| All assember in this directory are just version of the file |
| crypto/bn/bn_mulw.c. |
| |
| Quite a few of these files are just the assember output from gcc since on |
| quite a few machines they are 2 times faster than the system compiler. |
| |
| For the x86, I have hand written assember because of the bad job all |
| compilers seem to do on it. This normally gives a 2 time speed up in the RSA |
| routines. |
| |
| For the DEC alpha, I also hand wrote the assember (except the division which |
| is just the output from the C compiler pasted on the end of the file). |
| On the 2 alpha C compilers I had access to, it was not possible to do |
| 64b x 64b -> 128b calculations (both long and the long long data types |
| were 64 bits). So the hand assember gives access to the 128 bit result and |
| a 2 times speedup :-). |
| |
| The x86xxxx.obj files are the assembled version of x86xxxx.asm files. |
| I had such a hard time finding a macro assember for Microsoft, I decided to |
| include the object file to save others the hassle :-). |
| |
| I have also included uu encoded versions of the .obj incase they get |
| trashed. |
| |
| There are 2 versions of assember for the HP PA-RISC. |
| pa-risc.s is the origional one which works fine. |
| pa-risc2.s is a new version that often generates warnings but if the |
| tests pass, it gives performance that is over 2 times faster than |
| pa-risc.s. |
| Both were generated using gcc :-) |