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A PAINLESS GUIDE TO CRC ERROR DETECTION ALGORITHMS
==================================================
"Everything you wanted to know about CRC algorithms, but were afraid
to ask for fear that errors in your understanding might be detected."
Version : 3.
Date : 19 August 1993.
Author : Ross N. Williams.
Net : ross@guest.adelaide.edu.au.
FTP : ftp.adelaide.edu.au/pub/rocksoft/crc_v3.txt
Company : Rocksoft^tm Pty Ltd.
Snail : 16 Lerwick Avenue, Hazelwood Park 5066, Australia.
Fax : +61 8 373-4911 (c/- Internode Systems Pty Ltd).
Phone : +61 8 379-9217 (10am to 10pm Adelaide Australia time).
Note : "Rocksoft" is a trademark of Rocksoft Pty Ltd, Australia.
Status : Copyright (C) Ross Williams, 1993. However, permission is
granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this
document provided that this information block and copyright
notice is included. Also, the C code modules included
in this document are fully public domain.
Thanks : Thanks to Jean-loup Gailly (jloup@chorus.fr) and Mark Adler
(me@quest.jpl.nasa.gov) who both proof read this document
and picked out lots of nits as well as some big fat bugs.
Table of Contents
-----------------
Abstract
1. Introduction: Error Detection
2. The Need For Complexity
3. The Basic Idea Behind CRC Algorithms
4. Polynomical Arithmetic
5. Binary Arithmetic with No Carries
6. A Fully Worked Example
7. Choosing A Poly
8. A Straightforward CRC Implementation
9. A Table-Driven Implementation
10. A Slightly Mangled Table-Driven Implementation
11. "Reflected" Table-Driven Implementations
12. "Reversed" Polys
13. Initial and Final Values
14. Defining Algorithms Absolutely
15. A Parameterized Model For CRC Algorithms
16. A Catalog of Parameter Sets for Standards
17. An Implementation of the Model Algorithm
18. Roll Your Own Table-Driven Implementation
19. Generating A Lookup Table
20. Summary
21. Corrections
A. Glossary
B. References
C. References I Have Detected But Haven't Yet Sighted
Abstract
--------
This document explains CRCs (Cyclic Redundancy Codes) and their
table-driven implementations in full, precise detail. Much of the
literature on CRCs, and in particular on their table-driven
implementations, is a little obscure (or at least seems so to me).
This document is an attempt to provide a clear and simple no-nonsense
explanation of CRCs and to absolutely nail down every detail of the
operation of their high-speed implementations. In addition to this,
this document presents a parameterized model CRC algorithm called the
"Rocksoft^tm Model CRC Algorithm". The model algorithm can be
parameterized to behave like most of the CRC implementations around,
and so acts as a good reference for describing particular algorithms.
A low-speed implementation of the model CRC algorithm is provided in
the C programming language. Lastly there is a section giving two forms
of high-speed table driven implementations, and providing a program
that generates CRC lookup tables.
1. Introduction: Error Detection
--------------------------------
The aim of an error detection technique is to enable the receiver of a
message transmitted through a noisy (error-introducing) channel to
determine whether the message has been corrupted. To do this, the
transmitter constructs a value (called a checksum) that is a function
of the message, and appends it to the message. The receiver can then
use the same function to calculate the checksum of the received
message and compare it with the appended checksum to see if the
message was correctly received. For example, if we chose a checksum
function which was simply the sum of the bytes in the message mod 256
(i.e. modulo 256), then it might go something as follows. All numbers
are in decimal.
Message : 6 23 4
Message with checksum : 6 23 4 33
Message after transmission : 6 27 4 33
In the above, the second byte of the message was corrupted from 23 to
27 by the communications channel. However, the receiver can detect
this by comparing the transmitted checksum (33) with the computer
checksum of 37 (6 + 27 + 4). If the checksum itself is corrupted, a
correctly transmitted message might be incorrectly identified as a
corrupted one. However, this is a safe-side failure. A dangerous-side
failure occurs where the message and/or checksum is corrupted in a
manner that results in a transmission that is internally consistent.
Unfortunately, this possibility is completely unavoidable and the best
that can be done is to minimize its probability by increasing the
amount of information in the checksum (e.g. widening the checksum from
one byte to two bytes).
