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diff --git a/target/linux/generic/files/crypto/ocf/README b/target/linux/generic/files/crypto/ocf/README
index 5ac39f730..88849ddc4 100644
--- a/target/linux/generic/files/crypto/ocf/README
+++ b/target/linux/generic/files/crypto/ocf/README
@@ -1,167 +1,246 @@
-README - ocf-linux-20100325
----------------------------
+###########################
+README - ocf-linux-20100530
+###########################
This README provides instructions for getting ocf-linux compiled and
-operating in a generic linux environment. For other information you
-might like to visit the home page for this project:
+operating in a generic linux environment. Other information on the project
+can be found at the home page:
http://ocf-linux.sourceforge.net/
-Adding OCF to linux
--------------------
+Embedded systems and applications requiring userspace acceleration will need
+to patch the kernel source to get full OCF support. See "Adding OCF to
+linux source" below. Otherwise the "OCF Quickstart" that follows is the
+easiest way to get started.
- Not much in this file for now, just some notes. I usually build
- the ocf support as modules but it can be built into the kernel as
- well. To use it:
+If your goal is to accelerate Openswan on Ubuntu or CentOS, you may find
+that the required binaries are already available on openswan.org:
- * mknod /dev/crypto c 10 70
+ ftp://ftp.openswan.org/ocf/
+ ftp://ftp.openswan.org/openswan/binaries/ubuntu/
- * to add OCF to your kernel source, you have two options. Apply
- the kernel specific patch:
+#####################################################
+OCF Quickstart for Ubuntu/Others (including Openswan)
+#####################################################
- cd linux-2.4*; gunzip < ocf-linux-24-XXXXXXXX.patch.gz | patch -p1
- cd linux-2.6*; gunzip < ocf-linux-26-XXXXXXXX.patch.gz | patch -p1
-
- if you do one of the above, then you can proceed to the next step,
- or you can do the above process by hand with using the patches against
- linux-2.4.35 and 2.6.33 to include the ocf code under crypto/ocf.
- Here's how to add it:
+This section provides instructions on how to quickly add kernel only support
+for OCF to a GNU/Linux system. It is only suitable for in-kernel use such as
+Openswan MAST/KLIPS.
- for 2.4.35 (and later)
+If the target is an embedded system, or, userspace acceleration of
+applications such as OpenVPN and OpenSSL, the section below titled
+"Adding OCF to linux source" is more appropriate.
- cd linux-2.4.35/crypto
- tar xvzf ocf-linux.tar.gz
- cd ..
- patch -p1 < crypto/ocf/patches/linux-2.4.35-ocf.patch
+Before building kernel only support for OCF ensure that the appropriate
+linux-headers package is installed:
- for 2.6.23 (and later), find the kernel patch specific (or nearest)
- to your kernel versions and then:
+ cd ocf
+ make ocf_modules
+ sudo make ocf_install
+ OCF_DIR=`pwd` # remember where OCF sources were built
- cd linux-2.6.NN/crypto
- tar xvzf ocf-linux.tar.gz
- cd ..
- patch -p1 < crypto/ocf/patches/linux-2.6.NN-ocf.patch
+At this point the ocf, cryptosoft, ocfnull, hifn7751 and ocf-bench modules
+should have been built and installed. The OCF installation can be tested
+with the following commands:
- It should be easy to take this patch and apply it to other more
- recent versions of the kernels. The same patches should also work
- relatively easily on kernels as old as 2.6.11 and 2.4.18.
-
- * under 2.4 if you are on a non-x86 platform, you may need to:
+ modprobe ocf
+ modprobe cryptosoft
+ modprobe ocf-bench
+ dmesg | tail -5
- cp linux-2.X.x/include/asm-i386/kmap_types.h linux-2.X.x/include/asm-YYY
+The final modprobe of ocf-bench will fail, this is intentional as ocf-bench
+is a short lived module that tests in-kernel performance of OCF. If
+everything worked correctly the "dmesg | tail -5" should include a line
+like:
- so that you can build the kernel crypto support needed for the cryptosoft
- driver.
+ [ 583.128741] OCF: 45133 requests of 1488 bytes in 251 jiffies (535.122 Mbps)
- * For simplicity you should enable all the crypto support in your kernel
- except for the test driver. Likewise for the OCF options. Do not
- enable OCF crypto drivers for HW that you do not have (for example
- ixp4xx will not compile on non-Xscale systems).
+This shows the in-kernel performance of OCF using the cryptosoft driver.
+For addition driver load options, see "How to load the OCF modules" below.
- * make sure that cryptodev.h (from ocf-linux.tar.gz) is installed as
- crypto/cryptodev.h in an include directory that is used for building
- applications for your platform. For example on a host system that
- might be:
+If the intention is to run an OCF accelerated Openswan (KLIPS/MAST) then use
+these steps to compile openswan downloaded from openswan.org (2.6.34 or later).
