Dear Stephan,
Thank you for the quick reply. Am 10.11.20 um 10:25 schrieb Stephan Mueller:
Am Montag, 9. November 2020, 20:31:02 CET schrieb Paul Menzel:
By mistake I built `XFRM_ESP` into the Linux kernel, resulting in CONFIG_CRYPTO_SEQIV=y CONFIG_CRYPTO_ECHAINIV=y and also the Jitterentropy RNG to be built in. CRYPTO_JITTERENTROPY=y So, on the Asus F2A85-M PRO starting Linux 4.10-rc3 with `initcall_debug`, the init method is run unconditionally, and it takes 17.5 ms, which is over ten percent of the overall 900 ms the LinuxHm, 17.5 / 900 = 2%, or am I missing something?
Indeed, that is embarrassing. My bad.
kernel needs until loading the init process. [ 0.300544] calling jent_mod_init+0x0/0x2c @ 1 [ 0.318438] initcall jent_mod_init+0x0/0x2c returned 0 after 17471 usecs Looking at the output of systemd-bootchart, it looks like, that this indeed delayed the boot a little, as the other init methods seem to be ordered after it. I am now building it as a module, but am wondering if the time can be reduced to below ten milliseconds.What you see is the test whether the Jitter RNG has a proper noise source. The function jent_entropy_init() is the cause of the operation. It performs 1024 times a test to validate the appropriateness of the noise source. You can adjust that with the TESTLOOPCOUNT in this function. But I am not sure adjusting is a wise course of action.
Out of curiosity, why 1024 and not, for example, 128 or 2048? Is there some statistics behind it?
Kind regards, Paul