Other error detection techniques exist that involve performing complex
transformations on the message to inject it with redundant
information. However, this document addresses only CRC algorithms,
which fall into the class of error detection algorithms that leave the
data intact and append a checksum on the end. i.e.:
<original intact message> <checksum>
2. The Need For Complexity
--------------------------
In the checksum example in the previous section, we saw how a
corrupted message was detected using a checksum algorithm that simply
sums the bytes in the message mod 256:
Message : 6 23 4
Message with checksum : 6 23 4 33
Message after transmission : 6 27 4 33
A problem with this algorithm is that it is too simple. If a number of
random corruptions occur, there is a 1 in 256 chance that they will
not be detected. For example:
Message : 6 23 4
Message with checksum : 6 23 4 33
Message after transmission : 8 20 5 33
To strengthen the checksum, we could change from an 8-bit register to
a 16-bit register (i.e. sum the bytes mod 65536 instead of mod 256) so
as to apparently reduce the probability of failure from 1/256 to
1/65536. While basically a good idea, it fails in this case because
the formula used is not sufficiently "random"; with a simple summing
formula, each incoming byte affects roughly only one byte of the
summing register no matter how wide it is. For example, in the second
example above, the summing register could be a Megabyte wide, and the
error would still go undetected. This problem can only be solved by
replacing the simple summing formula with a more sophisticated formula
that causes each incoming byte to have an effect on the entire
checksum register.
Thus, we see that at least two aspects are required to form a strong
checksum function:
WIDTH: A register width wide enough to provide a low a-priori
probability of failure (e.g. 32-bits gives a 1/2^32 chance
of failure).
CHAOS: A formula that gives each input byte the potential to change
any number of bits in the register.
Note: The term "checksum" was presumably used to describe early
summing formulas, but has now taken on a more general meaning
encompassing more sophisticated algorithms such as the CRC ones. The
CRC algorithms to be described satisfy the second condition very well,
and can be configured to operate with a variety of checksum widths.
3. The Basic Idea Behind CRC Algorithms
---------------------------------------
Where might we go in our search for a more complex function than
summing? All sorts of schemes spring to mind. We could construct
tables using the digits of pi, or hash each incoming byte with all the
bytes in the register. We could even keep a large telephone book
on-line, and use each incoming byte combined with the register bytes
to index a new phone number which would be the next register value.
The possibilities are limitless.
However, we do not need to go so far; the next arithmetic step
suffices. While addition is clearly not strong enough to form an
effective checksum, it turns out that division is, so long as the
divisor is about as wide as the checksum register.
The basic idea of CRC algorithms is simply to treat the message as an
enormous binary number, to divide it by another fixed binary number,
and to make the remainder from this division the checksum. Upon
receipt of the message, the receiver can perform the same division and
compare the remainder with the "checksum" (transmitted remainder).
Example: Suppose the the message consisted of the two bytes (6,23) as
in the previous example. These can be considered to be the hexadecimal
number 0617 which can be considered to be the binary number
0000-0110-0001-0111. Suppose that we use a checksum register one-byte
wide and use a constant divisor of 1001, then the checksum is the
remainder after 0000-0110-0001-0111 is divided by 1001. While in this
case, this calculation could obviously be performed using common
garden variety 32-bit registers, in the general case this is messy. So
instead, we'll do the division using good-'ol long division which you
learnt in school (remember?). Except this time, it's in binary:
...0000010101101 = 00AD = 173 = QUOTIENT
____-___-___-___-
9= 1001 ) 0000011000010111 = 0617 = 1559 = DIVIDEND
DIVISOR 0000.,,....,.,,,
----.,,....,.,,,
0000,,....,.,,,
0000,,....,.,,,
----,,....,.,,,
0001,....,.,,,
0000,....,.,,,
----,....,.,,,
0011....,.,,,
0000....,.,,,
----....,.,,,
0110...,.,,,
0000...,.,,,
----...,.,,,
1100..,.,,,
1001..,.,,,
====..,.,,,
0110.,.,,,
0000.,.,,,
----.,.,,,
1100,.,,,
1001,.,,,
====,.,,,
0111.,,,
0000.,,,
----.,,,
1110,,,
1001,,,
====,,,
1011,,
1001,,
====,,
0101,
0000,
----
1011
1001
====
0010 = 02 = 2 = REMAINDER
In decimal this is "1559 divided by 9 is 173 with a remainder of 2".
Although the effect of each bit of the input message on the quotient
is not all that significant, the 4-bit remainder gets kicked about
quite a lot during the calculation, and if more bytes were added to
the message (dividend) it's value could change radically again very
quickly. This is why division works where addition doesn't.
