224 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			7.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			ArmAsm
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			224 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			7.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			ArmAsm
		
	
	
	
	
	
| /*
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|  * SHA-1 implementation for PowerPC.
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|  *
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|  * Copyright (C) 2005 Paul Mackerras <paulus@samba.org>
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|  */
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| 
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| /*
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|  * PowerPC calling convention:
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|  * %r0 - volatile temp
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|  * %r1 - stack pointer.
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|  * %r2 - reserved
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|  * %r3-%r12 - Incoming arguments & return values; volatile.
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|  * %r13-%r31 - Callee-save registers
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|  * %lr - Return address, volatile
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|  * %ctr - volatile
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|  *
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|  * Register usage in this routine:
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|  * %r0 - temp
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|  * %r3 - argument (pointer to 5 words of SHA state)
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|  * %r4 - argument (pointer to data to hash)
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|  * %r5 - Constant K in SHA round (initially number of blocks to hash)
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|  * %r6-%r10 - Working copies of SHA variables A..E (actually E..A order)
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|  * %r11-%r26 - Data being hashed W[].
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|  * %r27-%r31 - Previous copies of A..E, for final add back.
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|  * %ctr - loop count
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|  */
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| 
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| 
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| /*
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|  * We roll the registers for A, B, C, D, E around on each
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|  * iteration; E on iteration t is D on iteration t+1, and so on.
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|  * We use registers 6 - 10 for this.  (Registers 27 - 31 hold
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|  * the previous values.)
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|  */
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| #define RA(t)	(((t)+4)%5+6)
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| #define RB(t)	(((t)+3)%5+6)
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| #define RC(t)	(((t)+2)%5+6)
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| #define RD(t)	(((t)+1)%5+6)
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| #define RE(t)	(((t)+0)%5+6)
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| 
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| /* We use registers 11 - 26 for the W values */
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| #define W(t)	((t)%16+11)
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| 
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| /* Register 5 is used for the constant k */
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| 
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| /*
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|  * The basic SHA-1 round function is:
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|  * E += ROTL(A,5) + F(B,C,D) + W[i] + K;  B = ROTL(B,30)
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|  * Then the variables are renamed: (A,B,C,D,E) = (E,A,B,C,D).
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|  *
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|  * Every 20 rounds, the function F() and the constant K changes:
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|  * - 20 rounds of f0(b,c,d) = "bit wise b ? c : d" =  (^b & d) + (b & c)
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|  * - 20 rounds of f1(b,c,d) = b^c^d = (b^d)^c
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|  * - 20 rounds of f2(b,c,d) = majority(b,c,d) = (b&d) + ((b^d)&c)
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|  * - 20 more rounds of f1(b,c,d)
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|  *
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|  * These are all scheduled for near-optimal performance on a G4.
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|  * The G4 is a 3-issue out-of-order machine with 3 ALUs, but it can only
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|  * *consider* starting the oldest 3 instructions per cycle.  So to get
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|  * maximum performance out of it, you have to treat it as an in-order
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|  * machine.  Which means interleaving the computation round t with the
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|  * computation of W[t+4].
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|  *
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|  * The first 16 rounds use W values loaded directly from memory, while the
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|  * remaining 64 use values computed from those first 16.  We preload
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|  * 4 values before starting, so there are three kinds of rounds:
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|  * - The first 12 (all f0) also load the W values from memory.
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|  * - The next 64 compute W(i+4) in parallel. 8*f0, 20*f1, 20*f2, 16*f1.
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|  * - The last 4 (all f1) do not do anything with W.
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|  *
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|  * Therefore, we have 6 different round functions:
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|  * STEPD0_LOAD(t,s) - Perform round t and load W(s).  s < 16
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|  * STEPD0_UPDATE(t,s) - Perform round t and compute W(s).  s >= 16.
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|  * STEPD1_UPDATE(t,s)
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|  * STEPD2_UPDATE(t,s)
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|  * STEPD1(t) - Perform round t with no load or update.
