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From: Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com>
Date: Wed, 15 Jan 2020 16:42:39 +0000
Subject: arm64: Implement optimised checksum routine
Patch-mainline: v5.6-rc1
Git-commit: 5777eaed566a1d63e344d3dd8f2b5e33be20643e
References: bsc#1176447

Apparently there exist certain workloads which rely heavily on software
checksumming, for which the generic do_csum() implementation becomes a
significant bottleneck. Therefore let's give arm64 its own optimised
version - for ease of maintenance this foregoes assembly or intrisics,
and is thus not actually arm64-specific, but does rely heavily on C
idioms that translate well to the A64 ISA and the typical load/store
capabilities of most ARMv8 CPU cores.

The resulting increase in checksum throughput scales nicely with buffer
size, tending towards 4x for a small in-order core (Cortex-A53), and up
to 6x or more for an aggressive big core (Ampere eMAG).

Reported-by: Lingyan Huang <huanglingyan2@huawei.com>
Tested-by: Lingyan Huang <huanglingyan2@huawei.com>
Signed-off-by: Robin Murphy <robin.murphy@arm.com>
Signed-off-by: Will Deacon <will@kernel.org>
Acked-by: Thomas Bogendoerfer <tbogendoerfer@suse.de>
---
 arch/arm64/include/asm/checksum.h |    3 
 arch/arm64/lib/Makefile           |    6 -
 arch/arm64/lib/csum.c             |  123 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 3 files changed, 129 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
 create mode 100644 arch/arm64/lib/csum.c

--- a/arch/arm64/include/asm/checksum.h
+++ b/arch/arm64/include/asm/checksum.h
@@ -35,6 +35,9 @@ static inline __sum16 ip_fast_csum(const
 }
 #define ip_fast_csum ip_fast_csum
 
+extern unsigned int do_csum(const unsigned char *buff, int len);
+#define do_csum do_csum
+
 #include <asm-generic/checksum.h>
 
 #endif	/* __ASM_CHECKSUM_H */
--- a/arch/arm64/lib/Makefile
+++ b/arch/arm64/lib/Makefile
@@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
 # SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
 lib-y		:= clear_user.o delay.o copy_from_user.o		\
 		   copy_to_user.o copy_in_user.o copy_page.o		\
-		   clear_page.o memchr.o memcpy.o memmove.o memset.o	\
-		   memcmp.o strcmp.o strncmp.o strlen.o strnlen.o	\
-		   strchr.o strrchr.o tishift.o
+		   clear_page.o csum.o memchr.o memcpy.o memmove.o	\
+		   memset.o memcmp.o strcmp.o strncmp.o strlen.o	\
+		   strnlen.o strchr.o strrchr.o tishift.o
 
