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    Pfsense hardware for home

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Hardware
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    • PippinP
      Pippin
      last edited by

      Do you have any Cryptographic Hardware module loaded in pfSense?
      System/ Advanced/ Miscellaneous
      Set to none and reboot.

      Without AES-NI

      env OPENSSL_ia32cap=0 openssl speed -elapsed -evp aes-256-cbc
      type             16 bytes     64 bytes    256 bytes   1024 bytes   8192 bytes
      aes-256-cbc      23990.78k    28635.43k    29824.77k    75725.14k    76436.82k
      
      

      With AES-NI

      openssl speed -elapsed -evp aes-256-cbc
      type             16 bytes     64 bytes    256 bytes   1024 bytes   8192 bytes
      aes-256-cbc     132721.93k   211522.30k   244506.28k   254213.80k   256557.76k
      
      

      With aesni.ko module loaded, meaning Cryptographic Hardware is set to AES-NI

      type             16 bytes     64 bytes    256 bytes   1024 bytes   8192 bytes
      aes-256-cbc       4643.26k    17799.15k    57819.31k   136405.67k   218895.70k
      
      

      I gloomily came to the ironic conclusion that if you take a highly intelligent person and give them the best possible, elite education, then you will most likely wind up with an academic who is completely impervious to reality.
      Halton Arp

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      • P
        Paint
        last edited by

        @Pippin:

        Do you have any Cryptographic Hardware module loaded in pfSense?
        System/ Advanced/ Miscellaneous
        Set to none and reboot.

        Without AES-NI

        env OPENSSL_ia32cap=0 openssl speed -elapsed -evp aes-256-cbc
        type             16 bytes     64 bytes    256 bytes   1024 bytes   8192 bytes
        aes-256-cbc      23990.78k    28635.43k    29824.77k    75725.14k    76436.82k
        
        

        With AES-NI

        openssl speed -elapsed -evp aes-256-cbc
        type             16 bytes     64 bytes    256 bytes   1024 bytes   8192 bytes
        aes-256-cbc     132721.93k   211522.30k   244506.28k   254213.80k   256557.76k
        
        

        Yes, I have Cryptographic Hardware set to AES-NI CPU-based Acceleration
        OpenVPN's Hardware Crypto is set to BSD Cryptodev Engine

        Are these settings correct?

        [2.3.3-DEVELOPMENT][root@pfSense.pf.lan]/root: dmesg | grep -i aes
        [15] aesni0: <aes-cbc,aes-xts,aes-gcm,aes-icm> on motherboard
          Features2=0x7fdafbbf<sse3,pclmulqdq,dtes64,mon,ds_cpl,vmx,est,tm2,ssse3,sdbg,fma,cx16,xtpr,pdcm,pcid,sse4.1,sse4.2,movbe,popcnt,tscdlt,aesni,xsave,osxsave,avx,f16c,rdrand></sse3,pclmulqdq,dtes64,mon,ds_cpl,vmx,est,tm2,ssse3,sdbg,fma,cx16,xtpr,pdcm,pcid,sse4.1,sse4.2,movbe,popcnt,tscdlt,aesni,xsave,osxsave,avx,f16c,rdrand></aes-cbc,aes-xts,aes-gcm,aes-icm>
        
        [2.3.3-DEVELOPMENT][root@pfSense.pf.lan]/root: cryptostats
        10953025 symmetric crypto ops (0 errors, 0 times driver blocked)
        0 key ops (0 errors, 0 times driver blocked)
        0 crypto dispatch thread activations
        0 crypto return thread activations
        
        

        pfSense i5-4590
        940/880 mbit Fiber Internet from FiOS
        BROCADE ICX6450 48Port L3-Managed Switch w/4x 10GB ports
        Netgear R8000 AP (DD-WRT)

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        • PippinP
          Pippin
          last edited by

          Update my previous post to include loaded module in pfSense.

          As you can see from the results, the best is achieved when selecting no crypto in pfSense.
          It loads a module, aesni.ko, which is not needed in case one has a CPU with AES-NI support.

          In OpenVPN you dont need to set anything either, as said, OpenSSL will use AES-NI whenever its available on SOC.

