On Sun, 2013-04-28 at 08:11 +0800, Herbert Xu wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 26, 2013 at 09:44:17AM -0700, Tim Chen wrote:
> >
> > +   old_tfm = crct10dif_tfm;
> > +   crc_t10dif_newalg = true;
> > +   /* make sure new alg flag is turned on before starting to switch tfm */
> > +   mb();
> > +
> > +   new_tfm = crypto_alloc_shash("crct10dif", 0, 0);
> > +   if (IS_ERR(new_tfm))
> > +           goto done;
> > +
> > +   if (old_tfm)
> > +           if (crypto_tfm_alg_priority(&old_tfm->base) >=
> > +               crypto_tfm_alg_priority(&new_tfm->base)) {
> > +                   crypto_free_shash(new_tfm);
> > +                   goto done;
> > +           }
> > +   crct10dif_tfm = new_tfm;
> > +   /* make sure update to tfm pointer is completed */
> > +   mb();
> > +   crypto_free_shash(old_tfm);
> 
> This is not safe at all.  You'd need to use something like RCU.
> 
> However, I think this is an overkill.  Initialising it once should
> be enough.  If someone really wanted to change things at run-time,
> they could always build this as a module and unload/reload it.
> 

If I allocate the transform under the mod init instead, how can I make
sure that the fast version is already registered if I have it compiled
in?  It is not clear to me how that's done looking at the libcrc32c
code.  

Thanks.

Tim

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