/* inffas8664.c is a hand tuned assembler version of inffast.c - fast decoding
* version for AMD64 on Windows using Microsoft C compiler
*
* Copyright (C) 1995-2003 Mark Adler
* For conditions of distribution and use, see copyright notice in zlib.h
*
* Copyright (C) 2003 Chris Anderson <christop@charm.net>
* Please use the copyright conditions above.
*
* 2005 - Adaptation to Microsoft C Compiler for AMD64 by Gilles Vollant
*
* inffas8664.c call function inffas8664fnc in inffasx64.asm
* inffasx64.asm is automatically convert from AMD64 portion of inffas86.c
*
* Dec-29-2003 -- I added AMD64 inflate asm support. This version is also
* slightly quicker on x86 systems because, instead of using rep movsb to copy
* data, it uses rep movsw, which moves data in 2-byte chunks instead of single
* bytes. I've tested the AMD64 code on a Fedora Core 1 + the x86_64 updates
* which is running on an Athlon 64 3000+ / Gigabyte GA-K8VT800M system with
* 1GB ram. The 64-bit version is about 4% faster than the 32-bit version,
* when decompressing mozilla-source-1.3.tar.gz.
*
* Mar-13-2003 -- Most of this is derived from inffast.S which is derived from
* the gcc -S output of zlib-1.2.0/inffast.c. Zlib-1.2.0 is in beta release at
* the moment. I have successfully compiled and tested this code with gcc2.96,
* gcc3.2, icc5.0, msvc6.0. It is very close to the speed of inffast.S
* compiled with gcc -DNO_MMX, but inffast.S is still faster on the P3 with MMX
* enabled. I will attempt to merge the MMX code into this version. Newer
* versions of this and inffast.S can be found at
*
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include "zutil.h"
#include "inftrees.h"
#include "inflate.h"
#include "inffast.h"
/* Mark Adler's comments from inffast.c: */
/*
Decode literal, length, and distance codes and write out the resulting
literal and match bytes until either not enough input or output is
available, an end-of-block is encountered, or a data error is encountered.
When large enough input and output buffers are supplied to inflate(), for
example, a 16K input buffer and a 64K output buffer, more than 95% of the
inflate execution time is spent in this routine.
Entry assumptions:
state->mode == LEN
strm->avail_in >= 6
strm->avail_out >= 258
start >= strm->avail_out
state->bits < 8
On return, state->mode is one of:
LEN -- ran out of enough output space or enough available input
TYPE -- reached end of block code, inflate() to interpret next block
BAD -- error in block data
Notes:
length code, 5 bits for the length extra, 15 bits for the distance code,
and 13 bits for the distance extra. This totals 48 bits, or six bytes.
Therefore if strm->avail_in >= 6, then there is enough input to avoid
checking for available input while decoding.
bytes, which is the maximum length that can be coded. inflate_fast()
requires strm->avail_out >= 258 for each loop to avoid checking for
output space.
*/
typedef struct inffast_ar {
/* 64 32 x86 x86_64 */
/* ar offset register */
} type_ar;
#ifdef ASMINF
unsigned start; /* inflate()'s starting value for strm->avail_out */
{
#if (defined( __GNUC__ ) && defined( __amd64__ ) && ! defined( __i386 )) || (defined(_MSC_VER) && defined(_M_AMD64))
#else
#endif
/* copy state to local variables */
input data or output space */
/* align in on 1/2 hold size boundary */
}
inffas8664fnc(&ar);
else
}
}
/* return unused bytes (on entry, bits < 8, so in won't go too far back) */
/* update state and return */
return;
}
#endif