On Sat, May 10, 2025 at 05:41:09PM -0700, Eric Biggers wrote:
+static inline void nvme_tcp_ddgst_init(u32 *crcp)
{
+ *crcp = ~0;
}
This helper looks really odd. It coud just return the value, or
we could just assign it there using a seed define, e.g. this is what
XFS does:
#define XFS_CRC_SEED (~(uint32_t)0)
nd that might in fact be worth lifting to common code with a good
comment on why all-d is used as the typical crc32 seed.
+static inline void nvme_tcp_ddgst_final(u32 *crcp, __le32 *ddgst)
{
+ *ddgst = cpu_to_le32(~*crcp);
+}
Just return the big endian version calculated here?
+static inline void nvme_tcp_hdgst(void *pdu, size_t len)
+{
+ put_unaligned_le32(~crc32c(~0, pdu, len), pdu + len);
}
This could also use the seed define mentioned above.
recv_digest = *(__le32 *)(pdu + hdr->hlen);
- nvme_tcp_hdgst(queue->rcv_hash, pdu, pdu_len);
+ nvme_tcp_hdgst(pdu, pdu_len);
exp_digest = *(__le32 *)(pdu + hdr->hlen);
if (recv_digest != exp_digest) {
This code looks really weird, as it samples the on-the-wire digest
first and then overwrites it. I'd expect to just check the on-the-wire
on against one calculated in a local variable.
Sagi, any idea what is going on here?
Otherwise this looks great. It's always good to get rid of the
horrendous crypto API calls.