In case you're wondering, using this 4-bit checksum the transmitted
message would look like this (in hexadecimal): 06172 (where the 0617
is the message and the 2 is the checksum). The receiver would divide
0617 by 9 and see whether the remainder was 2.
4. Polynomical Arithmetic
-------------------------
While the division scheme described in the previous section is very
very similar to the checksumming schemes called CRC schemes, the CRC
schemes are in fact a bit weirder, and we need to delve into some
strange number systems to understand them.
The word you will hear all the time when dealing with CRC algorithms
is the word "polynomial". A given CRC algorithm will be said to be
using a particular polynomial, and CRC algorithms in general are said
to be operating using polynomial arithmetic. What does this mean?
Instead of the divisor, dividend (message), quotient, and remainder
(as described in the previous section) being viewed as positive
integers, they are viewed as polynomials with binary coefficients.
This is done by treating each number as a bit-string whose bits are
the coefficients of a polynomial. For example, the ordinary number 23
(decimal) is 17 (hex) and 10111 binary and so it corresponds to the
polynomial:
1*x^4 + 0*x^3 + 1*x^2 + 1*x^1 + 1*x^0
or, more simply:
x^4 + x^2 + x^1 + x^0
Using this technique, the message, and the divisor can be represented
as polynomials and we can do all our arithmetic just as before, except
that now it's all cluttered up with Xs. For example, suppose we wanted
to multiply 1101 by 1011. We can do this simply by multiplying the
polynomials:
(x^3 + x^2 + x^0)(x^3 + x^1 + x^0)
= (x^6 + x^4 + x^3
+ x^5 + x^3 + x^2
+ x^3 + x^1 + x^0) = x^6 + x^5 + x^4 + 3*x^3 + x^2 + x^1 + x^0
At this point, to get the right answer, we have to pretend that x is 2
and propagate binary carries from the 3*x^3 yielding
x^7 + x^3 + x^2 + x^1 + x^0
It's just like ordinary arithmetic except that the base is abstracted
and brought into all the calculations explicitly instead of being
there implicitly. So what's the point?
The point is that IF we pretend that we DON'T know what x is, we CAN'T
perform the carries. We don't know that 3*x^3 is the same as x^4 + x^3
because we don't know that x is 2. In this true polynomial arithmetic
the relationship between all the coefficients is unknown and so the
coefficients of each power effectively become strongly typed;
coefficients of x^2 are effectively of a different type to
coefficients of x^3.
With the coefficients of each power nicely isolated, mathematicians
came up with all sorts of different kinds of polynomial arithmetics
simply by changing the rules about how coefficients work. Of these
schemes, one in particular is relevant here, and that is a polynomial
arithmetic where the coefficients are calculated MOD 2 and there is no
carry; all coefficients must be either 0 or 1 and no carries are
calculated. This is called "polynomial arithmetic mod 2". Thus,
returning to the earlier example:
(x^3 + x^2 + x^0)(x^3 + x^1 + x^0)
= (x^6 + x^4 + x^3
+ x^5 + x^3 + x^2
+ x^3 + x^1 + x^0)
= x^6 + x^5 + x^4 + 3*x^3 + x^2 + x^1 + x^0
Under the other arithmetic, the 3*x^3 term was propagated using the
carry mechanism using the knowledge that x=2. Under "polynomial
arithmetic mod 2", we don't know what x is, there are no carries, and
all coefficients have to be calculated mod 2. Thus, the result
becomes:
= x^6 + x^5 + x^4 + x^3 + x^2 + x^1 + x^0
As Knuth [Knuth81] says (p.400):
"The reader should note the similarity between polynomial
arithmetic and multiple-precision arithmetic (Section 4.3.1), where
the radix b is substituted for x. The chief difference is that the
coefficient u_k of x^k in polynomial arithmetic bears little or no
relation to its neighboring coefficients x^{k-1} [and x^{k+1}], so
the idea of "carrying" from one place to another is absent. In fact
polynomial arithmetic modulo b is essentially identical to multiple
precision arithmetic with radix b, except that all carries are
suppressed."
Thus polynomical arithmetic mod 2 is just binary arithmetic mod 2 with
no carries. While polynomials provide useful mathematical machinery in
more analytical approaches to CRC and error-correction algorithms, for
the purposes of exposition they provide no extra insight and some
encumbrance and have been discarded in the remainder of this document
in favour of direct manipulation of the arithmetical system with which
they are isomorphic: binary arithmetic with no carry.
