Commit Graph

55 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Adam Langley
543d00692a Benchmark AEADs with aligned buffers.
This eliminates a source of variability from the benchmarks.

Change-Id: I8ce07bd68e7591f8c5545040b02b96d21609a0e5
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/2920
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
2015-01-16 19:00:17 +00:00
Adam Langley
45ec21b99c Add stitched RC4-MD5 as an AEAD.
This change adds the stitched RC4-MD5 code from upstream OpenSSL but
exposes it as an AEAD. It's not a normal AEAD (it's stateful thus
doesn't take an nonce) but forcing pre-AEAD cipher suites in the AEAD
interface is less painful than forcing AEADs into the EVP_CIPHER
interface. Over time, more and more cipher suites will be exposed as
TLS-specific AEADs and then ssl/ can drop support for EVP_CIPHER.

See original code from upstream:
https://github.com/openssl/openssl/blob/master/crypto/evp/e_rc4_hmac_md5.c

Change-Id: Ia9267b224747f02be6b934ea0b2b50e1f529fab9
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/1043
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
2014-06-30 23:01:17 +00:00
Adam Langley
30eda1d2b8 Include some build fixes for OS X.
Apart from the obvious little issues, this also works around a
(seeming) libtool/linker:

a.c defines a symbol:

int kFoo;

b.c uses it:

extern int kFoo;

int f() {
  return kFoo;
}

compile them:

$ gcc -c a.c
$ gcc -c b.c

and create a dummy main in order to run it, main.c:

int f();

int main() {
  return f();
}

this works as expected:

$ gcc main.c a.o b.o

but, if we make an archive:

$ ar q lib.a a.o b.o

and use that:

$ gcc main.c lib.a
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64
  "_kFoo", referenced from:
    _f in lib.a(b.o)

(It doesn't matter what order the .o files are put into the .a)

Linux and Windows don't seem to have this problem.

nm on a.o shows that the symbol is of type "C", which is a "common symbol"[1].
Basically the linker will merge multiple common symbol definitions together.

If ones makes a.c read:

int kFoo = 0;

Then one gets a type "D" symbol - a "data section symbol" and everything works
just fine.

This might actually be a libtool bug instead of an ld bug: Looking at `xxd
lib.a | less`, the __.SYMDEF SORTED index at the beginning of the archive
doesn't contain an entry for kFoo unless initialised.

Change-Id: I4cdad9ba46e9919221c3cbd79637508959359427
2014-06-24 11:15:12 -07:00
Adam Langley
006779a02c Add benchmarks for hash functions to bssl speed. 2014-06-20 13:17:42 -07:00
Adam Langley
c5c0c7e853 Split the speed tests into their own file. 2014-06-20 13:17:37 -07:00