* g10/filter.h (armor_filter_context_t): New fields dearmor_mode and
dearmor_state.
* g10/dearmor.c (dearmor_file): Set dearmor_mode.
* g10/armor.c (is_armor_header): Magic to switch to generic dearmor
mode.
(parse_header_line): Treat non OpenPGP armor in a special way.
(check_input): Ditto.
(radix64_read): Detect non OpenPGP armor END lines.
* g10/armor.c (asctobin): Larger look-up table for fast path.
(initialize): Update 'asctobin' initialization.
(radix64_read): Add fast path for radix64 to binary conversion.
--
This patch adds fast path for radix64 to binary conversion in
armored decryption.
Benchmark results below, tested on Intel Core i7-4790K (turbo off).
Encrypted 2 GiB through pipe to ramfs file using AES128. Decrypt
ramfs file out through pipe to /dev/null.
before patch-set
----------------
gpg process
armor: user time pipe transfer rate
encrypt-aead: 13.8 140 MB/s
decrypt-aead: 30.6 68 MB/s
encrypt-cfb: 17.4 114 MB/s
decrypt-cfb: 32.6 64 MB/s
after (decrypt+iobuf+crc+radix64 opt)
-------------------------------------
gpg process
armor: user time pipe transfer rate
decrypt-aead: 9.8 200 MB/s
decrypt-cfb: 11.9 168 MB/s
Signed-off-by: Jussi Kivilinna <jussi.kivilinna@iki.fi>
* g10/armor.c (bintoasc): Change to read-only.
(initialize): Use const pointer for 'bintoasc'.
(armor_output_buf_as_radix64): New function for faster binary to
radix64 conversion.
(armor_filter): Use new conversion function.
--
This patch adds faster binary to radix64 conversion to speed up
armored encryption.
Benchmark results below, tested on Intel Core i7-4790K (turbo off).
Encrypted 2 GiB through pipe to ramfs file using AES128. Decrypt
ramfs file out through pipe to /dev/null.
before patch-set
----------------
gpg process
armor: user time pipe transfer rate
encrypt-aead: 13.8 140 MB/s
decrypt-aead: 30.6 68 MB/s
encrypt-cfb: 17.4 114 MB/s
decrypt-cfb: 32.6 64 MB/s
after (decrypt+iobuf+crc+radix64 opt)
-------------------------------------
gpg process
armor: user time pipe transfer rate
encrypt-aead: 2.7 523 MB/s
encrypt-cfb: 6.7 264 MB/s
Signed-off-by: Jussi Kivilinna <jussi.kivilinna@iki.fi>
* g10/armor.c (CRCINIT, CRCPOLY, CRCUPDATE, crc_table): Remove.
(new_armor_context): Open libgcrypt CRC24 context.
(release_armor_context): Close CRC24 context.
(initialize): Remove CRC table generation.
(get_afx_crc): New.
(check_input, fake_packet, radix64_read, armor_filter): Update to use
CRC24 context.
* g10/filter.h (armor_filter_context_t): Replace crc intermediate value
with libgcrypt md context pointer.
--
This patch changes armor filter to use optimized CRC24 implementation
from libgcrypt to speed up encryption and decryption.
Benchmark results below, tested on Intel Core i7-4790K (turbo off).
Encrypted 2 GiB through pipe to ramfs file using AES128. Decrypt
ramfs file out through pipe to /dev/null.
before patch-set
----------------
gpg process
armor: user time pipe transfer rate
encrypt-aead: 13.8 140 MB/s
decrypt-aead: 30.6 68 MB/s
encrypt-cfb: 17.4 114 MB/s
decrypt-cfb: 32.6 64 MB/s
after (decrypt+iobuf+crc opt)
-----------------------------
gpg process
armor: user time pipe transfer rate
encrypt-aead: 8.7 211 MB/s
decrypt-aead: 17.6 116 MB/s
encrypt-cfb: 12.6 153 MB/s
decrypt-cfb: 19.6 105 MB/s
Signed-off-by: Jussi Kivilinna <jussi.kivilinna@iki.fi>
* g10/armor.c (radix64_read): Check EOF with '!afx->buffer_len' instead
of 'c == -1', as 'c' is never set to this value.
--
Signed-off-by: Jussi Kivilinna <jussi.kivilinna@iki.fi>
* g10/armor.c (check_input): Call is_armored only if LEN >= 2.
(unarmor_pump): Use a 2 byte buffer for is_armored.
--
Fixes-commit: 605276ef8c
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* g10/armor.c (radix64_read): If the = is followed by the string "3D",
check if the following four characters are valid radix 64 and are
followed by a new line. If so, warn and ignore the '3D'.
--
Signed-off-by: Neal H. Walfield <neal@g10code.com>
GnuPG-bug-id: 2250
* g10/gpg.h (g10_errstr): Remove macro and change all occurrences by
gpg_strerror.
(G10ERR_): Remove all macros and change all occurrences by their
GPG_ERR_ counterparts.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* g10/armor.c (parse_hash_header,carmor_filter): Ignore MD5 in hash
header.
(fake_packet): Remove pgp-2 workaround for white space stripping.
* g10/filter.h (armor_filter_context_t): Remove field pgp2mode.
* g10/options.h (opt): Remove field pgp2_workarounds.
* g10/gpg.c (main): Do not set this field.
* g10/gpgv.c (main): Ditto.
* g10/mainproc.c (proc_encrypted): Use SHA-1 as fallback s2k hash
algo. Using MD5 here is useless.
(proc_plaintext): Remove PGP-2 related woraround
(proc_tree): Remove another workaround but keep the one for PGP-5.
--
The removed code was either not anymore used or its use would have
caused an error message later anyway.
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
* g10/options.h (opt): Rename field no_version to emit_version.
* g10/gpg.c (main): Init opt.emit_vesion to 1. Change --emit-version
to bump up opt.emit_version.
* g10/armor.c (armor_filter): Implement different --emit-version
values.
--
GnuPG-bug-id: 1572
Signed-off-by: Werner Koch <wk@gnupg.org>
Replace hardwired strings at many places with new macros from config.h
and use the new strusage macro replacement feature.
* common/asshelp.c (lock_spawning) [W32]: Change the names of the spawn
sentinels.
* agent/command.c (cmd_import_key): Use asprintf to create the prompt.
We better do this once and for all instead of cluttering all future
commits with diffs of trailing white spaces. In the majority of cases
blank or single lines are affected and thus this change won't disturb
a git blame too much. For future commits the pre-commit scripts
checks that this won't happen again.
to libgcrypt functions, using shared error codes from libgpg-error,
replacing the old functions we used to have in ../util by those in
../jnlib and ../common, renaming the malloc functions and a couple of
types. Note, that not all changes are listed below becuause they are
too similar and done at far too many places. As of today the code
builds using the current libgcrypt from CVS but it is very unlikely
that it actually works.