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8039afa)
The `RDRAND' instruction can fail, leaving carry clear. Previously, I
just exposed the carry flag in a register (with `SETC'), and looped
around in C.
Rewrite the loop in assembler. This is makes the flow cleaner, and
(coincidentally) avoids a dependency on the `SETcc' instructions (though
if I thought a processor might have `RDRAND' and not `SETcc', I wouldn't
have written the original code the way I did). But the main benefit is
that I don't have nightmares about seeing
...; setc al; test al, al; ...
sequences any more. There's still the issue of `i' being tested for
zero twice, but I don't think I can fix that without resorting to `asm
goto', and that has its own problems.
static int rdrand_quick(rand_pool *r)
{
unsigned long rr;
static int rdrand_quick(rand_pool *r)
{
unsigned long rr;
- unsigned char w;
- int i;
-
- for (i = 0; i < 16; i++) {
- __asm__ ("rdrand %0; setc %1" : "=r" (rr), "=g" (w) : : "cc");
- if (w) {
- rand_add(r, &rr, sizeof(rr), 8*sizeof(rr));
- return (0);
- }
- }
- return (-1);
+ int i = 16;
+
+ __asm__ ("0: rdrand %0; jc 9f; dec %1; jnz 0b; 9:"
+ : "=r" (rr), "=r" (i) : "1" (i) : "cc");
+ if (!i) return (-1);
+ rand_add(r, &rr, sizeof(rr), 8*sizeof(rr));
+ return (0);