5. Binary Arithmetic with No Carries
------------------------------------
Having dispensed with polynomials, we can focus on the real arithmetic
issue, which is that all the arithmetic performed during CRC
calculations is performed in binary with no carries. Often this is
called polynomial arithmetic, but as I have declared the rest of this
document a polynomial free zone, we'll have to call it CRC arithmetic
instead. As this arithmetic is a key part of CRC calculations, we'd
better get used to it. Here we go:
Adding two numbers in CRC arithmetic is the same as adding numbers in
ordinary binary arithmetic except there is no carry. This means that
each pair of corresponding bits determine the corresponding output bit
without reference to any other bit positions. For example:
10011011
+11001010
--------
01010001
--------
There are only four cases for each bit position:
0+0=0
0+1=1
1+0=1
1+1=0 (no carry)
Subtraction is identical:
10011011
-11001010
--------
01010001
--------
with
0-0=0
0-1=1 (wraparound)
1-0=1
1-1=0
In fact, both addition and subtraction in CRC arithmetic is equivalent
to the XOR operation, and the XOR operation is its own inverse. This
effectively reduces the operations of the first level of power
(addition, subtraction) to a single operation that is its own inverse.
This is a very convenient property of the arithmetic.
By collapsing of addition and subtraction, the arithmetic discards any
notion of magnitude beyond the power of its highest one bit. While it
seems clear that 1010 is greater than 10, it is no longer the case
that 1010 can be considered to be greater than 1001. To see this, note
that you can get from 1010 to 1001 by both adding and subtracting the
same quantity:
1010 = 1010 + 0011
1010 = 1010 - 0011
This makes nonsense of any notion of order.
Having defined addition, we can move to multiplication and division.
Multiplication is absolutely straightforward, being the sum of the
first number, shifted in accordance with the second number.
1101
x 1011
----
1101
1101.
0000..
1101...
-------
1111111 Note: The sum uses CRC addition
-------
Division is a little messier as we need to know when "a number goes
into another number". To do this, we invoke the weak definition of
magnitude defined earlier: that X is greater than or equal to Y iff
the position of the highest 1 bit of X is the same or greater than the
position of the highest 1 bit of Y. Here's a fully worked division
(nicked from [Tanenbaum81]).
1100001010
_______________
10011 ) 11010110110000
10011,,.,,....
-----,,.,,....
10011,.,,....
10011,.,,....
-----,.,,....
00001.,,....
00000.,,....
-----.,,....
00010,,....
00000,,....
-----,,....
00101,....
00000,....
-----,....
01011....
00000....
-----....
10110...
10011...
-----...
01010..
00000..
-----..
10100.
10011.
-----.
01110
00000
-----
1110 = Remainder
That's really it. Before proceeding further, however, it's worth our
while playing with this arithmetic a bit to get used to it.
We've already played with addition and subtraction, noticing that they
are the same thing. Here, though, we should note that in this
arithmetic A+0=A and A-0=A. This obvious property is very useful
later.
In dealing with CRC multiplication and division, it's worth getting a
feel for the concepts of MULTIPLE and DIVISIBLE.
If a number A is a multiple of B then what this means in CRC
arithmetic is that it is possible to construct A from zero by XORing
in various shifts of B. For example, if A was 0111010110 and B was 11,
we could construct A from B as follows:
0111010110
= .......11.
+ ....11....
+ ...11.....
.11.......
However, if A is 0111010111, it is not possible to construct it out of
various shifts of B (can you see why? - see later) so it is said to be
not divisible by B in CRC arithmetic.
Thus we see that CRC arithmetic is primarily about XORing particular
values at various shifting offsets.
6. A Fully Worked Example
-------------------------
Having defined CRC arithmetic, we can now frame a CRC calculation as
simply a division, because that's all it is! This section fills in the
details and gives an example.
To perform a CRC calculation, we need to choose a divisor. In maths
marketing speak the divisor is called the "generator polynomial" or
simply the "polynomial", and is a key parameter of any CRC algorithm.
It would probably be more friendly to call the divisor something else,
but the poly talk is so deeply ingrained in the field that it would
now be confusing to avoid it. As a compromise, we will refer to the
CRC polynomial as the "poly". Just think of this number as a sort of
parrot. "Hello poly!"