          I gloomily came to the ironic conclusion that if you take a highly intelligent person and give them the best possible, elite education, then you will most likely wind up with an academic who is completely impervious to reality.
          Halton Arp

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          • MikeV7896M
            MikeV7896
            last edited by

            AES-GCM is where AES-NI really shines, not so much AES-CBC. Check out the difference here…

            Without AES-NI...

            : env OPENSSL_ia32cap=0 openssl speed -elapsed -evp aes-256-gcm
            You have chosen to measure elapsed time instead of user CPU time.
            Doing aes-256-gcm for 3s on 16 size blocks: 4318531 aes-256-gcm's in 3.01s
            Doing aes-256-gcm for 3s on 64 size blocks: 1237576 aes-256-gcm's in 3.00s
            Doing aes-256-gcm for 3s on 256 size blocks: 324193 aes-256-gcm's in 3.00s
            Doing aes-256-gcm for 3s on 1024 size blocks: 82041 aes-256-gcm's in 3.00s
            Doing aes-256-gcm for 3s on 8192 size blocks: 10292 aes-256-gcm's in 3.00s
            

            With AES-NI…

            : openssl speed -elapsed -evp aes-256-gcm
            You have chosen to measure elapsed time instead of user CPU time.
            Doing aes-256-gcm for 3s on 16 size blocks: 20466923 aes-256-gcm's in 3.01s
            Doing aes-256-gcm for 3s on 64 size blocks: 8766278 aes-256-gcm's in 3.00s
            Doing aes-256-gcm for 3s on 256 size blocks: 2775125 aes-256-gcm's in 3.00s
            Doing aes-256-gcm for 3s on 1024 size blocks: 748960 aes-256-gcm's in 3.00s
            Doing aes-256-gcm for 3s on 8192 size blocks: 95348 aes-256-gcm's in 3.00s
            

            The difference is quite a bit more visible… 5 to 9 times faster depending on the block size, and I have AES-NI selected under System > Advanced > Miscellaneous > Cryptographic Hardware.

            AES-CBC still needs the hash to be calculated for authentication, so it might be fast to encrypt, but it's lost in computing the hash to go along with it... AES-GCM has that all wrapped in so there's no additional processing needed. That's why it can be so much faster when accelerated.

            But AES-GCM is not available as an option in the pfSense OpenVPN settings right now... so hopefully Paint is correct regarding support coming in a future version. I don't see anything in the OpenVPN category in Redmine that asks for AES-GCM support to be added, but maybe it happens with one of the other updates/fixes there?

            The S in IOT stands for Security

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            • PippinP
              Pippin
              last edited by

              AES-GCM is where AES-NI really shines, not so much AES-CBC.

              Still, AES-CBC does benefit compared to not using AES-NI, I would say, use it if have it.

              AES-GCM has that all wrapped in so there's no additional processing needed

              Yes, no separate authentication.

              I have AES-NI selected under System > Advanced > Miscellaneous > Cryptographic Hardware

              Since version 1.0+ OpenSSL automatically detects if AES-NI support is available, not any module is needed to activate it.

              When loading the aesni.ko module in WebUI, crypto will take place in kernel, not in hardware.

              When not loading the aesni.ko module in WebUI, crypto takes place on crypto hardware if there is any, not in kernel.

              But AES-GCM is not available as an option in the pfSense OpenVPN settings right now

              OpenVPN will add AES-GCM (AEAD) support in version 2.4 so pfSense has to wait until OpenVPN releases version 2.4.

              I gloomily came to the ironic conclusion that if you take a highly intelligent person and give them the best possible, elite education, then you will most likely wind up with an academic who is completely impervious to reality.
              Halton Arp

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              • G
                garyd9
                last edited by

                @Pippin:

                I have AES-NI selected under System > Advanced > Miscellaneous > Cryptographic Hardware

                …
                When loading the aesni.ko module in WebUI, crypto will take place in kernel, not in hardware.

                When not loading the aesni.ko module in WebUI, crypto takes place on crypto hardware if there is any, not in kernel.

                I'm confused about this.  Are you saying, for openVPN specifically, that turning OFF the "crypto h/w" option in pfsense results in hardware crypto working, but turning ON the h/w option in pfsense results in h/w crypto NOT working?