- /usr/include/crypto/cryptodev.h
+ tar xf openswan-2.6.34.tar.gz
+ cd openswan-2.6.34
+ make programs
+ make KERNELSRC=/lib/modules/`uname -r`/build \
+ KBUILD_EXTRA_SYMBOLS=$OCF_DIR/Module.symvers \
+ MODULE_DEF_INCLUDE=`pwd`/packaging/ocf/config-all.hmodules \
+ MODULE_DEFCONFIG=`pwd`/packaging/ocf/defconfig \
+ module
+ sudo make KERNELSRC=/lib/modules/`uname -r`/build \
+ KBUILD_EXTRA_SYMBOLS=$OCF_DIR/Module.symvers \
+ MODULE_DEF_INCLUDE=`pwd`/packaging/ocf/config-all.hmodules \
+ MODULE_DEFCONFIG=`pwd`/packaging/ocf/defconfig \
+ install minstall
- * patch your openssl-0.9.8n code with the openssl-0.9.8n.patch.
- (NOTE: there is no longer a need to patch ssh). The patch is against:
- openssl-0_9_8e
+The rest of this document is only required for more complex build
+requirements.
- If you need a patch for an older version of openssl, you should look
- to older OCF releases. This patch is unlikely to work on older
- openssl versions.
+##########################
+Adding OCF to linux source
+##########################
- openssl-0.9.8n.patch
- - enables --with-cryptodev for non BSD systems
- - adds -cpu option to openssl speed for calculating CPU load
- under linux
- - fixes null pointer in openssl speed multi thread output.
- - fixes test keys to work with linux crypto's more stringent
- key checking.
- - adds MD5/SHA acceleration (Ronen Shitrit), only enabled
- with the --with-cryptodev-digests option
- - fixes bug in engine code caching.
+It is recommended that OCF be built as modules as it increases the
+flexibility and ease of debugging the system.
- * build crypto-tools-XXXXXXXX.tar.gz if you want to try some of the BSD
- tools for testing OCF (ie., cryptotest).
+Ensure that the system has /dev/crypto for userspace access to OCF:
-How to load the OCF drivers
----------------------------
+ mknod /dev/crypto c 10 70
- First insert the base modules:
+Generate the kernel patches and apply the appropriate one.
- insmod ocf
- insmod cryptodev
+ cd ocf
+ make patch
- You can then install the software OCF driver with:
+This will provide three files:
- insmod cryptosoft
+ linux-2.4.*-ocf.patch
+ linux-2.6.*-ocf.patch
+ ocf-linux-base.patch
- and one or more of the OCF HW drivers with:
+If either of the first two patches applies to the targets kernel, then one
+of the following as required:
- insmod safe
- insmod hifn7751
- insmod ixp4xx
- ...
+ cd linux-2.X.Y; patch -p1 < linux-2.4.*-ocf.patch
+ cd linux-2.6.Y; patch -p1 < linux-2.6.*-ocf.patch
- all the drivers take a debug option to enable verbose debug so that
- you can see what is going on. For debug you load them as:
+Otherwise, locate the appropriate kernel patch in the patches directory and
+apply that as well as the ocf-linux-base.patch using '-p1'.
- insmod ocf crypto_debug=1
- insmod cryptodev cryptodev_debug=1
- insmod cryptosoft swcr_debug=1
+When using a linux-2.4 system on a non-x86 platform, the following may be
+required to build cryptosoft:
- You may load more than one OCF crypto driver but then there is no guarantee
- as to which will be used.
+ cp linux-2.X.x/include/asm-i386/kmap_types.h linux-2.X.x/include/asm-YYY
- You can also enable debug at run time on 2.6 systems with the following:
+When using cryptosoft, for simplicity, enable all the crypto support in the
+kernel except for the test driver. Likewise for the OCF options. Do not
+enable OCF crypto drivers for HW that is not present (for example the ixp4xx
+driver will not compile on non-Xscale systems).
- echo 1 > /sys/module/ocf/parameters/crypto_debug
- echo 1 > /sys/module/cryptodev/parameters/cryptodev_debug
- echo 1 > /sys/module/cryptosoft/parameters/swcr_debug
- echo 1 > /sys/module/hifn7751/parameters/hifn_debug
- echo 1 > /sys/module/safe/parameters/safe_debug
- echo 1 > /sys/module/ixp4xx/parameters/ixp_debug
- ...
+Make sure that cryptodev.h from the ocf directory is installed as
+crypto/cryptodev.h in an include directory that is used for building
+applications for the target platform. For example on a host system that
+might be:
+ /usr/include/crypto/cryptodev.h
+
+Patch the openssl-0.9.8r code the openssl-0.9.8r.patch from the patches
+directory. There are many older patch versions in the patches directory
+if required.