You can choose any poly and come up with a CRC algorithm. However,
some polys are better than others, and so it is wise to stick with the
tried an tested ones. A later section addresses this issue.
The width (position of the highest 1 bit) of the poly is very
important as it dominates the whole calculation. Typically, widths of
16 or 32 are chosen so as to simplify implementation on modern
computers. The width of a poly is the actual bit position of the
highest bit. For example, the width of 10011 is 4, not 5. For the
purposes of example, we will chose a poly of 10011 (of width W of 4).
Having chosen a poly, we can proceed with the calculation. This is
simply a division (in CRC arithmetic) of the message by the poly. The
only trick is that W zero bits are appended to the message before the
CRC is calculated. Thus we have:
Original message : 1101011011
Poly : 10011
Message after appending W zeros : 11010110110000
Now we simply divide the augmented message by the poly using CRC
arithmetic. This is the same division as before:
1100001010 = Quotient (nobody cares about the quotient)
_______________
10011 ) 11010110110000 = Augmented message (1101011011 + 0000)
=Poly 10011,,.,,....
-----,,.,,....
10011,.,,....
10011,.,,....
-----,.,,....
00001.,,....
00000.,,....
-----.,,....
00010,,....
00000,,....
-----,,....
00101,....
00000,....
-----,....
01011....
00000....
-----....
10110...
10011...
-----...
01010..
00000..
-----..
10100.
10011.
-----.
01110
00000
-----
1110 = Remainder = THE CHECKSUM!!!!
The division yields a quotient, which we throw away, and a remainder,
which is the calculated checksum. This ends the calculation.
Usually, the checksum is then appended to the message and the result
transmitted. In this case the transmission would be: 11010110111110.
At the other end, the receiver can do one of two things:
a. Separate the message and checksum. Calculate the checksum for
the message (after appending W zeros) and compare the two
checksums.
b. Checksum the whole lot (without appending zeros) and see if it
comes out as zero!
These two options are equivalent. However, in the next section, we
will be assuming option b because it is marginally mathematically
cleaner.
A summary of the operation of the class of CRC algorithms:
1. Choose a width W, and a poly G (of width W).
2. Append W zero bits to the message. Call this M'.
3. Divide M' by G using CRC arithmetic. The remainder is the checksum.
That's all there is to it.
7. Choosing A Poly
------------------
Choosing a poly is somewhat of a black art and the reader is referred
to [Tanenbaum81] (p.130-132) which has a very clear discussion of this
issue. This section merely aims to put the fear of death into anyone
who so much as toys with the idea of making up their own poly. If you
don't care about why one poly might be better than another and just
want to find out about high-speed implementations, choose one of the
arithmetically sound polys listed at the end of this section and skip
to the next section.
First note that the transmitted message T is a multiple of the poly.
To see this, note that 1) the last W bits of T is the remainder after
dividing the augmented (by zeros remember) message by the poly, and 2)
addition is the same as subtraction so adding the remainder pushes the
value up to the next multiple. Now note that if the transmitted
message is corrupted in transmission that we will receive T+E where E
is an error vector (and + is CRC addition (i.e. XOR)). Upon receipt of
this message, the receiver divides T+E by G. As T mod G is 0, (T+E)
mod G = E mod G. Thus, the capacity of the poly we choose to catch
particular kinds of errors will be determined by the set of multiples
of G, for any corruption E that is a multiple of G will be undetected.
Our task then is to find classes of G whose multiples look as little
like the kind of line noise (that will be creating the corruptions) as
possible. So let's examine the kinds of line noise we can expect.
SINGLE BIT ERRORS: A single bit error means E=1000...0000. We can
ensure that this class of error is always detected by making sure that
G has at least two bits set to 1. Any multiple of G will be
constructed using shifting and adding and it is impossible to
construct a value with a single bit by shifting an adding a single
value with more than one bit set, as the two end bits will always
persist.
TWO-BIT ERRORS: To detect all errors of the form 100...000100...000
(i.e. E contains two 1 bits) choose a G that does not have multiples
that are 11, 101, 1001, 10001, 100001, etc. It is not clear to me how
one goes about doing this (I don't have the pure maths background),
but Tanenbaum assures us that such G do exist, and cites G with 1 bits
(15,14,1) turned on as an example of one G that won't divide anything
less than 1...1 where ... is 32767 zeros.
