openssl/crypto/sparse_array.c
Pauli 1bdbdaffdc Properties for implementation selection.
Properties are a sequence of comma separated name=value pairs.  A name
without a corresponding value is assumed to be a Boolean and have the
true value 'yes'.  Values are either strings or numbers.  Strings can be
quoted either _"_ or _'_ or unquoted (with restrictions).  There are no
escape characters inside strings.  Number are either decimal digits or
'0x' followed by hexidecimal digits.  Numbers are represented internally
as signed sixty four bit values.

Queries on properties are a sequence comma separated conditional tests.
These take the form of name=value (equality test), name!=value (inequality
test) or name (Boolean test for truth).  Queries can be parsed, compared
against a definition or merged pairwise.

Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Tim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>
(Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/8224)
2019-02-18 13:28:14 +10:00

219 lines
5.8 KiB
C

/*
* Copyright 2019 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
* Copyright (c) 2019, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
*
* Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use
* this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
* in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
* https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html
*/
#include <openssl/crypto.h>
#include <openssl/bn.h>
#include "internal/sparse_array.h"
/*
* How many bits are used to index each level in the tree structre?
* This setting determines the number of pointers stored in each node of the
* tree used to represent the sparse array. Having more pointers reduces the
* depth of the tree but potentially wastes more memory. That is, this is a
* direct space versus time tradeoff.
*
* The large memory model uses twelve bits which means that the are 4096
* pointers in each tree node. This is more than sufficient to hold the
* largest defined NID (as of Feb 2019). This means that using a NID to
* index a sparse array becomes a constant time single array look up.
*
* The small memory model uses four bits which means the tree nodes contain
* sixteen pointers. This reduces the amount of unused space significantly
* at a cost in time.
*
* The library builder is also permitted to define other sizes in the closed
* interval [2, sizeof(size_t) * 8].
*/
#ifndef OPENSSL_SA_BLOCK_BITS
# ifdef OPENSSL_SMALL_FOOTPRINT
# define OPENSSL_SA_BLOCK_BITS 4
# else
# define OPENSSL_SA_BLOCK_BITS 12
# endif
#elif OPENSSL_SA_BLOCK_BITS < 2 || OPENSSL_SA_BLOCK_BITS > (BN_BITS2 - 1)
# error OPENSSL_SA_BLOCK_BITS is out of range
#endif
/*
* From the number of bits, work out:
* the number of pointers in a tree node;
* a bit mask to quickly extract an index and
* the maximum depth of the tree structure.
*/
#define SA_BLOCK_MAX (1 << OPENSSL_SA_BLOCK_BITS)
#define SA_BLOCK_MASK (SA_BLOCK_MAX - 1)
#define SA_BLOCK_MAX_LEVELS (((int)sizeof(size_t) * 8 \
+ OPENSSL_SA_BLOCK_BITS - 1) \
/ OPENSSL_SA_BLOCK_BITS)
struct sparse_array_st {
int levels;
size_t top;
size_t nelem;
void **nodes;
};
OPENSSL_SA *OPENSSL_SA_new(void)
{
OPENSSL_SA *res = OPENSSL_zalloc(sizeof(*res));
return res;
}
static void sa_doall(const OPENSSL_SA *sa, void (*node)(void **),
void (*leaf)(size_t, void *, void *), void *arg)
{
int i[SA_BLOCK_MAX_LEVELS];
void *nodes[SA_BLOCK_MAX_LEVELS];
size_t idx = 0;
int l = 0;
i[0] = 0;
nodes[0] = sa->nodes;
while (l >= 0) {
const int n = i[l];
void ** const p = nodes[l];
if (n >= SA_BLOCK_MAX) {
if (p != NULL && node != NULL)
(*node)(p);
l--;
idx >>= OPENSSL_SA_BLOCK_BITS;
} else {
i[l] = n + 1;
if (p != NULL && p[n] != NULL) {
idx = (idx & ~SA_BLOCK_MASK) | n;
if (l < sa->levels - 1) {
i[++l] = 0;
nodes[l] = p[n];
idx <<= OPENSSL_SA_BLOCK_BITS;
} else if (leaf != NULL) {
(*leaf)(idx, p[n], arg);
}
}
}
}
}
static void sa_free_node(void **p)
{
OPENSSL_free(p);
}
static void sa_free_leaf(size_t n, void *p, void *arg)
{
OPENSSL_free(p);
}
void OPENSSL_SA_free(OPENSSL_SA *sa)
{
sa_doall(sa, &sa_free_node, NULL, NULL);
OPENSSL_free(sa);
}
void OPENSSL_SA_free_leaves(OPENSSL_SA *sa)
{
sa_doall(sa, &sa_free_node, &sa_free_leaf, NULL);
OPENSSL_free(sa);
}
/* Wrap this in a structure to avoid compiler warnings */
struct trampoline_st {
void (*func)(size_t, void *);
};
static void trampoline(size_t n, void *l, void *arg)
{
((const struct trampoline_st *)arg)->func(n, l);
}
void OPENSSL_SA_doall(const OPENSSL_SA *sa, void (*leaf)(size_t, void *))
{
struct trampoline_st tramp;
tramp.func = leaf;
if (sa != NULL)
sa_doall(sa, NULL, &trampoline, &tramp);
}
void OPENSSL_SA_doall_arg(const OPENSSL_SA *sa,
void (*leaf)(size_t, void *, void *), void *arg)
{
if (sa != NULL)
sa_doall(sa, NULL, leaf, arg);
}
size_t OPENSSL_SA_num(const OPENSSL_SA *sa)
{
return sa == NULL ? 0 : sa->nelem;
}
void *OPENSSL_SA_get(const OPENSSL_SA *sa, size_t n)
{
int level;
void **p, *r = NULL;
if (sa == NULL)
return NULL;
if (n <= sa->top) {
p = sa->nodes;
for (level = sa->levels - 1; p != NULL && level > 0; level--)
p = (void **)p[(n >> (OPENSSL_SA_BLOCK_BITS * level))
& SA_BLOCK_MASK];
r = p == NULL ? NULL : p[n & SA_BLOCK_MASK];
}
return r;
}
static ossl_inline void **alloc_node(void)
{
return OPENSSL_zalloc(SA_BLOCK_MAX * sizeof(void *));
}
int OPENSSL_SA_set(OPENSSL_SA *sa, size_t posn, void *val)
{
int i, level = 1;
size_t n = posn;
void **p;
if (sa == NULL)
return 0;
for (level = 1; level < SA_BLOCK_MAX_LEVELS; level++)
if ((n >>= OPENSSL_SA_BLOCK_BITS) == 0)
break;
for (;sa->levels < level; sa->levels++) {
p = alloc_node();
if (p == NULL)
return 0;
p[0] = sa->nodes;
sa->nodes = p;
}
if (sa->top < posn)
sa->top = posn;
p = sa->nodes;
for (level = sa->levels - 1; level > 0; level--) {
i = (posn >> (OPENSSL_SA_BLOCK_BITS * level)) & SA_BLOCK_MASK;
if (p[i] == NULL && (p[i] = alloc_node()) == NULL)
return 0;
p = p[i];
}
p += posn & SA_BLOCK_MASK;
if (val == NULL && *p != NULL)
sa->nelem--;
else if (val != NULL && *p == NULL)
sa->nelem++;
*p = val;
return 1;
}