+
+The openssl patches provide the following functionality:
+
+ * enables --with-cryptodev for non BSD systems
+ * adds -cpu option to openssl speed for calculating CPU load under linux
+ * fixes null pointer in openssl speed multi thread output.
+ * fixes test keys to work with linux crypto's more stringent key checking.
+ * adds MD5/SHA acceleration (Ronen Shitrit), only enabled with the
+ --with-cryptodev-digests option
+ * fixes bug in engine code caching.
+
+Build the crypto-tools directory for the target to obtain a userspace
+testing tool call cryptotest.
+
+###########################
+How to load the OCF modules
+###########################
+
+First insert the base modules (cryptodev is optional, it is only used
+for userspace acceleration):
+
+ modprobe ocf
+ modprobe cryptodev
+
+Load the software OCF driver with:
+
+ modprobe cryptosoft
+
+and zero or more of the OCF HW drivers with:
+
+ modprobe safe
+ modprobe hifn7751
+ modprobe ixp4xx
+ ...
+
+All the drivers take a debug option to enable verbose debug so that
+OCF operation may be observed via "dmesg" or the console. For debug
+load the modules as:
+
+ modprobe ocf crypto_debug=1
+ modprobe cryptodev cryptodev_debug=1
+ modprobe cryptosoft swcr_debug=1
+
+More than one OCF crypto driver may be loaded but then there is no
+guarantee as to which will be used (other than a preference for HW
+drivers over SW drivers by most applications).
+
+It is also possible to enable debug at run time on linux-2.6 systems
+with the following:
+
+ echo 1 > /sys/module/ocf/parameters/crypto_debug
+ echo 1 > /sys/module/cryptodev/parameters/cryptodev_debug
+ echo 1 > /sys/module/cryptosoft/parameters/swcr_debug
+ echo 1 > /sys/module/hifn7751/parameters/hifn_debug
+ echo 1 > /sys/module/safe/parameters/safe_debug
+ echo 1 > /sys/module/ixp4xx/parameters/ixp_debug
+ ...
+
+The ocf-bench driver accepts the following parameters:
+
+ request_q_len - Maximum number of outstanding requests to OCF
+ request_num - run for at least this many requests
+ request_size - size of each request (multiple of 16 bytes recommended)
+ request_batch - enable OCF request batching
+ request_cbimm - enable OCF immediate callback on completion
+
+For example:
+
+ modprobe ocf-bench request_size=1024 request_cbimm=0
+
+#######################
Testing the OCF support
------------------------
+#######################
+
+run "cryptotest", it should do a short test for a couple of
+des packets. If it does everything is working.
- run "cryptotest", it should do a short test for a couple of
- des packets. If it does everything is working.
+If this works, then ssh will use the driver when invoked as:
- If this works, then ssh will use the driver when invoked as:
+ ssh -c 3des username@host
- ssh -c 3des username@host
+to see for sure that it is operating, enable debug as defined above.
- to see for sure that it is operating, enable debug as defined above.
+To get a better idea of performance run:
- To get a better idea of performance run:
+ cryptotest 100 4096
- cryptotest 100 4096
+There are more options to cryptotest, see the help.
- There are more options to cryptotest, see the help.
+It is also possible to use openssl to test the speed of the crypto
+drivers.
- It is also possible to use openssl to test the speed of the crypto
- drivers.
+ openssl speed -evp des -engine cryptodev -elapsed
+ openssl speed -evp des3 -engine cryptodev -elapsed
+ openssl speed -evp aes128 -engine cryptodev -elapsed
- openssl speed -evp des -engine cryptodev -elapsed
- openssl speed -evp des3 -engine cryptodev -elapsed
- openssl speed -evp aes128 -engine cryptodev -elapsed
+and multiple threads (10) with:
- and multiple threads (10) with:
+ openssl speed -evp des -engine cryptodev -elapsed -multi 10
+ openssl speed -evp des3 -engine cryptodev -elapsed -multi 10
+ openssl speed -evp aes128 -engine cryptodev -elapsed -multi 10
- openssl speed -evp des -engine cryptodev -elapsed -multi 10
- openssl speed -evp des3 -engine cryptodev -elapsed -multi 10
- openssl speed -evp aes128 -engine cryptodev -elapsed -multi 10
+for public key testing you can try:
- for public key testing you can try:
+ cryptokeytest
+ openssl speed -engine cryptodev rsa -elapsed
+ openssl speed -engine cryptodev dsa -elapsed
- cryptokeytest
- openssl speed -engine cryptodev rsa -elapsed
- openssl speed -engine cryptodev dsa -elapsed
-David McCullough
-david_mccullough@mcafee.com
+#############################
+#
+# David McCullough
+# david_mccullough@mcafee.com
+#
+#############################