ERRORS WITH AN ODD NUMBER OF BITS: We can catch all corruptions where
E has an odd number of bits by choosing a G that has an even number of
bits. To see this, note that 1) CRC multiplication is simply XORing a
constant value into a register at various offsets, 2) XORing is simply
a bit-flip operation, and 3) if you XOR a value with an even number of
bits into a register, the oddness of the number of 1 bits in the
register remains invariant. Example: Starting with E=111, attempt to
flip all three bits to zero by the repeated application of XORing in
11 at one of the two offsets (i.e. "E=E XOR 011" and "E=E XOR 110")
This is nearly isomorphic to the "glass tumblers" party puzzle where
you challenge someone to flip three tumblers by the repeated
application of the operation of flipping any two. Most of the popular
CRC polys contain an even number of 1 bits. (Note: Tanenbaum states
more specifically that all errors with an odd number of bits can be
caught by making G a multiple of 11).
BURST ERRORS: A burst error looks like E=000...000111...11110000...00.
That is, E consists of all zeros except for a run of 1s somewhere
inside. This can be recast as E=(10000...00)(1111111...111) where
there are z zeros in the LEFT part and n ones in the RIGHT part. To
catch errors of this kind, we simply set the lowest bit of G to 1.
Doing this ensures that LEFT cannot be a factor of G. Then, so long as
G is wider than RIGHT, the error will be detected. See Tanenbaum for a
clearer explanation of this; I'm a little fuzzy on this one. Note:
Tanenbaum asserts that the probability of a burst of length greater
than W getting through is (0.5)^W.
That concludes the section on the fine art of selecting polys.
Some popular polys are:
16 bits: (16,12,5,0) [X25 standard]
(16,15,2,0) ["CRC-16"]
32 bits: (32,26,23,22,16,12,11,10,8,7,5,4,2,1,0) [Ethernet]
8. A Straightforward CRC Implementation
---------------------------------------
That's the end of the theory; now we turn to implementations. To start
with, we examine an absolutely straight-down-the-middle boring
straightforward low-speed implementation that doesn't use any speed
tricks at all. We'll then transform that program progessively until we
end up with the compact table-driven code we all know and love and
which some of us would like to understand.
To implement a CRC algorithm all we have to do is implement CRC
division. There are two reasons why we cannot simply use the divide
instruction of whatever machine we are on. The first is that we have
to do the divide in CRC arithmetic. The second is that the dividend
might be ten megabytes long, and todays processors do not have
registers that big.
So to implement CRC division, we have to feed the message through a
division register. At this point, we have to be absolutely precise
about the message data. In all the following examples the message will
be considered to be a stream of bytes (each of 8 bits) with bit 7 of
each byte being considered to be the most significant bit (MSB). The
bit stream formed from these bytes will be the bit stream with the MSB
(bit 7) of the first byte first, going down to bit 0 of the first
byte, and then the MSB of the second byte and so on.
With this in mind, we can sketch an implementation of the CRC
division. For the purposes of example, consider a poly with W=4 and
the poly=10111. Then, the perform the division, we need to use a 4-bit
register:
3 2 1 0 Bits
+---+---+---+---+
Pop! <-- | | | | | <----- Augmented message
+---+---+---+---+
1 0 1 1 1 = The Poly
(Reminder: The augmented message is the message followed by W zero bits.)
To perform the division perform the following:
Load the register with zero bits.
Augment the message by appending W zero bits to the end of it.
While (more message bits)
Begin
Shift the register left by one bit, reading the next bit of the
augmented message into register bit position 0.
If (a 1 bit popped out of the register during step 3)
Register = Register XOR Poly.
End
The register now contains the remainder.
(Note: In practice, the IF condition can be tested by testing the top
bit of R before performing the shift.)
We will call this algorithm "SIMPLE".
This might look a bit messy, but all we are really doing is
"subtracting" various powers (i.e. shiftings) of the poly from the
message until there is nothing left but the remainder. Study the
manual examples of long division if you don't understand this.
It should be clear that the above algorithm will work for any width W.
9. A Table-Driven Implementation
--------------------------------
The SIMPLE algorithm above is a good starting point because it
corresponds directly to the theory presented so far, and because it is
so SIMPLE. However, because it operates at the bit level, it is rather
awkward to code (even in C), and inefficient to execute (it has to
loop once for each bit). To speed it up, we need to find a way to
enable the algorithm to process the message in units larger than one
bit. Candidate quantities are nibbles (4 bits), bytes (8 bits), words
(16 bits) and longwords (32 bits) and higher if we can achieve it. Of
these, 4 bits is best avoided because it does not correspond to a byte
boundary. At the very least, any speedup should allow us to operate at
byte boundaries, and in fact most of the table driven algorithms
operate a byte at a time.
