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AES-CTR implementation using AES-NI intrinsics and SIMD operations

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AES-CTR

AES-CTR implementation using AES-NI intrinsics and SIMD operations.

Motivation

After reading Understanding Cryptography, A Textbook for Students and Practitioners by Christof Paar and Jan Pelzl, I tried to implement AES in C++. At the end of Chapter 4, the book says that it is possible to implement AES in such a way that it requires fewer than 4 CPU cycles to encrypt a byte. So, I gave it a shot.

Performance (with I/O)

Below is the tabulated percentual differences between openssl and tautastic/aes-ctr:

Metric openssl Value tautastic/aes-ctr Value Percentual Difference
CPU Utilization 0.413 0.999 +141.89%
Cycles 2,183,036,314 932,415,861 -57.29%
Instructions 2,544,915,007 1,014,823,687 -60.11%
Cycles per Byte 5.4576 2.3310 -57.29%
Throughput in GB/s 0.325 0.712 +119.08%

Note: The comparison is done to illustrate the performance characteristics of tautastic/aes-ctr relative to openssl. Both libraries have their own set of features and optimizations which may suit different use cases.

openssl

Performance counter stats for 'openssl enc -aes-128-ctr -in song.webm -out song128.webm -K 2b7e151628aed2a6abf7158809cf4f3c -iv f0f1f2f3f4f5f6f7f8f9fafbfcfdfeff':

            508,18 msec task-clock                       #    0,413 CPUs utilized             
               117      context-switches                 #  230,232 /sec                      
                 1      cpu-migrations                   #    1,968 /sec                      
               333      page-faults                      #  655,275 /sec                      
     2.183.036.314      cycles                           #    4,296 GHz                       
     2.544.915.007      instructions                     #    1,17  insn per cycle            
       416.065.929      branches                         #  818,732 M/sec                     
         3.988.395      branch-misses                    #    0,96% of all branches           

       1,230478489 seconds time elapsed

       0,129072000 seconds user
       0,380437000 seconds sys

tautastic/aes-ctr

Performance counter stats for 'aes-128-ctr -in song.webm -out song128.webm -K 2b7e151628aed2a6abf7158809cf4f3c -iv f0f1f2f3f4f5f6f7f8f9fafbfcfdfeff':

            212,55 msec task-clock                       #    0,999 CPUs utilized             
                 0      context-switches                 #    0,000 /sec                      
                 0      cpu-migrations                   #    0,000 /sec                      
           103.563      page-faults                      #  487,245 K/sec                     
       932.415.861      cycles                           #    4,387 GHz                       
     1.014.823.687      instructions                     #    1,09  insn per cycle            
       129.065.235      branches                         #  607,229 M/sec                     
           550.080      branch-misses                    #    0,43% of all branches           

       0,212803631 seconds time elapsed

       0,087524000 seconds user
       0,124655000 seconds sys

Note: The file song.webm has a size of 400MB.

Goals

Intel's whitepaper, "Breakthrough AES Performance with Intel® AES New Instructions", states in its conclusion: "We are able to achieve excellent AES performance on the Intel® Core™ i7 Processor Extreme Edition (i7-980X) using the new instructions. With optimized code, it is possible to achieve ~0.24 cycles/byte on 6 cores for AES128 on parallel modes for large buffers."

So there is still plenty of room for further optimization.

Disclaimer

This implementation is intended for academic purposes only and should not be used in a production environment.

References