openssl/crypto/bn/asm
2005-11-15 08:04:42 +00:00
..
alpha
alpha.works
x86
.cvsignore Add emacs cache files to .cvsignore. 2005-04-11 14:18:14 +00:00
alpha.s
alpha.s.works
bn-586.pl OPENSSL_ia32cap final touches. Note that OPENSSL_ia32cap is no longer a 2004-08-29 16:36:05 +00:00
bn-alpha.pl
ca.pl
co-586.pl
co-alpha.pl
ia64.S Sync with HEAD. Up to >20% overall performance improvement. 2004-07-17 13:27:38 +00:00
mips1.s
mips3.s This fixes "Spurious test failures on IRIX?" reported in April. Apparently 2001-06-22 19:17:42 +00:00
pa-risc.s
pa-risc2.s pa-risc2.s was not PIC, see RT#426. I strip call to fprintf as it's 2003-01-03 10:52:40 +00:00
pa-risc2.s.old
pa-risc2W.s
ppc.pl Bugfix for bn_div_words PPC assembler implementation [from HEAD]. 2005-07-03 09:24:35 +00:00
r3000.s
README
sparcv8.S
sparcv8plus.S bn/asm/sparcv8plus.S update from HEAD. 2005-11-15 08:04:42 +00:00
vms.mar Finally, a bn_div_words() in VAX assembler that goes through all tests. 2002-12-23 11:25:55 +00:00
x86.pl
x86_64-gcc.c Downsync from HEAD. 2005-04-03 18:54:46 +00:00

<OBSOLETE>

All assember in this directory are just version of the file
crypto/bn/bn_asm.c.

Quite a few of these files are just the assember output from gcc since on 
quite a few machines they are 2 times faster than the system compiler.

For the x86, I have hand written assember because of the bad job all
compilers seem to do on it.  This normally gives a 2 time speed up in the RSA
routines.

For the DEC alpha, I also hand wrote the assember (except the division which
is just the output from the C compiler pasted on the end of the file).
On the 2 alpha C compilers I had access to, it was not possible to do
64b x 64b -> 128b calculations (both long and the long long data types
were 64 bits).  So the hand assember gives access to the 128 bit result and
a 2 times speedup :-).

There are 3 versions of assember for the HP PA-RISC.

pa-risc.s is the origional one which works fine and generated using gcc :-)

pa-risc2W.s and pa-risc2.s are 64 and 32-bit PA-RISC 2.0 implementations
by Chris Ruemmler from HP (with some help from the HP C compiler).

</OBSOLETE>