For the purposes of discussion, let us switch from a 4-bit poly to a
32-bit one. Our register looks much the same, except the boxes
represent bytes instead of bits, and the Poly is 33 bits (one implicit
1 bit at the top and 32 "active" bits) (W=32).
3 2 1 0 Bytes
+----+----+----+----+
Pop! <-- | | | | | <----- Augmented message
+----+----+----+----+
1<------32 bits------>
The SIMPLE algorithm is still applicable. Let us examine what it does.
Imagine that the SIMPLE algorithm is in full swing and consider the
top 8 bits of the 32-bit register (byte 3) to have the values:
t7 t6 t5 t4 t3 t2 t1 t0
In the next iteration of SIMPLE, t7 will determine whether the Poly
will be XORed into the entire register. If t7=1, this will happen,
otherwise it will not. Suppose that the top 8 bits of the poly are g7
g6.. g0, then after the next iteration, the top byte will be:
t6 t5 t4 t3 t2 t1 t0 ??
+ t7 * (g7 g6 g5 g4 g3 g2 g1 g0) [Reminder: + is XOR]
The NEW top bit (that will control what happens in the next iteration)
now has the value t6 + t7*g7. The important thing to notice here is
that from an informational point of view, all the information required
to calculate the NEW top bit was present in the top TWO bits of the
original top byte. Similarly, the NEXT top bit can be calculated in
advance SOLELY from the top THREE bits t7, t6, and t5. In fact, in
general, the value of the top bit in the register in k iterations can
be calculated from the top k bits of the register. Let us take this
for granted for a moment.
Consider for a moment that we use the top 8 bits of the register to
calculate the value of the top bit of the register during the next 8
iterations. Suppose that we drive the next 8 iterations using the
calculated values (which we could perhaps store in a single byte
register and shift out to pick off each bit). Then we note three
things:
* The top byte of the register now doesn't matter. No matter how
many times and at what offset the poly is XORed to the top 8
bits, they will all be shifted out the right hand side during the
next 8 iterations anyway.
* The remaining bits will be shifted left one position and the
rightmost byte of the register will be shifted in the next byte
AND
* While all this is going on, the register will be subjected to a
series of XOR's in accordance with the bits of the pre-calculated
control byte.
Now consider the effect of XORing in a constant value at various
offsets to a register. For example:
0100010 Register
...0110 XOR this
..0110. XOR this
0110... XOR this
-------
0011000
-------
The point of this is that you can XOR constant values into a register
to your heart's delight, and in the end, there will exist a value
which when XORed in with the original register will have the same
effect as all the other XORs.
Perhaps you can see the solution now. Putting all the pieces together
we have an algorithm that goes like this:
While (augmented message is not exhausted)
Begin
Examine the top byte of the register
Calculate the control byte from the top byte of the register
Sum all the Polys at various offsets that are to be XORed into
the register in accordance with the control byte
Shift the register left by one byte, reading a new message byte
into the rightmost byte of the register
XOR the summed polys to the register
End
As it stands this is not much better than the SIMPLE algorithm.
However, it turns out that most of the calculation can be precomputed
and assembled into a table. As a result, the above algorithm can be
reduced to:
While (augmented message is not exhaused)
Begin
Top = top_byte(Register);
Register = (Register << 24) | next_augmessage_byte;
Register = Register XOR precomputed_table[Top];
End
There! If you understand this, you've grasped the main idea of
table-driven CRC algorithms. The above is a very efficient algorithm
requiring just a shift, and OR, an XOR, and a table lookup per byte.
Graphically, it looks like this:
3 2 1 0 Bytes
+----+----+----+----+
+-----<| | | | | <----- Augmented message
| +----+----+----+----+
| ^
| |
| XOR
| |
| 0+----+----+----+----+ Algorithm
v +----+----+----+----+ ---------
| +----+----+----+----+ 1. Shift the register left by
| +----+----+----+----+ one byte, reading in a new
| +----+----+----+----+ message byte.
| +----+----+----+----+ 2. Use the top byte just rotated
| +----+----+----+----+ out of the register to index
+----->+----+----+----+----+ the table of 256 32-bit values.
+----+----+----+----+ 3. XOR the table value into the
+----+----+----+----+ register.
