Update the PSA crypto-only config.h in configs

The file was derived from an earlier version of Mbed TLS and had not
been updated in a rebase of the PSA branch.
This commit is contained in:
Gilles Peskine 2018-06-19 11:49:23 +02:00 committed by itayzafrir
parent 828ed149d5
commit 13187931f1

View file

@ -398,12 +398,45 @@
/**
* \def MBEDTLS_AES_ROM_TABLES
*
* Store the AES tables in ROM.
* Use precomputed AES tables stored in ROM.
*
* Uncomment this macro to use precomputed AES tables stored in ROM.
* Comment this macro to generate AES tables in RAM at runtime.
*
* Tradeoff: Using precomputed ROM tables reduces RAM usage by ~8kb
* (or ~2kb if \c MBEDTLS_AES_FEWER_TABLES is used) and reduces the
* initialization time before the first AES operation can be performed.
* It comes at the cost of additional ~8kb ROM use (resp. ~2kb if \c
* MBEDTLS_AES_FEWER_TABLES below is used), and potentially degraded
* performance if ROM access is slower than RAM access.
*
* This option is independent of \c MBEDTLS_AES_FEWER_TABLES.
*
* Uncomment this macro to store the AES tables in ROM.
*/
//#define MBEDTLS_AES_ROM_TABLES
/**
* \def MBEDTLS_AES_FEWER_TABLES
*
* Use less ROM/RAM for AES tables.
*
* Uncommenting this macro omits 75% of the AES tables from
* ROM / RAM (depending on the value of \c MBEDTLS_AES_ROM_TABLES)
* by computing their values on the fly during operations
* (the tables are entry-wise rotations of one another).
*
* Tradeoff: Uncommenting this reduces the RAM / ROM footprint
* by ~6kb but at the cost of more arithmetic operations during
* runtime. Specifically, one has to compare 4 accesses within
* different tables to 4 accesses with additional arithmetic
* operations within the same table. The performance gain/loss
* depends on the system and memory details.
*
* This option is independent of \c MBEDTLS_AES_ROM_TABLES.
*
*/
//#define MBEDTLS_AES_FEWER_TABLES
/**
* \def MBEDTLS_CAMELLIA_SMALL_MEMORY
*
@ -470,6 +503,7 @@
#define MBEDTLS_ECP_DP_BP384R1_ENABLED
#define MBEDTLS_ECP_DP_BP512R1_ENABLED
#define MBEDTLS_ECP_DP_CURVE25519_ENABLED
#define MBEDTLS_ECP_DP_CURVE448_ENABLED
/**
* \def MBEDTLS_ECP_NIST_OPTIM
@ -1704,6 +1738,26 @@
//#define MBEDTLS_PLATFORM_NV_SEED_READ_MACRO mbedtls_platform_std_nv_seed_read /**< Default nv_seed_read function to use, can be undefined */
//#define MBEDTLS_PLATFORM_NV_SEED_WRITE_MACRO mbedtls_platform_std_nv_seed_write /**< Default nv_seed_write function to use, can be undefined */
/**
* Uncomment the macro to let mbed TLS use your alternate implementation of
* mbedtls_platform_zeroize(). This replaces the default implementation in
* platform_util.c.
*
* mbedtls_platform_zeroize() is a widely used function across the library to
* zero a block of memory. The implementation is expected to be secure in the
* sense that it has been written to prevent the compiler from removing calls
* to mbedtls_platform_zeroize() as part of redundant code elimination
* optimizations. However, it is difficult to guarantee that calls to
* mbedtls_platform_zeroize() will not be optimized by the compiler as older
* versions of the C language standards do not provide a secure implementation
* of memset(). Therefore, MBEDTLS_PLATFORM_ZEROIZE_ALT enables users to
* configure their own implementation of mbedtls_platform_zeroize(), for
* example by using directives specific to their compiler, features from newer
* C standards (e.g using memset_s() in C11) or calling a secure memset() from
* their system (e.g explicit_bzero() in BSD).
*/
//#define MBEDTLS_PLATFORM_ZEROIZE_ALT
/* \} name SECTION: Customisation configuration options */
#include "mbedtls/check_config.h"