This is revision 2.0 of Jerasure. This is pretty much Jerasure 1.2 without the original Galois Field backend. Version 2.0 links directly to GF-Complete. External Documentation: See technical report CS-08-627 for a description of the main interfaces (Version 1.2) See http://web.eecs.utk.edu/~plank/plank/papers/CS-13-703.html for information on GF-Complete and the tarball needed to install it. Custom usgae of GF-Complete is explained in this file (see below). NOTE: You must have GF-Complete installed in order to use Jerasure 2.0. There are two directories: The home directory contains the jerasure code. The Examples directory contains the example programs. The makefile assumes that Examples is a subdirectory of the home directory. Installing: 1.) Install GF-Complete 2.) 'cd' to root directory of Jerasure 3.) Set PREFIX in ./makefile to appropriate directory (/usr/local by default) 4.) make 5.) make install Running tests and examples: 1.) 'cd' into Examples 2.) make See individual source file to determine what the examples do. Inclusion of GF-Complete: As long as GF-Complete is installed, Jerasure 2.0 can be used just as previous versions. There is no need to define custom Galois Fields. Jerasure will determine the default field to use, if one is not specified. If you would like to explore a using a different Galois Field implementation, you can dynamically set the backend GF for a given word-size (w). The new galois.[ch] exports the following functions to be used by applications for dynamically setting the backend GF: 1.) galois_change_technique Function signature: void galois_change_technique(gf_t *gf, int w); This function will take a pointer to a Galois field structure and set it as the current backend for all operations in GF(2^w). Note that you must specify 'w' here, since the internal GF structure is mostly opaque to Jerasure. Be sure to change the technique with the correct structure and word-size. There are a few ways to get a pointer to a gf_t structure: via GF-Complete or using the helper functions provided by Jerasure: galois_init_field and galois_init_composite_field. GF-Complete exposes create_gf_from_argv, gf_init_easy and gf_init_hard. See the GF-Complete documentation for more detail on how to use those functions. You can definitely create more complicated fields with the GF-Complete initialization functions, but the two helper functions provided by Jerasure (galois_init_field and galois_init_composite_field) can be used to create most of the supported Galois Fields. 2.) galois_init_field Function signature: gf_t* galois_init_field(int w, int mult_type, int region_type, int divide_type, uint64_t prim_poly, int arg1, int arg2); This is a helper function that will initialize a Galois field. See the GF-Complete documentation for more info on what the arguments mean. Here is a brief description of the arguments: mult_type can be any *one* of the following: GF_MULT_DEFAULT GF_MULT_SHIFT GF_MULT_CARRY_FREE GF_MULT_GROUP GF_MULT_BYTWO_p GF_MULT_BYTWO_b GF_MULT_TABLE GF_MULT_LOG_TABLE GF_MULT_LOG_ZERO GF_MULT_LOG_ZERO_EXT GF_MULT_SPLIT_TABLE region_type can be a combination of the following (some combinations will not be valid): GF_REGION_DEFAULT GF_REGION_DOUBLE_TABLE GF_REGION_QUAD_TABLE GF_REGION_LAZY GF_REGION_SSE GF_REGION_NOSSE GF_REGION_ALTMAP GF_REGION_CAUCHY divide_type can be one of the following: GF_DIVIDE_DEFAULT GF_DIVIDE_MATRIX GF_DIVIDE_EUCLID prim_poly is the field-defining primitive polynomial arg1 and arg2 are special arguments usually used for defining SPLIT and GROUP operations 3.) galois_init_composite_field Function signature: gf_t* galois_init_composite_field(int w, int region_type, int divide_type, int degree, gf_t* base_gf); This is a helper function designed to make creating Composite fields easier. All you need to do is hand it w, region mult type, divide type, degree and a pointer to a base field. Note that the base_gf must have degree w/degree in order for this to work. For example, if we create a GF using: galois_init_composite_field(32, GF_REGION_DEFAULT, GF_DIVIDE_DEFAULT, 2, base_gf); Then base_gf must have w=16. For more information on how to change the backing fields for Jerasure, please refer to 1.) Examples/reed_sol_test_gf.c: Runs basic tests for Reed-Solomon given args for a backing GF (uses create_gf_from_argv to get gf_t pointer) 2.) Examples/reed_sol_time_gf.c: Runs more thorough timing and validation tests for a backing GF (uses create_gf_from_argv to get gf_t pointer) 3.) Examples/reed_sol_hard_time_gf.c: Runs more thorough timing and validation tests for a backing GF (uses galois_init_field and galois_init_composite_field to get gf_t pointer) Performance: There are two performance-based test scripts: time_all_gfs_argv_init.sh and time_all_gfs_hard_init.sh. Both scripts run the same tests, but initialize the underlying GF fields in different ways (*argv* uses reed_sol_time_gf and *hard* uses reed_sol_hard_time_gf.c). You can run 'time_all_gfs_argv_init.sh' to time *all* possible GF implementations on your computer. This script requires the 'gf_methods' utility from GF-Complete to be in your PATH. time_all_gfs_argv_init.sh was run on a MacBook Air and the distilled numbers are given in ./PERF.txt. The results are sorted by encoding throughput. The format of each entry reflects the arguments given to reed_sol_time_gf. For example, the test run of 'Examples/reed_sol_time_gf 12 3 8 128 65536 -m SPLIT 8 4 -r SSE' is recorded as this in PERF.txt: _12_3_8_128_65536_-m_SPLIT_8_4_-r_SSE_- 2813.34