+----+----+----+----+ 4. Goto 1 iff more augmented
+----+----+----+----+ message bytes.
255+----+----+----+----+
In C, the algorithm main loop looks like this:
r=0;
while (len--)
{
byte t = (r >> 24) & 0xFF;
r = (r << 8) | *p++;
r^=table[t];
}
where len is the length of the augmented message in bytes, p points to
the augmented message, r is the register, t is a temporary, and table
is the computed table. This code can be made even more unreadable as
follows:
r=0; while (len--) r = ((r << 8) | *p++) ^ t[(r >> 24) & 0xFF];
This is a very clean, efficient loop, although not a very obvious one
to the casual observer not versed in CRC theory. We will call this the
TABLE algorithm.
10. A Slightly Mangled Table-Driven Implementation
--------------------------------------------------
Despite the terse beauty of the line
r=0; while (len--) r = ((r << 8) | *p++) ^ t[(r >> 24) & 0xFF];
those optimizing hackers couldn't leave it alone. The trouble, you
see, is that this loop operates upon the AUGMENTED message and in
order to use this code, you have to append W/8 zero bytes to the end
of the message before pointing p at it. Depending on the run-time
environment, this may or may not be a problem; if the block of data
was handed to us by some other code, it could be a BIG problem. One
alternative is simply to append the following line after the above
loop, once for each zero byte:
for (i=0; i<W/4; i++) r = (r << 8) ^ t[(r >> 24) & 0xFF];
This looks like a sane enough solution to me. However, at the further
expense of clarity (which, you must admit, is already a pretty scare
commodity in this code) we can reorganize this small loop further so
as to avoid the need to either augment the message with zero bytes, or
to explicitly process zero bytes at the end as above. To explain the
optimization, we return to the processing diagram given earlier.
3 2 1 0 Bytes
+----+----+----+----+
+-----<| | | | | <----- Augmented message
| +----+----+----+----+
| ^
| |
| XOR
| |
| 0+----+----+----+----+ Algorithm
v +----+----+----+----+ ---------
| +----+----+----+----+ 1. Shift the register left by
| +----+----+----+----+ one byte, reading in a new
| +----+----+----+----+ message byte.
| +----+----+----+----+ 2. Use the top byte just rotated
| +----+----+----+----+ out of the register to index
+----->+----+----+----+----+ the table of 256 32-bit values.
+----+----+----+----+ 3. XOR the table value into the
+----+----+----+----+ register.
+----+----+----+----+ 4. Goto 1 iff more augmented
+----+----+----+----+ message bytes.
255+----+----+----+----+
Now, note the following facts:
TAIL: The W/4 augmented zero bytes that appear at the end of the
message will be pushed into the register from the right as all
the other bytes are, but their values (0) will have no effect
whatsoever on the register because 1) XORing with zero does not
change the target byte, and 2) the four bytes are never
propagated out the left side of the register where their
zeroness might have some sort of influence. Thus, the sole
function of the W/4 augmented zero bytes is to drive the
calculation for another W/4 byte cycles so that the end of the
REAL data passes all the way through the register.
HEAD: If the initial value of the register is zero, the first four
iterations of the loop will have the sole effect of shifting in
the first four bytes of the message from the right. This is
because the first 32 control bits are all zero and so nothing is
XORed into the register. Even if the initial value is not zero,
the first 4 byte iterations of the algorithm will have the sole
effect of shifting the first 4 bytes of the message into the
register and then XORing them with some constant value (that is
a function of the initial value of the register).
These facts, combined with the XOR property
(A xor B) xor C = A xor (B xor C)
mean that message bytes need not actually travel through the W/4 bytes
of the register. Instead, they can be XORed into the top byte just
before it is used to index the lookup table. This leads to the
following modified version of the algorithm.
+-----<Message (non augmented)
|
v 3 2 1 0 Bytes
| +----+----+----+----+
XOR----<| | | | |
| +----+----+----+----+
| ^
| |
| XOR
| |
| 0+----+----+----+----+ Algorithm
v +----+----+----+----+ ---------
| +----+----+----+----+ 1. Shift the register left by
| +----+----+----+----+ one byte, reading in a new
| +----+----+----+----+ message byte.
| +----+----+----+----+ 2. XOR the top byte just rotated
| +----+----+----+----+ out of the register with the
+----->+----+----+----+----+ next message byte to yield an
+----+----+----+----+ index into the table ([0,255]).
+----+----+----+----+ 3. XOR the table value into the