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- /*
- * pg_crc.h
- *
- * PostgreSQL CRC support
- *
- * See Ross Williams' excellent introduction
- * A PAINLESS GUIDE TO CRC ERROR DETECTION ALGORITHMS, available from
- * http://www.ross.net/crc/ or several other net sites.
- *
- * We have three slightly different variants of a 32-bit CRC calculation:
- * CRC-32C (Castagnoli polynomial), CRC-32 (Ethernet polynomial), and a legacy
- * CRC-32 version that uses the lookup table in a funny way. They all consist
- * of four macros:
- *
- * INIT_<variant>(crc)
- * Initialize a CRC accumulator
- *
- * COMP_<variant>(crc, data, len)
- * Accumulate some (more) bytes into a CRC
- *
- * FIN_<variant>(crc)
- * Finish a CRC calculation
- *
- * EQ_<variant>(c1, c2)
- * Check for equality of two CRCs.
- *
- * The CRC-32C variant is in port/pg_crc32c.h.
- *
- * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2016, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
- * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
- *
- * src/include/utils/pg_crc.h
- */
- #ifndef PG_CRC_H
- #define PG_CRC_H
- typedef uint32 pg_crc32;
- /*
- * CRC-32, the same used e.g. in Ethernet.
- *
- * This is currently only used in ltree and hstore contrib modules. It uses
- * the same lookup table as the legacy algorithm below. New code should
- * use the Castagnoli version instead.
- */
- #define INIT_TRADITIONAL_CRC32(crc) ((crc) = 0xFFFFFFFF)
- #define FIN_TRADITIONAL_CRC32(crc) ((crc) ^= 0xFFFFFFFF)
- #define COMP_TRADITIONAL_CRC32(crc, data, len) \
- COMP_CRC32_NORMAL_TABLE(crc, data, len, pg_crc32_table)
- #define EQ_TRADITIONAL_CRC32(c1, c2) ((c1) == (c2))
- /* Sarwate's algorithm, for use with a "normal" lookup table */
- #define COMP_CRC32_NORMAL_TABLE(crc, data, len, table) \
- do { \
- const unsigned char *__data = (const unsigned char *) (data); \
- uint32 __len = (len); \
- \
- while (__len-- > 0) \
- { \
- int __tab_index = ((int) (crc) ^ *__data++) & 0xFF; \
- (crc) = table[__tab_index] ^ ((crc) >> 8); \
- } \
- } while (0)
- /*
- * The CRC algorithm used for WAL et al in pre-9.5 versions.
- *
- * This closely resembles the normal CRC-32 algorithm, but is subtly
- * different. Using Williams' terms, we use the "normal" table, but with
- * "reflected" code. That's bogus, but it was like that for years before
- * anyone noticed. It does not correspond to any polynomial in a normal CRC
- * algorithm, so it's not clear what the error-detection properties of this
- * algorithm actually are.
- *
- * We still need to carry this around because it is used in a few on-disk
- * structures that need to be pg_upgradeable. It should not be used in new
- * code.
- */
- #define INIT_LEGACY_CRC32(crc) ((crc) = 0xFFFFFFFF)
- #define FIN_LEGACY_CRC32(crc) ((crc) ^= 0xFFFFFFFF)
- #define COMP_LEGACY_CRC32(crc, data, len) \
- COMP_CRC32_REFLECTED_TABLE(crc, data, len, pg_crc32_table)
- #define EQ_LEGACY_CRC32(c1, c2) ((c1) == (c2))
- /*
- * Sarwate's algorithm, for use with a "reflected" lookup table (but in the
- * legacy algorithm, we actually use it on a "normal" table, see above)
- */
- #define COMP_CRC32_REFLECTED_TABLE(crc, data, len, table) \
- do { \
- const unsigned char *__data = (const unsigned char *) (data); \
- uint32 __len = (len); \
- \
- while (__len-- > 0) \
- { \
- int __tab_index = ((int) ((crc) >> 24) ^ *__data++) & 0xFF; \
- (crc) = table[__tab_index] ^ ((crc) << 8); \
- } \
- } while (0)
- /*
- * Constant table for the CRC-32 polynomials. The same table is used by both
- * the normal and traditional variants.
- */
- extern PGDLLIMPORT const uint32 pg_crc32_table[256];
- #endif /* PG_CRC_H */
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