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molenzwiebel · a year ago
For those that thought the process of speeding up CRC was interesting, I strongly recommend reading [1]. It describes a step by step process on how a naive CRC implementation might be improved, until finally arriving at an implementation in assembly with a staggering throughput of 62 processed bits (almost 8 bytes) per CPU cycle. Yes, you read that right.

[1]: https://github.com/komrad36/CRC

fnands · a year ago
Yup, it's a fantastic read. I based most of my post off it (I clearly mention so) and it's worth it to read at least the first part of it before reading my post.
jorams · a year ago
For what it's worth, it appears the paper "Everything we know about CRC but afraid to forget" was originally published as part of the release of crcutil on Google Code[1]. This is a hg repository with one commit that includes the paper, the source of the paper, and an implementation.

[1]: https://code.google.com/archive/p/crcutil/

fnands · a year ago
Thanks! I'll add it to the post.
onethumb · a year ago
FYI, I forked and improved [1] a Rust implementation that supports both table- and SIMD-accelerated CRC-64/NVME [2] calculations. The SIMD-accelerated (x86/x86_64 and aarch64) version delivers 10X over the table (16-bytes at a time) implementation.

The original implementation [3] did the same thing but for CRC-64/XZ [4].

[1]: https://github.com/awesomized/crc64fast-nvme

[2]: https://reveng.sourceforge.io/crc-catalogue/all.htm#crc.cat....

[3]: https://github.com/tikv/crc64fast

[4]: https://reveng.sourceforge.io/crc-catalogue/all.htm#crc.cat....

Genbox · a year ago
How does it compare to the built-in CRC32 instruction? [1]

[1] https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/docs/ipp/developer-g...

onethumb · a year ago
This is computing CRC-64, not CRC-32, so there's not really a comparison. But perhaps most importantly, ours works with a variety of polynomials (there are a lot! [1])... we're just using the NVME one, but it's trivially adaptable to most (all?) of them. (The Intel instruction you link to only works with two - CRC32 and CRC32C)

Finally, it's based on Intel's paper [2], so they also believe it's extremely fast. :)

[1]: https://reveng.sourceforge.io/crc-catalogue/all.htm

[2]: https://web.archive.org/web/20131224125630/https://www.intel...

adsharma · a year ago
https://github.com/py2many/py2many/pull/653

Transpiling the python version in the blog to mojo gives me a 4x speedup.

Had to hand edit a couple of things:

    - List to bytearray conversion is not working yet
    - Can't iterate over SIMD. So a "for x in list" loop has to be rewritten as a range based loop.
With a bit more work, the manual edits won't be necessary.

fnands · a year ago
Oh! Cool project!

You mean 4x speedup over Python?

adsharma · a year ago
Yes. Details in the pull request linked above
bsaul · a year ago
How is mojo doing ? Has it made its way as a niche language in some places ?
fnands · a year ago
It's coming along. I don't think anyone is using it for anything serious yet, but it is starting to feel like a real language.

My guess is that it will start being used as a library language (i.e. have libraries written in Mojo being called from Python) before it really gets going as its own thing.

khimaros · a year ago
and is it still closed source?
fnands · a year ago
Yup, language is still closed, stdlib is open.
chrislattner · a year ago
Great post @fnands!
fnands · a year ago
Thanks Chris!

It has been about a year since I started playing around with Mojo and it's impressive how far it (and the community) has come!