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Author SHA1 Message Date
Lasse Collin 419f55f9df liblzma: Avoid extern lzma_crc32_clmul() and lzma_crc64_clmul().
A CLMUL-only build will have the crcxx_clmul() inlined into
lzma_crcxx(). Previously a jump to the extern lzma_crcxx_clmul()
was needed. Notes about shared liblzma on ELF platforms:

  - On platforms that support ifunc and -fvisibility=hidden, this
    was silly because CLMUL-only build would have that single extra
    jump instruction of extra overhead.

  - On platforms that support neither -fvisibility=hidden nor linker
    version script (liblzma*.map), jumping to lzma_crcxx_clmul()
    would go via PLT so a few more instructions of overhead (still
    not a big issue but silly nevertheless).

There was a downside with static liblzma too: if an application only
needs lzma_crc64(), static linking would make the linker include the
CLMUL code for both CRC32 and CRC64 from crc_x86_clmul.o even though
the CRC32 code wouldn't be needed, thus increasing code size of the
executable (assuming that -ffunction-sections isn't used).

Also, now compilers are likely to inline crc_simd_body()
even if they don't support the always_inline attribute
(or MSVC's __forceinline). Quite possibly all compilers
that build the code do support such an attribute. But now
it likely isn't a problem even if the attribute wasn't supported.

Now all x86-specific stuff is in crc_x86_clmul.h. If other archs
The other archs can then have their own headers with their own
is_clmul_supported() and crcxx_clmul().

Another bonus is that the build system doesn't need to care if
crc_clmul.c is needed.

is_clmul_supported() stays as inline function as it's not needed
when doing a CLMUL-only build (avoids a warning about unused function).
2024-01-11 14:29:42 +02:00