                Thanks
                Gary

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                • PippinP
                  Pippin
                  last edited by

                  Yes, we talk about OpenVPN (which uses OpenSSL for the crypto part).
                  And yes, that`s what I'm saying :)

                  Will try to explain my findings:

                  System/ Advanced/ Miscellaneous
                  Cryptographic Hardware: None
                  ^^^
                  –- When selecting an option a kernel module gets loaded, but we don`t need
                  –- it because OpenSSL will use AES-NI on SOC automatically.

                  VPN/ OpenVPN/ Servers--> Edit Server
                  Hardware Crypto: No Hardware Crypto Acceleration
                  ^^^
                  --- When selecting an option then it will set the directive "engine xxxxx" in server config file, but we
                  –- dont need it because OpenSSL will use AES-NI on SOC automatically. --- If it should be selectable? Yes I think so because when theres no AES-NI on SOC available, one could
                  --- possibly benefit from the kernel module that gets loaded by one of these options.
                  --- In that case Cryptographic Hardware needs to be set appropriately.

                  Now the test to confirm and for who is interested to compare to mine:
                  Make the two settings as written above, selecting None and No Hardware Crypto Acceleration.
                  For the first setting above to take immediate effect without a restart, do

                  kldunload aesni.ko
                  

                  in console.
                  Close the WebUI as it will influence the test and if can disable installed packages.
                  The following however I did with packages running because didn`t feel like disabling them :)

                  Then this command will tell OpenSSL to not use AES-NI support on SOC
                  1.

                  env OPENSSL_ia32cap=0 openssl speed -elapsed -evp aes-256-cbc
                  type             16 bytes     64 bytes    256 bytes   1024 bytes   8192 bytes
                  aes-256-cbc      23756.57k    28643.61k    29828.52k    75748.35k    76480.51k
                  

                  And then this command will tell OpenSSL to use AES-NI on SOC
                  2.

                  openssl speed -elapsed -evp aes-256-cbc
                  type             16 bytes     64 bytes    256 bytes   1024 bytes   8192 bytes
                  aes-256-cbc     125684.70k   211853.44k   244509.53k   254263.64k   256703.33k
                  

                  Compare 1 and 2 and see the improvement.

                  Now to compare against aesni.ko loaded, do

                  kldload aesni.ko
                  

                  This command will load the AES-NI kernel module, its the same as selecting it in the WebUI, "Cryptographic Hardware: None" but on console its more convenient as one no need to restart pfSense.
                  To see if it`s loaded do

                  kldstat
                  

                  To unload it do

                  kldunload aesni.ko
                  

                  Do the same as in 1 and 2
                  3.

                  env OPENSSL_ia32cap=0 openssl speed -elapsed -evp aes-256-cbc
                  type             16 bytes     64 bytes    256 bytes   1024 bytes   8192 bytes
                  aes-256-cbc       4026.26k    17522.26k    56889.00k   135259.14k   218065.68k
                  
                  
                  openssl speed -elapsed -evp aes-256-cbc
                  type             16 bytes     64 bytes    256 bytes   1024 bytes   8192 bytes
                  aes-256-cbc       4689.60k    17543.15k    58354.77k   136928.60k   217352.87k
                  
                  

                  In 3 and 4 we can see that there is no difference because aesni.ko is loaded and therefore AES-NI on SOC is not used.
                  We also see that 2, AES-NI on SOC gives best result.

                  I gloomily came to the ironic conclusion that if you take a highly intelligent person and give them the best possible, elite education, then you will most likely wind up with an academic who is completely impervious to reality.
                  Halton Arp

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                  • G
                    garyd9
                    last edited by

                    I hope you understand that I believe you, but I wanted to make sure that I understood you.  Obviously, what you describe sounds like it's working backwards.

                    Enable h/w AES support and it's NOT used, but if you disable h/w AES support, then it IS used.  Backwards, right?

                    In the linux world, such a kernel module would probably provide canned routines that make use of AES instructions.  Afterall, it wouldn't make much sense to have an entire kernel module just to enable the instructions.  So, the only way I can make sense of your experience is that, perhaps, the openVPN code has more efficient use of the AES instructions when compared to the canned routines in the kernel module (for the usage that openVPN makes of them) (assuming my guess on what the module does is correct.)  Of course, THAT doesn't make sense either, because even poorly written canned routines using AES should perform at a significantly different speed than no use of AES-NI to begin with.

