From 97aded26654ede8204a313dd6967b678a72a2a10 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?Parm=C3=A9nides=20GV?= Date: Fri, 12 Dec 2014 18:02:40 +0100 Subject: Updated ics-openvpn to last rev 14 Nov 2014. Material design! It still doesn't run properly on my tablet, openvpn keeps getting down and exiting. --- .../main/openssl/crypto/bn/asm/README | 27 ---------------------- 1 file changed, 27 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 ics-openvpn-stripped/main/openssl/crypto/bn/asm/README (limited to 'ics-openvpn-stripped/main/openssl/crypto/bn/asm/README') diff --git a/ics-openvpn-stripped/main/openssl/crypto/bn/asm/README b/ics-openvpn-stripped/main/openssl/crypto/bn/asm/README deleted file mode 100644 index b0f3a68a..00000000 --- a/ics-openvpn-stripped/main/openssl/crypto/bn/asm/README +++ /dev/null @@ -1,27 +0,0 @@ - - -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). - - -- cgit v1.2.3