 ifeq ($(CONFIG_KERNEL_MODE_NEON), y)
 obj-$(CONFIG_XOR_BLOCKS)	+= xor-neon.o
--- /dev/null
+++ b/arch/arm64/lib/csum.c
@@ -0,0 +1,123 @@
+// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only
+// Copyright (C) 2019-2020 Arm Ltd.
+
+#include <linux/compiler.h>
+#include <linux/kasan-checks.h>
+#include <linux/kernel.h>
+
+#include <net/checksum.h>
+
+/* Looks dumb, but generates nice-ish code */
+static u64 accumulate(u64 sum, u64 data)
+{
+	__uint128_t tmp = (__uint128_t)sum + data;
+	return tmp + (tmp >> 64);
+}
+
+unsigned int do_csum(const unsigned char *buff, int len)
+{
+	unsigned int offset, shift, sum;
+	const u64 *ptr;
+	u64 data, sum64 = 0;
+
+	offset = (unsigned long)buff & 7;
+	/*
+	 * This is to all intents and purposes safe, since rounding down cannot
+	 * result in a different page or cache line being accessed, and @buff
+	 * should absolutely not be pointing to anything read-sensitive. We do,
+	 * however, have to be careful not to piss off KASAN, which means using
+	 * unchecked reads to accommodate the head and tail, for which we'll
+	 * compensate with an explicit check up-front.
+	 */
+	kasan_check_read(buff, len);
+	ptr = (u64 *)(buff - offset);
+	len = len + offset - 8;
+
+	/*
+	 * Head: zero out any excess leading bytes. Shifting back by the same
+	 * amount should be at least as fast as any other way of handling the
+	 * odd/even alignment, and means we can ignore it until the very end.
+	 */
+	shift = offset * 8;
+	data = READ_ONCE_NOCHECK(*ptr++);
+#ifdef __LITTLE_ENDIAN
+	data = (data >> shift) << shift;
+#else
+	data = (data << shift) >> shift;
+#endif
+
+	/*
+	 * Body: straightforward aligned loads from here on (the paired loads
+	 * underlying the quadword type still only need dword alignment). The
+	 * main loop strictly excludes the tail, so the second loop will always
+	 * run at least once.
+	 */
+	while (unlikely(len > 64)) {
+		__uint128_t tmp1, tmp2, tmp3, tmp4;
+
+		tmp1 = READ_ONCE_NOCHECK(*(__uint128_t *)ptr);
+		tmp2 = READ_ONCE_NOCHECK(*(__uint128_t *)(ptr + 2));
+		tmp3 = READ_ONCE_NOCHECK(*(__uint128_t *)(ptr + 4));
+		tmp4 = READ_ONCE_NOCHECK(*(__uint128_t *)(ptr + 6));
+
+		len -= 64;
+		ptr += 8;
+
+		/* This is the "don't dump the carry flag into a GPR" idiom */
+		tmp1 += (tmp1 >> 64) | (tmp1 << 64);
+		tmp2 += (tmp2 >> 64) | (tmp2 << 64);
+		tmp3 += (tmp3 >> 64) | (tmp3 << 64);
+		tmp4 += (tmp4 >> 64) | (tmp4 << 64);
+		tmp1 = ((tmp1 >> 64) << 64) | (tmp2 >> 64);
+		tmp1 += (tmp1 >> 64) | (tmp1 << 64);
+		tmp3 = ((tmp3 >> 64) << 64) | (tmp4 >> 64);
+		tmp3 += (tmp3 >> 64) | (tmp3 << 64);
+		tmp1 = ((tmp1 >> 64) << 64) | (tmp3 >> 64);
+		tmp1 += (tmp1 >> 64) | (tmp1 << 64);
+		tmp1 = ((tmp1 >> 64) << 64) | sum64;
+		tmp1 += (tmp1 >> 64) | (tmp1 << 64);
+		sum64 = tmp1 >> 64;
+	}
+	while (len > 8) {
+		__uint128_t tmp;
+
+		sum64 = accumulate(sum64, data);
+		tmp = READ_ONCE_NOCHECK(*(__uint128_t *)ptr);
+
+		len -= 16;
+		ptr += 2;
+
+#ifdef __LITTLE_ENDIAN
+		data = tmp >> 64;
+		sum64 = accumulate(sum64, tmp);
+#else
+		data = tmp;
+		sum64 = accumulate(sum64, tmp >> 64);
+#endif
+	}
+	if (len > 0) {
+		sum64 = accumulate(sum64, data);
+		data = READ_ONCE_NOCHECK(*ptr);
+		len -= 8;
+	}
+	/*
+	 * Tail: zero any over-read bytes similarly to the head, again
+	 * preserving odd/even alignment.
+	 */
+	shift = len * -8;
+#ifdef __LITTLE_ENDIAN
+	data = (data << shift) >> shift;
+#else
+	data = (data >> shift) << shift;
+#endif
+	sum64 = accumulate(sum64, data);
+
+	/* Finally, folding */
+	sum64 += (sum64 >> 32) | (sum64 << 32);
+	sum = sum64 >> 32;
+	sum += (sum >> 16) | (sum << 16);
+	if (offset & 1)
+		return (u16)swab32(sum);
+
+	return sum >> 16;
+}