                    Is the AES-NI kernel module just an emulator and not really h/w support?

                    I wonder if the same backwards behavior occurs with IPSec..  (I haven't configured VPN yet, so haven't had a chance to play with it.)

                    Sadly, I'm not familiar with BSD-based kernels whatsoever, so I can't really contribute anything more than startled exclamations and questions based on knowledge of a different platform.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • PippinP
                      Pippin
                      last edited by

                      @garyd9:

                      I hope you understand that I believe you, but I wanted to make sure that I understood you.  Obviously, what you describe sounds like it's working backwards.
                      Enable h/w AES support and it's NOT used, but if you disable h/w AES support, then it IS used.  Backwards, right?

                      I think the thing to understand is that there is nothing needed to enable AES-NI support because OpenSSL will detect/support it automatically.
                      It`s possible that the built-in code in OpenSSL is doing a better job then the kernel module.
                      An answer I got a while back from a OpenVPN dev:
                      –Using AES-NI via kernel cryptodev is almost always a bad idea - because
                      --it is much slower than just using the same AES-NI instructions in openssl
                      --userland ("same CPU opcodes, less jump-to-kernel-and-back").

                      --So "just don't do that"..."

                      the openVPN code has more efficient use of the AES instructions…........
                      .............
                      Of course, THAT doesn't make sense either

                      It`s actually the OpenSSL code, OpenVPN just makes a call and gets a encrypted/decrypted buffer back.
                      But i think it can make sense, see "same CPU opcodes, less jump-to-kernel-and-back"

                      Is the AES-NI kernel module just an emulator and not really h/w support?

                      About deeper/inner workings my knowledge is limited, only just about seeing the big picture and my results.
                      Most of it is from trying out myself and trying to filter correct from incorrect info from reading.

                      I wonder if the same backwards behavior occurs with IPSec..

                      Never used IPsec, it doesn`t see userland i think? That could possibly mean aesni.ko needs to be loaded?
                      If IPsec requires aesni.ko module and one also uses OpenVPN then i can imagine that OpenVPN performance is, to some degree, degraded, crypto-wise.
                      I would think so because when aesni.ko is loaded the OpenSSL built-in engine is not used.

                      One can repeat the above test and see what works best…

                      I gloomily came to the ironic conclusion that if you take a highly intelligent person and give them the best possible, elite education, then you will most likely wind up with an academic who is completely impervious to reality.
                      Halton Arp

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                      • P
                        Paint
                        last edited by

                        Im sorry Pippin, I know you are trying to help here…. but I want to make sure a future pfSense user is not confused by this thread.

                        This is correct as of pfSense 2.3.2:

                        • OpenVPN will not show a large benefit from AES-NI until the next version of OpenVPN

                        • AES-NI should be enabled via the pfSense GUI so that the kernel module is loaded.

                        • IPsec VPNs will show a speed improvement with AES-NI enabled,if your processor supports it.

                        • OpenVPN will not be slower if AES-NI is enabled.

                        • OpenSSL will still be able to use AES-NI with the kernel modules loaded - its not an either or situation.

                        pfSense i5-4590
                        940/880 mbit Fiber Internet from FiOS
                        BROCADE ICX6450 48Port L3-Managed Switch w/4x 10GB ports
                        Netgear R8000 AP (DD-WRT)

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                        • G
                          garyd9
                          last edited by

                          @Paint:

                          • OpenVPN will not be slower if AES-NI is enabled.

                          Based on the data above, that's a false statement.  His tests show openVPN performing SLOWER when then AES-NI module is loaded (enabled in pfSense) when compared to it NOT being loaded.

                          @Paint:

                          • IPsec VPNs will show a speed improvement with AES-NI enabled,if your processor supports it.

                          Is it?  Has that statement been verified recently?  Sure, it seems reasonable to assume IPSec would be faster with AES-NI enabled, but it ALSO seems reasonable to assume that enabling AES-NI would help, not hinder, openVPN (which Pippen shows is false.)