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|  *
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|  * The G5 is more fully out-of-order, and can find the parallelism
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|  * by itself.  The big limit is that it has a 2-cycle ALU latency, so
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|  * even though it's 2-way, the code has to be scheduled as if it's
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|  * 4-way, which can be a limit.  To help it, we try to schedule the
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|  * read of RA(t) as late as possible so it doesn't stall waiting for
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|  * the previous round's RE(t-1), and we try to rotate RB(t) as early
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|  * as possible while reading RC(t) (= RB(t-1)) as late as possible.
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|  */
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| 
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| /* the initial loads. */
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| #define LOADW(s) \
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| 	lwz	W(s),(s)*4(%r4)
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| 
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| /*
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|  * Perform a step with F0, and load W(s).  Uses W(s) as a temporary
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|  * before loading it.
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|  * This is actually 10 instructions, which is an awkward fit.
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|  * It can execute grouped as listed, or delayed one instruction.
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|  * (If delayed two instructions, there is a stall before the start of the
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|  * second line.)  Thus, two iterations take 7 cycles, 3.5 cycles per round.
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|  */
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| #define STEPD0_LOAD(t,s) \
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| add RE(t),RE(t),W(t); andc   %r0,RD(t),RB(t);  and    W(s),RC(t),RB(t); \
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| add RE(t),RE(t),%r0;  rotlwi %r0,RA(t),5;      rotlwi RB(t),RB(t),30;   \
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| add RE(t),RE(t),W(s); add    %r0,%r0,%r5;      lwz    W(s),(s)*4(%r4);  \
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| add RE(t),RE(t),%r0
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| 
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| /*
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|  * This is likewise awkward, 13 instructions.  However, it can also
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|  * execute starting with 2 out of 3 possible moduli, so it does 2 rounds
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|  * in 9 cycles, 4.5 cycles/round.
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|  */
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| #define STEPD0_UPDATE(t,s,loadk...) \
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| add RE(t),RE(t),W(t); andc   %r0,RD(t),RB(t); xor    W(s),W((s)-16),W((s)-3); \
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| add RE(t),RE(t),%r0;  and    %r0,RC(t),RB(t); xor    W(s),W(s),W((s)-8);      \
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| add RE(t),RE(t),%r0;  rotlwi %r0,RA(t),5;     xor    W(s),W(s),W((s)-14);     \
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| add RE(t),RE(t),%r5;  loadk; rotlwi RB(t),RB(t),30;  rotlwi W(s),W(s),1;     \
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| add RE(t),RE(t),%r0
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| 
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| /* Nicely optimal.  Conveniently, also the most common. */
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| #define STEPD1_UPDATE(t,s,loadk...) \
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| add RE(t),RE(t),W(t); xor    %r0,RD(t),RB(t); xor    W(s),W((s)-16),W((s)-3); \
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| add RE(t),RE(t),%r5;  loadk; xor %r0,%r0,RC(t);  xor W(s),W(s),W((s)-8);      \
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| add RE(t),RE(t),%r0;  rotlwi %r0,RA(t),5;     xor    W(s),W(s),W((s)-14);     \
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| add RE(t),RE(t),%r0;  rotlwi RB(t),RB(t),30;  rotlwi W(s),W(s),1
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| 
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| /*
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|  * The naked version, no UPDATE, for the last 4 rounds.  3 cycles per.
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|  * We could use W(s) as a temp register, but we don't need it.
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|  */
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| #define STEPD1(t) \
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|                         add   RE(t),RE(t),W(t); xor    %r0,RD(t),RB(t); \
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| rotlwi RB(t),RB(t),30;  add   RE(t),RE(t),%r5;  xor    %r0,%r0,RC(t);   \
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| add    RE(t),RE(t),%r0; rotlwi %r0,RA(t),5;     /* spare slot */        \
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| add    RE(t),RE(t),%r0
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| 
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| /*
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|  * 14 instructions, 5 cycles per.  The majority function is a bit
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|  * awkward to compute.  This can execute with a 1-instruction delay,
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|  * but it causes a 2-instruction delay, which triggers a stall.
