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linux-next/lib/zstd/decompress/zstd_decompress_block.h
Nick Terrell e0c1b49f5b lib: zstd: Upgrade to latest upstream zstd version 1.4.10
Upgrade to the latest upstream zstd version 1.4.10.

This patch is 100% generated from upstream zstd commit 20821a46f412 [0].

This patch is very large because it is transitioning from the custom
kernel zstd to using upstream directly. The new zstd follows upstreams
file structure which is different. Future update patches will be much
smaller because they will only contain the changes from one upstream
zstd release.

As an aid for review I've created a commit [1] that shows the diff
between upstream zstd as-is (which doesn't compile), and the zstd
code imported in this patch. The verion of zstd in this patch is
generated from upstream with changes applied by automation to replace
upstreams libc dependencies, remove unnecessary portability macros,
replace `/**` comments with `/*` comments, and use the kernel's xxhash
instead of bundling it.

The benefits of this patch are as follows:
1. Using upstream directly with automated script to generate kernel
   code. This allows us to update the kernel every upstream release, so
   the kernel gets the latest bug fixes and performance improvements,
   and doesn't get 3 years out of date again. The automation and the
   translated code are tested every upstream commit to ensure it
   continues to work.
2. Upgrades from a custom zstd based on 1.3.1 to 1.4.10, getting 3 years
   of performance improvements and bug fixes. On x86_64 I've measured
   15% faster BtrFS and SquashFS decompression+read speeds, 35% faster
   kernel decompression, and 30% faster ZRAM decompression+read speeds.
3. Zstd-1.4.10 supports negative compression levels, which allow zstd to
   match or subsume lzo's performance.
4. Maintains the same kernel-specific wrapper API, so no callers have to
   be modified with zstd version updates.

One concern that was brought up was stack usage. Upstream zstd had
already removed most of its heavy stack usage functions, but I just
removed the last functions that allocate arrays on the stack. I've
measured the high water mark for both compression and decompression
before and after this patch. Decompression is approximately neutral,
using about 1.2KB of stack space. Compression levels up to 3 regressed
from 1.4KB -> 1.6KB, and higher compression levels regressed from 1.5KB
-> 2KB. We've added unit tests upstream to prevent further regression.
I believe that this is a reasonable increase, and if it does end up
causing problems, this commit can be cleanly reverted, because it only
touches zstd.

I chose the bulk update instead of replaying upstream commits because
there have been ~3500 upstream commits since the 1.3.1 release, zstd
wasn't ready to be used in the kernel as-is before a month ago, and not
all upstream zstd commits build. The bulk update preserves bisectablity
because bugs can be bisected to the zstd version update. At that point
the update can be reverted, and we can work with upstream to find and
fix the bug.

Note that upstream zstd release 1.4.10 doesn't exist yet. I have cut a
staging branch at 20821a46f412 [0] and will apply any changes requested
to the staging branch. Once we're ready to merge this update I will cut
a zstd release at the commit we merge, so we have a known zstd release
in the kernel.

The implementation of the kernel API is contained in
zstd_compress_module.c and zstd_decompress_module.c.

[0] 20821a46f4
[1] e0fa481d0e

Signed-off-by: Nick Terrell <terrelln@fb.com>
Tested By: Paul Jones <paul@pauljones.id.au>
Tested-by: Oleksandr Natalenko <oleksandr@natalenko.name>
Tested-by: Sedat Dilek <sedat.dilek@gmail.com> # LLVM/Clang v13.0.0 on x86-64
Tested-by: Jean-Denis Girard <jd.girard@sysnux.pf>
2021-11-08 16:55:32 -08:00

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2.2 KiB
C

/*
* Copyright (c) Yann Collet, Facebook, Inc.
* All rights reserved.
*
* This source code is licensed under both the BSD-style license (found in the
* LICENSE file in the root directory of this source tree) and the GPLv2 (found
* in the COPYING file in the root directory of this source tree).
* You may select, at your option, one of the above-listed licenses.
*/
#ifndef ZSTD_DEC_BLOCK_H
#define ZSTD_DEC_BLOCK_H
/*-*******************************************************
* Dependencies
*********************************************************/
#include "../common/zstd_deps.h" /* size_t */
#include <linux/zstd.h> /* DCtx, and some public functions */
#include "../common/zstd_internal.h" /* blockProperties_t, and some public functions */
#include "zstd_decompress_internal.h" /* ZSTD_seqSymbol */
/* === Prototypes === */
/* note: prototypes already published within `zstd.h` :
* ZSTD_decompressBlock()
*/
/* note: prototypes already published within `zstd_internal.h` :
* ZSTD_getcBlockSize()
* ZSTD_decodeSeqHeaders()
*/
/* ZSTD_decompressBlock_internal() :
* decompress block, starting at `src`,
* into destination buffer `dst`.
* @return : decompressed block size,
* or an error code (which can be tested using ZSTD_isError())
*/
size_t ZSTD_decompressBlock_internal(ZSTD_DCtx* dctx,
void* dst, size_t dstCapacity,
const void* src, size_t srcSize, const int frame);
/* ZSTD_buildFSETable() :
* generate FSE decoding table for one symbol (ll, ml or off)
* this function must be called with valid parameters only
* (dt is large enough, normalizedCounter distribution total is a power of 2, max is within range, etc.)
* in which case it cannot fail.
* The workspace must be 4-byte aligned and at least ZSTD_BUILD_FSE_TABLE_WKSP_SIZE bytes, which is
* defined in zstd_decompress_internal.h.
* Internal use only.
*/
void ZSTD_buildFSETable(ZSTD_seqSymbol* dt,
const short* normalizedCounter, unsigned maxSymbolValue,
const U32* baseValue, const U32* nbAdditionalBits,
unsigned tableLog, void* wksp, size_t wkspSize,
int bmi2);
#endif /* ZSTD_DEC_BLOCK_H */