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                          • M
                            mauroman33
                            last edited by

                            I did the test suggested by Pippin
                            These are the results:

                            System/ Advanced/ Miscellaneous
                            Cryptographic Hardware: AES-NI CPU-based Acceleration

                            openssl speed -elapsed -evp aes-256-cbc
                            type            16 bytes    64 bytes    256 bytes  1024 bytes  8192 bytes
                            aes-256-cbc      4872.05k    18312.96k    59575.30k  138123.61k  219373.57k

                            System/ Advanced/ Miscellaneous
                            Cryptographic Hardware: None

                            openssl speed -elapsed -evp aes-256-cbc
                            type            16 bytes    64 bytes    256 bytes  1024 bytes  8192 bytes
                            aes-256-cbc    155467.39k  211837.63k  244339.11k  254131.88k  256329.17k

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                            • PippinP
                              Pippin
                              last edited by

                              Thanks @mauroman33, that seems to confirm it once more.

                              @Paint:

                              Im sorry Pippin, I know you are trying to help here…. but I want to make sure a future pfSense user is not confused by this thread.

                              Glad to help and Im trying to take away confusion, for myself too, I not understand/know it all ;) If you have data showing otherwise, test method described and better explanations, maybe clear up the mystic. To me its a complex thing to understand, especially having no background (at all) in IT whatsoever.

                              This is correct as of pfSense 2.3.2:

                              • 1. OpenVPN will not show a large benefit from AES-NI until the next version of OpenVPN

                              • 2. AES-NI should be enabled via the pfSense GUI so that the kernel module is loaded.

                              • 3. IPsec VPNs will show a speed improvement with AES-NI enabled,if your processor supports it.

                              • 4. OpenVPN will not be slower if AES-NI is enabled.

                              • 5. OpenSSL will still be able to use AES-NI with the kernel modules loaded - its not an either or situation.

                              First part is not true, see my results.
                              The way i understand it the culprit is hashing not supported on hardware crypto, having bigger impact on performance.
                              Second part yes, it will improve even more when OpenVPN 2.4 is ready due to support for AES-GCM which has the hashing included, so to speak.
                              AES-GCM is not debated here though and would not be correct to compare to AES-CBC for the latter test not includes the hashing.
                              To test including hashing one could do: openssl speed -evp aes-256-cbc-hmac-sha1

                              But just do test 1 and 2 exactly as above, one will see the improvement.

                              Statement in itself is correct to get the aesni.ko module loaded but only for in kernel crypto which is less performing compared to using AES-NI on the SOC.
                              Understand the difference between kernel and userland…..which I don`t fully :)

                              I`ll stay away from IPSec, no experience.

                              I assume you mean when AES-NI module (aesni.ko) is loaded?
                              On a system under load, it`s better to use AES-NI on SOC (hardware acceleration), looks kind of logical to me.
                              Meaning not selecting anything in WebUI.

                              Yes, it will.
                              But the question is: Is crypto performance better using aesni.ko or handled by OpenSSLs built-in code for hardware crypto device support. My results show, better use OpenSSLs built-in code in case AES-NI on SOC is supported.
                              Also think about a system under load using CPU power that cannot be used for crypto, then better use crypto hardware.

                              I gloomily came to the ironic conclusion that if you take a highly intelligent person and give them the best possible, elite education, then you will most likely wind up with an academic who is completely impervious to reality.
                              Halton Arp

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • S
                                Stewart
                                last edited by

                                @Pippin and @mauroman33

                                Have a look at the results I found while testing on an APU1D and an APU2C4, especially the heatmap in the attachment and particularly the APU2C4.
                                https://forum.pfsense.org/index.php?topic=106444.msg646667#msg646667

                                Enabling the aes-ni in the GUI has tremendous impact, usually negatively, on the new unit.  For example:

                                
                                openssl speed -elapsed -evp aes-128-cbc
                                Without aes-ni:   116,857.16 	 167,172.30 	 205,183.44 	 216,286.74 	 219,179.69 
                                With aes-ni:            1,455.86 	     5,778.35 	   21,179.49 	   64,385.85 	 158,815.65 
                                openssl speed -elapsed -evp aes-256-cbc
                                Without aes-ni:   96,810.10 	 129,034.06 	 150,190.10 	 156,638.07 	 158,143.28 
                                With aes-ni:          1,404.00 	 5,528.13 	 19,735.86 	 55,687.85 	 119,758.85 
                                
                                

                                I guess I'm only adding to the confusion.  I would expect the encryption to work better with aes-ni loaded, but it definitely doesn't appear to.

