Andy Polyakov bb98f6bef6 Adapt ARM assembly pack for iOS.
This is achieved by filtering perlasm output through arm-xlate.pl. But note
that it's done only if "flavour" argument is not 'void'. As 'void' is
default value for other ARM targets, permasm output is not actually
filtered on previously validated platforms.

Reviewed-by: Dr. Stephen Henson <steve@openssl.org>
(cherry picked from commit 874faf2ffb22187ad5483d9691a3a2eb7112f161)
2015-05-13 17:59:22 +02:00
..
2015-05-13 17:59:22 +02:00
2015-05-13 17:59:22 +02:00
2005-08-10 08:28:36 +00:00
2000-12-15 10:42:11 +00:00
2010-11-22 21:55:07 +00:00
2011-02-23 16:06:33 +00:00
2011-05-22 18:29:11 +00:00
1999-02-12 19:05:10 +00:00

<OBSOLETE>

All assember in this directory are just version of the file
crypto/bn/bn_asm.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 :-).

There are 3 versions of assember for the HP PA-RISC.

pa-risc.s is the origional one which works fine and generated using gcc :-)

pa-risc2W.s and pa-risc2.s are 64 and 32-bit PA-RISC 2.0 implementations
by Chris Ruemmler from HP (with some help from the HP C compiler).

</OBSOLETE>