linux/Documentation/crc32.txt
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   1=================================
   2brief tutorial on CRC computation
   3=================================
   4
   5A CRC is a long-division remainder.  You add the CRC to the message,
   6and the whole thing (message+CRC) is a multiple of the given
   7CRC polynomial.  To check the CRC, you can either check that the
   8CRC matches the recomputed value, *or* you can check that the
   9remainder computed on the message+CRC is 0.  This latter approach
  10is used by a lot of hardware implementations, and is why so many
  11protocols put the end-of-frame flag after the CRC.
  12
  13It's actually the same long division you learned in school, except that:
  14
  15- We're working in binary, so the digits are only 0 and 1, and
  16- When dividing polynomials, there are no carries.  Rather than add and
  17  subtract, we just xor.  Thus, we tend to get a bit sloppy about
  18  the difference between adding and subtracting.
  19
  20Like all division, the remainder is always smaller than the divisor.
  21To produce a 32-bit CRC, the divisor is actually a 33-bit CRC polynomial.
  22Since it's 33 bits long, bit 32 is always going to be set, so usually the
  23CRC is written in hex with the most significant bit omitted.  (If you're
  24familiar with the IEEE 754 floating-point format, it's the same idea.)
  25
  26Note that a CRC is computed over a string of *bits*, so you have
  27to decide on the endianness of the bits within each byte.  To get
  28the best error-detecting properties, this should correspond to the
  29order they're actually sent.  For example, standard RS-232 serial is
  30little-endian; the most significant bit (sometimes used for parity)
  31is sent last.  And when appending a CRC word to a message, you should
  32do it in the right order, matching the endianness.
  33
  34Just like with ordinary division, you proceed one digit (bit) at a time.
  35Each step of the division you take one more digit (bit) of the dividend
  36and append it to the current remainder.  Then you figure out the
  37appropriate multiple of the divisor to subtract to being the remainder
  38back into range.  In binary, this is easy - it has to be either 0 or 1,
  39and to make the XOR cancel, it's just a copy of bit 32 of the remainder.
  40
  41When computing a CRC, we don't care about the quotient, so we can
  42throw the quotient bit away, but subtract the appropriate multiple of
  43the polynomial from the remainder and we're back to where we started,
  44ready to process the next bit.
  45
  46A big-endian CRC written this way would be coded like::
  47
  48        for (i = 0; i < input_bits; i++) {
  49                multiple = remainder & 0x80000000 ? CRCPOLY : 0;
  50                remainder = (remainder << 1 | next_input_bit()) ^ multiple;
  51        }
  52
  53Notice how, to get at bit 32 of the shifted remainder, we look
  54at bit 31 of the remainder *before* shifting it.
  55
  56But also notice how the next_input_bit() bits we're shifting into
  57the remainder don't actually affect any decision-making until
  5832 bits later.  Thus, the first 32 cycles of this are pretty boring.
  59Also, to add the CRC to a message, we need a 32-bit-long hole for it at
  60the end, so we have to add 32 extra cycles shifting in zeros at the
  61end of every message.
  62
  63These details lead to a standard trick: rearrange merging in the
  64next_input_bit() until the moment it's needed.  Then the first 32 cycles
  65can be precomputed, and merging in the final 32 zero bits to make room
  66for the CRC can be skipped entirely.  This changes the code to::
  67
  68        for (i = 0; i < input_bits; i++) {
  69                remainder ^= next_input_bit() << 31;
  70                multiple = (remainder & 0x80000000) ? CRCPOLY : 0;
  71                remainder = (remainder << 1) ^ multiple;
  72        }
  73
  74With this optimization, the little-endian code is particularly simple::
  75
  76        for (i = 0; i < input_bits; i++) {
  77                remainder ^= next_input_bit();
  78                multiple = (remainder & 1) ? CRCPOLY : 0;
  79                remainder = (remainder >> 1) ^ multiple;
  80        }
  81
  82The most significant coefficient of the remainder polynomial is stored
  83in the least significant bit of the binary "remainder" variable.
  84The other details of endianness have been hidden in CRCPOLY (which must
  85be bit-reversed) and next_input_bit().
  86
  87As long as next_input_bit is returning the bits in a sensible order, we don't
  88*have* to wait until the last possible moment to merge in additional bits.
