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OPENSSL_ia32cap(3)
OPENSSL_ia32cap - the IA-32 processor capabilities vector
unsigned int *OPENSSL_ia32cap_loc(void);
#define OPENSSL_ia32cap ((OPENSSL_ia32cap_loc())[0])
Value returned by OPENSSL_ia32cap_loc() is address of a
variable containing IA-32 processor capabilities bit vector as it appears
in EDX:ECX register pair after executing CPUID instruction with EAX=1 input
value (see Intel Application Note #241618). Naturally it's meaningful on
x86 and x86_64 platforms only. The variable is normally set up
automatically upon toolkit initialization, but can be manipulated
afterwards to modify crypto library behaviour. For the moment of this
writing following bits are significant:
- bit #4 denoting presence of Time-Stamp Counter.
-
- bit #19 denoting availability of CLFLUSH instruction;
-
- bit #20, reserved by Intel, is used to choose among RC4 code paths;
-
- bit #23 denoting MMX support;
-
- bit #24, FXSR bit, denoting availability of XMM registers;
-
- bit #25 denoting SSE support;
-
- bit #26 denoting SSE2 support;
-
- bit #28 denoting Hyperthreading, which is used to distiguish
cores with shared cache;
-
- bit #30, reserved by Intel, denotes specifically Intel CPUs;
-
- bit #33 denoting availability of PCLMULQDQ instruction;
-
- bit #41 denoting SSSE3, Supplemental SSE3, support;
-
- bit #43 denoting AMD XOP support (forced to zero on non-AMD CPUs);
-
- bit #57 denoting AES-NI instruction set extension;
-
- bit #59, OSXSAVE bit, denoting availability of YMM registers;
-
- bit #60 denoting AVX extension;
-
- bit #62 denoting availability of RDRAND instruction;
-
For example, clearing bit #26 at run-time disables high-performance SSE2
code present in the crypto library, while clearing bit #24 disables SSE2
code operating on 128-bit XMM register bank. You might have to do the
latter if target OpenSSL application is executed on SSE2 capable CPU, but
under control of OS that does not enable XMM registers. Even though you can
manipulate the value programmatically, you most likely will find it more
appropriate to set up an environment variable with the same name prior
starting target application, e.g. on Intel P4 processor 'env
OPENSSL_ia32cap=0x16980010 apps/openssl', or better yet 'env
OPENSSL_ia32cap=~0x1000000 apps/openssl' to achieve same effect without
modifying the application source code. Alternatively you can reconfigure
the toolkit with no-sse2 option and recompile.
Less intuituve is clearing bit #28. The truth is that it's not copied from
CPUID output verbatim, but is adjusted to reflect whether or not the data
cache is actually shared between logical cores. This in turn affects the
decision on whether or not expensive countermeasures against cache-timing
attacks are applied, most notably in AES assembler module.
The vector is further extended with EBX value returned by CPUID with EAX=7
and ECX=0 as input. Following bits are significant:
- bit #64+3 denoting availability of BMI1 instructions, e.g. ANDN;
-
- bit #64+5 denoting availability of AVX2 instructions;
-
- bit #64+8 denoting availability of BMI2 instructions, e.g. MUXL
and RORX;
-
- bit #64+18 denoting availability of RDSEED instruction;
-
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