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							- =pod
 
- =head1 NAME
 
- OPENSSL_ia32cap - the x86[_64] processor capabilities vector
 
- =head1 SYNOPSIS
 
-  env OPENSSL_ia32cap=... <application>
 
- =head1 DESCRIPTION
 
- OpenSSL supports a range of x86[_64] instruction set extensions. These
 
- extensions are denoted by individual bits in capability vector returned
 
- by processor in EDX:ECX register pair after executing CPUID instruction
 
- with EAX=1 input value (see Intel Application Note #241618). This vector
 
- is copied to memory upon toolkit initialization and used to choose
 
- between different code paths to provide optimal performance across wide
 
- range of processors. For the moment of this writing following bits are
 
- significant:
 
- =over 4
 
- =item bit #4 denoting presence of Time-Stamp Counter.
 
- =item bit #19 denoting availability of CLFLUSH instruction;
 
- =item bit #20, reserved by Intel, is used to choose among RC4 code paths;
 
- =item bit #23 denoting MMX support;
 
- =item bit #24, FXSR bit, denoting availability of XMM registers;
 
- =item bit #25 denoting SSE support;
 
- =item bit #26 denoting SSE2 support;
 
- =item bit #28 denoting Hyperthreading, which is used to distinguish
 
- cores with shared cache;
 
- =item bit #30, reserved by Intel, denotes specifically Intel CPUs;
 
- =item bit #33 denoting availability of PCLMULQDQ instruction;
 
- =item bit #41 denoting SSSE3, Supplemental SSE3, support;
 
- =item bit #43 denoting AMD XOP support (forced to zero on non-AMD CPUs);
 
- =item bit #54 denoting availability of MOVBE instruction;
 
- =item bit #57 denoting AES-NI instruction set extension;
 
- =item bit #58, XSAVE bit, lack of which in combination with MOVBE is used
 
- to identify Atom Silvermont core;
 
- =item bit #59, OSXSAVE bit, denoting availability of YMM registers;
 
- =item bit #60 denoting AVX extension;
 
- =item bit #62 denoting availability of RDRAND instruction;
 
- =back
 
- For example, in 32-bit application context clearing bit #26 at run-time
 
- disables high-performance SSE2 code present in the crypto library, while
 
- clearing bit #24 disables SSE2 code operating on 128-bit XMM register
 
- bank. You might have to do the latter if target OpenSSL application is
 
- executed on SSE2 capable CPU, but under control of OS that does not
 
- enable XMM registers. Historically address of the capability vector copy
 
- was exposed to application through OPENSSL_ia32cap_loc(), but not
 
- anymore. Now the only way to affect the capability detection is to set
 
- B<OPENSSL_ia32cap> environment variable prior target application start. To
 
- give a specific example, on Intel P4 processor
 
- C<env OPENSSL_ia32cap=0x16980010 apps/openssl>, or better yet
 
- C<env OPENSSL_ia32cap=~0x1000000 apps/openssl> would achieve the desired
 
- effect. Alternatively you can reconfigure the toolkit with no-sse2
 
- option and recompile.
 
- Less intuitive is clearing bit #28, or ~0x10000000 in the "environment
 
- variable" terms. The truth is that it's not copied from CPUID output
 
- verbatim, but is adjusted to reflect whether or not the data cache is
 
- actually shared between logical cores. This in turn affects the decision
 
- on whether or not expensive countermeasures against cache-timing attacks
 
- are applied, most notably in AES assembler module.
 
- The capability vector is further extended with EBX value returned by
 
- CPUID with EAX=7 and ECX=0 as input. Following bits are significant:
 
- =over 4
 
- =item bit #64+3 denoting availability of BMI1 instructions, e.g. ANDN;
 
- =item bit #64+5 denoting availability of AVX2 instructions;
 
- =item bit #64+8 denoting availability of BMI2 instructions, e.g. MULX
 
- and RORX;
 
- =item bit #64+16 denoting availability of AVX512F extension;
 
- =item bit #64+17 denoting availability of AVX512DQ extension;
 
- =item bit #64+18 denoting availability of RDSEED instruction;
 
- =item bit #64+19 denoting availability of ADCX and ADOX instructions;
 
- =item bit #64+21 denoting availability of VPMADD52[LH]UQ instructions,
 
- aka AVX512IFMA extension;
 
- =item bit #64+29 denoting availability of SHA extension;
 
- =item bit #64+30 denoting availability of AVX512BW extension;
 
- =item bit #64+31 denoting availability of AVX512VL extension;
 
- =item bit #64+41 denoting availability of VAES extension;
 
- =item bit #64+42 denoting availability of VPCLMULQDQ extension;
 
- =back
 
- To control this extended capability word use C<:> as delimiter when
 
- setting up B<OPENSSL_ia32cap> environment variable. For example assigning
 
- C<:~0x20> would disable AVX2 code paths, and C<:0> - all post-AVX
 
- extensions.
 
- =head1 RETURN VALUES
 
- Not available.
 
- =head1 COPYRIGHT
 
- Copyright 2004-2022 The OpenSSL Project Authors. 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
 
- L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.
 
- =cut
 
 
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