forked from cory/tildefriends
		
	
		
			
	
	
		
			31 lines
		
	
	
		
			1.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
		
		
			
		
	
	
			31 lines
		
	
	
		
			1.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
|  | These numbers are for 32 iterations ("$2a$05"): | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | 			OpenBSD 3.0 bcrypt(*)	crypt_blowfish 0.4.4 | ||
|  | Pentium III, 840 MHz	99 c/s			121 c/s (+22%) | ||
|  | Alpha 21164PC, 533 MHz	55.5 c/s		76.9 c/s (+38%) | ||
|  | UltraSparc IIi, 400 MHz	49.9 c/s		52.5 c/s (+5%) | ||
|  | Pentium, 120 MHz	8.8 c/s			20.1 c/s (+128%) | ||
|  | PA-RISC 7100LC, 80 MHz	8.5 c/s			16.3 c/s (+92%) | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | (*) built with -fomit-frame-pointer -funroll-loops, which I don't | ||
|  | think happens for libcrypt. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | Starting with version 1.1 released in June 2011, default builds of | ||
|  | crypt_blowfish invoke a quick self-test on every hash computation. | ||
|  | This has roughly a 4.8% performance impact at "$2a$05", but only a 0.6% | ||
|  | impact at a more typical setting of "$2a$08". | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | The large speedup for the original Pentium is due to the assembly | ||
|  | code and the weird optimizations this processor requires. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | The numbers for password cracking are 2 to 10% higher than those for | ||
|  | crypt_blowfish as certain things may be done out of the loop and the | ||
|  | code doesn't need to be reentrant. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | Recent versions of John the Ripper (1.6.25-dev and newer) achieve an | ||
|  | additional 15% speedup on the Pentium Pro family of processors (which | ||
|  | includes Pentium III) with a separate version of the assembly code and | ||
|  | run-time CPU detection. | ||
|  | 
 | ||
|  | $Owl: Owl/packages/glibc/crypt_blowfish/PERFORMANCE,v 1.6 2011/06/21 12:09:20 solar Exp $ |