  89We can do it 8 bits at a time rather than 1 bit at a time::
  90
  91        for (i = 0; i < input_bytes; i++) {
  92                remainder ^= next_input_byte() << 24;
  93                for (j = 0; j < 8; j++) {
  94                        multiple = (remainder & 0x80000000) ? CRCPOLY : 0;
  95                        remainder = (remainder << 1) ^ multiple;
  96                }
  97        }
  98
  99Or in little-endian::
 100
 101        for (i = 0; i < input_bytes; i++) {
 102                remainder ^= next_input_byte();
 103                for (j = 0; j < 8; j++) {
 104                        multiple = (remainder & 1) ? CRCPOLY : 0;
 105                        remainder = (remainder >> 1) ^ multiple;
 106                }
 107        }
 108
 109If the input is a multiple of 32 bits, you can even XOR in a 32-bit
 110word at a time and increase the inner loop count to 32.
 111
 112You can also mix and match the two loop styles, for example doing the
 113bulk of a message byte-at-a-time and adding bit-at-a-time processing
 114for any fractional bytes at the end.
 115
 116To reduce the number of conditional branches, software commonly uses
 117the byte-at-a-time table method, popularized by Dilip V. Sarwate,
 118"Computation of Cyclic Redundancy Checks via Table Look-Up", Comm. ACM
 119v.31 no.8 (August 1998) p. 1008-1013.
 120
 121Here, rather than just shifting one bit of the remainder to decide
 122in the correct multiple to subtract, we can shift a byte at a time.
 123This produces a 40-bit (rather than a 33-bit) intermediate remainder,
 124and the correct multiple of the polynomial to subtract is found using
 125a 256-entry lookup table indexed by the high 8 bits.
 126
 127(The table entries are simply the CRC-32 of the given one-byte messages.)
 128
 129When space is more constrained, smaller tables can be used, e.g. two
 1304-bit shifts followed by a lookup in a 16-entry table.
 131
 132It is not practical to process much more than 8 bits at a time using this
 133technique, because tables larger than 256 entries use too much memory and,
 134more importantly, too much of the L1 cache.
 135
 136To get higher software performance, a "slicing" technique can be used.
 137See "High Octane CRC Generation with the Intel Slicing-by-8 Algorithm",
 138ftp://download.intel.com/technology/comms/perfnet/download/slicing-by-8.pdf
 139
 140This does not change the number of table lookups, but does increase
 141the parallelism.  With the classic Sarwate algorithm, each table lookup
 142must be completed before the index of the next can be computed.
 143
 144A "slicing by 2" technique would shift the remainder 16 bits at a time,
 145producing a 48-bit intermediate remainder.  Rather than doing a single
 146lookup in a 65536-entry table, the two high bytes are looked up in
 147two different 256-entry tables.  Each contains the remainder required
 148to cancel out the corresponding byte.  The tables are different because the
 149polynomials to cancel are different.  One has non-zero coefficients from
 150x^32 to x^39, while the other goes from x^40 to x^47.
 151
 152Since modern processors can handle many parallel memory operations, this
 153takes barely longer than a single table look-up and thus performs almost
 154twice as fast as the basic Sarwate algorithm.
 155
 156This can be extended to "slicing by 4" using 4 256-entry tables.
 157Each step, 32 bits of data is fetched, XORed with the CRC, and the result
 158broken into bytes and looked up in the tables.  Because the 32-bit shift
 159leaves the low-order bits of the intermediate remainder zero, the
 160final CRC is simply the XOR of the 4 table look-ups.
 161
 162But this still enforces sequential execution: a second group of table
 163look-ups cannot begin until the previous groups 4 table look-ups have all
 164been completed.  Thus, the processor's load/store unit is sometimes idle.
 165
 166To make maximum use of the processor, "slicing by 8" performs 8 look-ups
 167in parallel.  Each step, the 32-bit CRC is shifted 64 bits and XORed
 168with 64 bits of input data.  What is important to note is that 4 of
 169those 8 bytes are simply copies of the input data; they do not depend
 170on the previous CRC at all.  Thus, those 4 table look-ups may commence
 171immediately, without waiting for the previous loop iteration.
 172
 173By always having 4 loads in flight, a modern superscalar processor can
 174be kept busy and make full use of its L1 cache.
 175
 176Two more details about CRC implementation in the real world:
 177
 178Normally, appending zero bits to a message which is already a multiple
 179of a polynomial produces a larger multiple of that polynomial.  Thus,
 180a basic CRC will not detect appended zero bits (or bytes).  To enable
 181a CRC to detect this condition, it's common to invert the CRC before
 182appending it.  This makes the remainder of the message+crc come out not
 183as zero, but some fixed non-zero value.  (The CRC of the inversion
 184pattern, 0xffffffff.)
 185
 186The same problem applies to zero bits prepended to the message, and a
 187similar solution is used.  Instead of starting the CRC computation with
 188a remainder of 0, an initial remainder of all ones is used.  As long as
 189you start the same way on decoding, it doesn't make a difference.
 190