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|  */
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| #define STEPD2_UPDATE(t,s,loadk...) \
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| add RE(t),RE(t),W(t); and    %r0,RD(t),RB(t); xor    W(s),W((s)-16),W((s)-3); \
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| add RE(t),RE(t),%r0;  xor    %r0,RD(t),RB(t); xor    W(s),W(s),W((s)-8);      \
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| add RE(t),RE(t),%r5;  loadk; and %r0,%r0,RC(t);  xor W(s),W(s),W((s)-14);     \
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| add RE(t),RE(t),%r0;  rotlwi %r0,RA(t),5;     rotlwi W(s),W(s),1;             \
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| add RE(t),RE(t),%r0;  rotlwi RB(t),RB(t),30
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| 
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| #define STEP0_LOAD4(t,s)		\
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| 	STEPD0_LOAD(t,s);		\
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| 	STEPD0_LOAD((t+1),(s)+1);	\
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| 	STEPD0_LOAD((t)+2,(s)+2);	\
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| 	STEPD0_LOAD((t)+3,(s)+3)
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| 
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| #define STEPUP4(fn, t, s, loadk...)		\
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| 	STEP##fn##_UPDATE(t,s,);		\
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| 	STEP##fn##_UPDATE((t)+1,(s)+1,);	\
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| 	STEP##fn##_UPDATE((t)+2,(s)+2,);	\
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| 	STEP##fn##_UPDATE((t)+3,(s)+3,loadk)
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| 
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| #define STEPUP20(fn, t, s, loadk...)	\
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| 	STEPUP4(fn, t, s,);		\
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| 	STEPUP4(fn, (t)+4, (s)+4,);	\
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| 	STEPUP4(fn, (t)+8, (s)+8,);	\
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| 	STEPUP4(fn, (t)+12, (s)+12,);	\
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| 	STEPUP4(fn, (t)+16, (s)+16, loadk)
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| 
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| 	.globl	ppc_sha1_core
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| ppc_sha1_core:
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| 	stwu	%r1,-80(%r1)
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| 	stmw	%r13,4(%r1)
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| 
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| 	/* Load up A - E */
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| 	lmw	%r27,0(%r3)
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| 
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| 	mtctr	%r5
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| 
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| 1:
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| 	LOADW(0)
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| 	lis	%r5,0x5a82
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| 	mr	RE(0),%r31
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| 	LOADW(1)
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| 	mr	RD(0),%r30
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| 	mr	RC(0),%r29
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| 	LOADW(2)
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| 	ori	%r5,%r5,0x7999	/* K0-19 */
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| 	mr	RB(0),%r28
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| 	LOADW(3)
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| 	mr	RA(0),%r27
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| 
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| 	STEP0_LOAD4(0, 4)
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| 	STEP0_LOAD4(4, 8)
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| 	STEP0_LOAD4(8, 12)
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| 	STEPUP4(D0, 12, 16,)
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| 	STEPUP4(D0, 16, 20, lis %r5,0x6ed9)
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| 
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| 	ori	%r5,%r5,0xeba1	/* K20-39 */
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| 	STEPUP20(D1, 20, 24, lis %r5,0x8f1b)
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| 
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| 	ori	%r5,%r5,0xbcdc	/* K40-59 */
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| 	STEPUP20(D2, 40, 44, lis %r5,0xca62)
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| 
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| 	ori	%r5,%r5,0xc1d6	/* K60-79 */
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| 	STEPUP4(D1, 60, 64,)
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| 	STEPUP4(D1, 64, 68,)
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| 	STEPUP4(D1, 68, 72,)
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| 	STEPUP4(D1, 72, 76,)
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| 	addi	%r4,%r4,64
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| 	STEPD1(76)
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| 	STEPD1(77)
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| 	STEPD1(78)
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| 	STEPD1(79)
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| 
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| 	/* Add results to original values */
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| 	add	%r31,%r31,RE(0)
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| 	add	%r30,%r30,RD(0)
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| 	add	%r29,%r29,RC(0)
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| 	add	%r28,%r28,RB(0)
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| 	add	%r27,%r27,RA(0)
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| 
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| 	bdnz	1b
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| 
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| 	/* Save final hash, restore registers, and return */
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| 	stmw	%r27,0(%r3)
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| 	lmw	%r13,4(%r1)
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| 	addi	%r1,%r1,80
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| 	blr
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