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                                • M
                                  mauroman33
                                  last edited by

                                  Also the following test seems to be affected by that setting.

                                  System/ Advanced/ Miscellaneous
                                  Cryptographic Hardware: AES-NI CPU-based Acceleration

                                  openvpn –genkey --secret /tmp/secret
                                  time openvpn --test-crypto --secret /tmp/secret --verb 0 --tun-mtu 20000 --cipher aes-256-cbc
                                  3200/27.41=116.74 Mbps OpenVPN performance (estimate)

                                  System/ Advanced/ Miscellaneous
                                  Cryptographic Hardware: None

                                  openvpn –genkey --secret /tmp/secret
                                  time openvpn --test-crypto --secret /tmp/secret --verb 0 --tun-mtu 20000 --cipher aes-256-cbc
                                  3200/26.94=118.78 Mbps OpenVPN performance (estimate)

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                                  • PippinP
                                    Pippin
                                    last edited by

                                    @Stewart

                                    I guess I'm only adding to the confusion.  I would expect the encryption to work better with aes-ni loaded, but it definitely doesn't appear to.

                                    Yes, maybe add to confusion but you seem to confirm it again.

                                    The way I understand it/picture it in my head, your result could be expected.
                                    When loading the module which, for what I understand means crypto in kernel, then it boils down to what the CPU is capable of.

                                    If you are willing, you could do as described in Reply: #47 and post the four results.

                                    I gloomily came to the ironic conclusion that if you take a highly intelligent person and give them the best possible, elite education, then you will most likely wind up with an academic who is completely impervious to reality.
                                    Halton Arp

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • G
                                      garyd9
                                      last edited by

                                      I'm really trying to understand what the end result of all this is:  Is AES-NI h/w "broken" in freebsd (and therefore pfsense), or do these results only impact openssl/openVPN?

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                                      • MikeV7896M
                                        MikeV7896
                                        last edited by

                                        @garyd9:

                                        I'm really trying to understand what the end result of all this is:  Is AES-NI h/w "broken" in freebsd (and therefore pfsense), or do these results only impact openssl/openVPN?

                                        I think these results only impact OpenSSL/OpenVPN, since it will automatically detect when AES-NI is available, while other crypto capabilities (IPSEC?) may not do so. So other things may need the kernel module to be loaded for full benefit.

                                        The S in IOT stands for Security

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                                        • PippinP
                                          Pippin
                                          last edited by

                                          @virgiliomi:

                                          I think these results only impact OpenSSL/OpenVPN, since it will automatically detect when AES-NI is available

                                          Yes, not only think but I'm pretty sure.

                                          while other crypto capabilities (IPSEC?) may not do so. So other things may need the kernel module to be loaded for full benefit.

                                          Yes, indeed it`s probably because IPSec is L2, but there is also a but :) in case one uses IPsec and OpenVPN simultaneously.
                                          As I wrote before, OpenVPN/OpenSSL wil not use hardware crypto device if the module is loaded.
                                          Therefore it will perform less.

                                          Since I not use IPsec, never did, I will stick to my findings and use settings as described.

                                          Edit: Forgot the simultaneous part

                                          I gloomily came to the ironic conclusion that if you take a highly intelligent person and give them the best possible, elite education, then you will most likely wind up with an academic who is completely impervious to reality.
                                          Halton Arp

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • S
                                            Stewart
                                            last edited by

                                            @Pippin:

                                            @Stewart

                                            I guess I'm only adding to the confusion.  I would expect the encryption to work better with aes-ni loaded, but it definitely doesn't appear to.

                                            Yes, maybe add to confusion but you seem to confirm it again.

                                            The way I understand it/picture it in my head, your result could be expected.
                                            When loading the module which, for what I understand means crypto in kernel, then it boils down to what the CPU is capable of.

                                            If you are willing, you could do as described in Reply: #47 and post the four results.

                                            @Pippin

                                            I can run those tests on Monday but it's my understanding that setting the aes-ni in the GUI is really just loading/unloading aesni.ko.

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