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authorÆvar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com>2022-08-31 12:18:43 +0300
committerJunio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>2022-09-01 00:37:31 +0300
commit9dc523aa0e20271cfe1474bef9fafbe62b7ff603 (patch)
tree9e75110b9b63173053fadb0d7c9a2f02e7961b27 /block-sha1
parentd42b38dfb5edf1a7fddd9542d722f91038407819 (diff)
Makefile + hash.h: remove PPC_SHA1 implementation
Remove the PPC_SHA1 implementation added in a6ef3518f9a ([PATCH] PPC assembly implementation of SHA1, 2005-04-22). When this was added Apple consumer hardware used the PPC architecture, and the implementation was intended to improve SHA-1 speed there. Since it was added we've moved to using sha1collisiondetection by default, and anyone wanting hard-rolled non-DC SHA-1 implementation can use OpenSSL's via the OPENSSL_SHA1 knob. The PPC_SHA1 originally originally targeted 32 bit PPC, and later the 64 bit PPC 970 (a.k.a. Apple PowerPC G5). See 926172c5e48 (block-sha1: improve code on large-register-set machines, 2009-08-10) for a reference about the performance on G5 (a comment in block-sha1/sha1.c being removed here). I can't get it to do anything but segfault on both the BE and LE POWER machines in the GCC compile farm[1]. Anyone who's concerned about performance on PPC these days is likely to be using the IBM POWER processors. There have been proposals to entirely remove non-sha1collisiondetection implementations from the tree[2]. I think per [3] that would be a bit overzealous. I.e. there are various set-ups git's speed is going to be more important than the relatively implausible SHA-1 collision attack, or where such attacks are entirely mitigated by other means (e.g. by incoming objects being checked with DC_SHA1). But that really doesn't apply to PPC_SHA1 in particular, which seems to have outlived its usefulness. As this gets rid of the only in-tree *.S assembly file we can remove the small bits of logic from the Makefile needed to build objects from *.S (as opposed to *.c) The code being removed here was also throwing warnings with the "-pedantic" flag, it could have been fixed as 544d93bc3b4 (block-sha1: remove use of obsolete x86 assembly, 2022-03-10) did for block-sha1/*, but as noted above let's remove it instead. 1. https://cfarm.tetaneutral.net/machines/list/ Tested on gcc{110,112,135,203}, a mixture of POWER [789] ppc64 and ppc64le. All segfault in anything needing object hashing (e.g. t/t1007-hash-object.sh) when compiled with PPC_SHA1=Y. 2. https://lore.kernel.org/git/20200223223758.120941-1-mh@glandium.org/ 3. https://lore.kernel.org/git/20200224044732.GK1018190@coredump.intra.peff.net/ Acked-by: brian m. carlson" <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net> Signed-off-by: Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avarab@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'block-sha1')
-rw-r--r--block-sha1/sha1.c4
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/block-sha1/sha1.c b/block-sha1/sha1.c
index 5974cd7dd3..80cebd2756 100644
--- a/block-sha1/sha1.c
+++ b/block-sha1/sha1.c
@@ -28,10 +28,6 @@
* try to do the silly "optimize away loads" part because it won't
* see what the value will be).
*
- * Ben Herrenschmidt reports that on PPC, the C version comes close
- * to the optimized asm with this (ie on PPC you don't want that
- * 'volatile', since there are lots of registers).
- *
* On ARM we get the best code generation by forcing a full memory barrier
* between each SHA_ROUND, otherwise gcc happily get wild with spilling and
* the stack frame size simply explode and performance goes down the drain.