> From: Mattias Rönnblom [mailto:mattias.ronnb...@ericsson.com]
> Sent: Friday, 8 July 2022 14.44
> 
> On 2022-07-07 23:44, Morten Brørup wrote:
> >> From: Mattias Rönnblom [mailto:hof...@lysator.liu.se]
> >> Sent: Thursday, 7 July 2022 20.35
> >>
> >> From: Mattias Rönnblom <mattias.ronnb...@ericsson.com>
> >>
> >> __rte_raw_cksum() (used by rte_raw_cksum() among others) accessed
> its
> >> data through an uint16_t pointer, which allowed the compiler to
> assume
> >> the data was 16-bit aligned. This in turn would, with certain
> >> architectures and compiler flag combinations, result in code with
> SIMD
> >> load or store instructions with restrictions on data alignment.
> >>
> >> This patch keeps the old algorithm, but data is read using memcpy()
> >> instead of direct pointer access, forcing the compiler to always
> >> generate code that handles unaligned input. The __may_alias__ GCC
> >> attribute is no longer needed.
> >>
> >> The data on which the Internet checksum functions operates are
> almost
> >> always 16-bit aligned, but there are exceptions. In particular, the
> >> PDCP protocol header may (literally) have an odd size.
> >>
> >> Performance impact seems to range from none to a very slight
> >> regression.
> >>
> >> Bugzilla ID: 1035
> >> Cc: sta...@dpdk.org
> >>
> >> Signed-off-by: Mattias Rönnblom <mattias.ronnb...@ericsson.com>
> >> ---
> >>   lib/net/rte_ip.h | 19 ++++++++++++-------
> >>   1 file changed, 12 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-)
> >>
> >> diff --git a/lib/net/rte_ip.h b/lib/net/rte_ip.h
> >> index b502481670..a9e6251f14 100644
> >> --- a/lib/net/rte_ip.h
> >> +++ b/lib/net/rte_ip.h
> >> @@ -160,18 +160,23 @@ rte_ipv4_hdr_len(const struct rte_ipv4_hdr
> >> *ipv4_hdr)
> >>   static inline uint32_t
> >>   __rte_raw_cksum(const void *buf, size_t len, uint32_t sum)
> >>   {
> >> -  /* extend strict-aliasing rules */
> >> -  typedef uint16_t __attribute__((__may_alias__)) u16_p;
> >> -  const u16_p *u16_buf = (const u16_p *)buf;
> >> -  const u16_p *end = u16_buf + len / sizeof(*u16_buf);
> >> +  const void *end;
> >
> > I would set "end" here instead, possibly making the pointer const
> too. And add spaces around '/'.
> > const void * const end = RTE_PTR_ADD(buf, (len / sizeof(uint16_t)) *
> sizeof(uint16_t));
> >
> 
> I don't think that makes the code more readable.

It's only a matter of taste... Your code, your decision. :-)

I think the spaces are required by the coding standard; not sure, though.

> 
> >>
> >> -  for (; u16_buf != end; ++u16_buf)
> >> -          sum += *u16_buf;
> >> +  for (end = RTE_PTR_ADD(buf, (len/sizeof(uint16_t)) *
> >> sizeof(uint16_t));
> >> +       buf != end; buf = RTE_PTR_ADD(buf, sizeof(uint16_t))) {
> >> +          uint16_t v;
> >> +
> >> +          memcpy(&v, buf, sizeof(uint16_t));
> >> +          sum += v;
> >> +  }
> >>
> >>    /* if length is odd, keeping it byte order independent */
> >>    if (unlikely(len % 2)) {
> >> +          uint8_t last;
> >>            uint16_t left = 0;
> >> -          *(unsigned char *)&left = *(const unsigned char *)end;
> >> +
> >> +          memcpy(&last, end, 1);
> >> +          *(unsigned char *)&left = last;
> >
> > Couldn't you just memcpy(&left, end, 1), and omit the temporary
> variable "last"?
> >
> 
> Good point.
> 
> I don't like how this code is clever vis-à-vis byte order, but then I
> also don't have a better suggestion.

The byte ordering cleverness has its roots in RFC 1071.

Stephen suggested using a union, although in a slightly different context. I'm 
not sure it will be more readable here, because it will require #ifdef to 
support byte ordering. Just thought I'd mention it, for your consideration.

Your patch v2 just reached my inbox, and it looks good. No further response to 
this email is expected.

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