[CRYPTO] Use standard byte order macros wherever possible
A lot of crypto code needs to read/write a 32-bit/64-bit words in a
specific gender. Many of them open code them by reading/writing one
byte at a time. This patch converts all the applicable usages over
to use the standard byte order macros.
This is based on a previous patch by Denis Vlasenko.
Signed-off-by: Herbert Xu <herbert@gondor.apana.org.au>
diff --git a/crypto/aes.c b/crypto/aes.c
index 5df9288..35a11de 100644
--- a/crypto/aes.c
+++ b/crypto/aes.c
@@ -73,9 +73,6 @@
return x >> (n << 3);
}
-#define u32_in(x) le32_to_cpu(*(const u32 *)(x))
-#define u32_out(to, from) (*(u32 *)(to) = cpu_to_le32(from))
-
struct aes_ctx {
int key_length;
u32 E[60];
@@ -256,6 +253,7 @@
aes_set_key(void *ctx_arg, const u8 *in_key, unsigned int key_len, u32 *flags)
{
struct aes_ctx *ctx = ctx_arg;
+ const __le32 *key = (const __le32 *)in_key;
u32 i, t, u, v, w;
if (key_len != 16 && key_len != 24 && key_len != 32) {
@@ -265,10 +263,10 @@
ctx->key_length = key_len;
- E_KEY[0] = u32_in (in_key);
- E_KEY[1] = u32_in (in_key + 4);
- E_KEY[2] = u32_in (in_key + 8);
- E_KEY[3] = u32_in (in_key + 12);
+ E_KEY[0] = le32_to_cpu(key[0]);
+ E_KEY[1] = le32_to_cpu(key[1]);
+ E_KEY[2] = le32_to_cpu(key[2]);
+ E_KEY[3] = le32_to_cpu(key[3]);
switch (key_len) {
case 16:
@@ -278,17 +276,17 @@
break;
case 24:
- E_KEY[4] = u32_in (in_key + 16);
- t = E_KEY[5] = u32_in (in_key + 20);
+ E_KEY[4] = le32_to_cpu(key[4]);
+ t = E_KEY[5] = le32_to_cpu(key[5]);
for (i = 0; i < 8; ++i)
loop6 (i);
break;
case 32:
- E_KEY[4] = u32_in (in_key + 16);
- E_KEY[5] = u32_in (in_key + 20);
- E_KEY[6] = u32_in (in_key + 24);
- t = E_KEY[7] = u32_in (in_key + 28);
+ E_KEY[4] = le32_to_cpu(key[4]);
+ E_KEY[5] = le32_to_cpu(key[5]);
+ E_KEY[6] = le32_to_cpu(key[6]);
+ t = E_KEY[7] = le32_to_cpu(key[7]);
for (i = 0; i < 7; ++i)
loop8 (i);
break;
@@ -324,13 +322,15 @@
static void aes_encrypt(void *ctx_arg, u8 *out, const u8 *in)
{
const struct aes_ctx *ctx = ctx_arg;
+ const __le32 *src = (const __le32 *)in;
+ __le32 *dst = (__le32 *)out;
u32 b0[4], b1[4];
const u32 *kp = E_KEY + 4;
- b0[0] = u32_in (in) ^ E_KEY[0];
- b0[1] = u32_in (in + 4) ^ E_KEY[1];
- b0[2] = u32_in (in + 8) ^ E_KEY[2];
- b0[3] = u32_in (in + 12) ^ E_KEY[3];
+ b0[0] = le32_to_cpu(src[0]) ^ E_KEY[0];
+ b0[1] = le32_to_cpu(src[1]) ^ E_KEY[1];
+ b0[2] = le32_to_cpu(src[2]) ^ E_KEY[2];
+ b0[3] = le32_to_cpu(src[3]) ^ E_KEY[3];
if (ctx->key_length > 24) {
f_nround (b1, b0, kp);
@@ -353,10 +353,10 @@
f_nround (b1, b0, kp);
f_lround (b0, b1, kp);
- u32_out (out, b0[0]);
- u32_out (out + 4, b0[1]);
- u32_out (out + 8, b0[2]);
- u32_out (out + 12, b0[3]);
+ dst[0] = cpu_to_le32(b0[0]);
+ dst[1] = cpu_to_le32(b0[1]);
+ dst[2] = cpu_to_le32(b0[2]);
+ dst[3] = cpu_to_le32(b0[3]);
}
/* decrypt a block of text */
@@ -377,14 +377,16 @@
static void aes_decrypt(void *ctx_arg, u8 *out, const u8 *in)
{
const struct aes_ctx *ctx = ctx_arg;
+ const __le32 *src = (const __le32 *)in;
+ __le32 *dst = (__le32 *)out;
u32 b0[4], b1[4];
const int key_len = ctx->key_length;
const u32 *kp = D_KEY + key_len + 20;
- b0[0] = u32_in (in) ^ E_KEY[key_len + 24];
- b0[1] = u32_in (in + 4) ^ E_KEY[key_len + 25];
- b0[2] = u32_in (in + 8) ^ E_KEY[key_len + 26];
- b0[3] = u32_in (in + 12) ^ E_KEY[key_len + 27];
+ b0[0] = le32_to_cpu(src[0]) ^ E_KEY[key_len + 24];
+ b0[1] = le32_to_cpu(src[1]) ^ E_KEY[key_len + 25];
+ b0[2] = le32_to_cpu(src[2]) ^ E_KEY[key_len + 26];
+ b0[3] = le32_to_cpu(src[3]) ^ E_KEY[key_len + 27];
if (key_len > 24) {
i_nround (b1, b0, kp);
@@ -407,10 +409,10 @@
i_nround (b1, b0, kp);
i_lround (b0, b1, kp);
- u32_out (out, b0[0]);
- u32_out (out + 4, b0[1]);
- u32_out (out + 8, b0[2]);
- u32_out (out + 12, b0[3]);
+ dst[0] = cpu_to_le32(b0[0]);
+ dst[1] = cpu_to_le32(b0[1]);
+ dst[2] = cpu_to_le32(b0[2]);
+ dst[3] = cpu_to_le32(b0[3]);
}