5bd4a122a6afa02c8ce6231ae2c6167461f669ce
[libreriscv.git] / isa_conflict_resolution / isamux_isans.mdwn
1 # Note-form on ISAMUX (aka "ISANS")
2
3 A fixed number of additional (hidden) bits, conceptually a "namespace", that go directly and non-optionally
4 into the instruction decode phase, extending (in each implementation) the
5 opcode length to 16+N, 32+N, 48+N, where N is a hard fixed quantity on
6 a per-implementor basis.
7
8 Where the opcode is normally loaded from the location at the PC, the extra
9 bits, set via a CSR, are mandatorially appended to every instruction: hence why they are described as "hidden" opcode bits, and as a "namespace".
10
11 The parallels with c++ "using namespace" are direct and clear.
12 Alternative conceptual ways to understand this concept include
13 "escape-sequencing".
14
15 TODO: reserve some bits which permit the namespace (escape-sequence) to
16 be relevant for a fixed number of instructions at a time. Caveat:
17 allowing such a countdown to cross branch-points is unwise (illegal
18 instruction?)
19
20 # Hypothetical Format
21
22 Note that this is a hypothetical format, yet TBD, where particular attention
23 needs to be paid to the fact that there is an "immediate" version of CSRRW
24 (with 5 bits of immediate) that could save a lot of space in binaries.
25
26 <pre>
27 3 2 1
28 |1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0|
29 |------------------------------ |-------|---------------------|-|
30 |1 custom custom custom custom custom | foreignarch |1|
31 |0 reserved reserved reserved reserved reserved | foreignarch |1|
32 |custom | reserved | official|B| rvcpage |0|
33 </pre>
34
35 RV Mode
36
37 * when bit 0 is 0, "RV" mode is selected.
38 * in RV mode, bits 1 thru 5 provide up to 16 possible alternative meanings (namespaces) for 16 Bit opcodes. "pages" if you will. The top bit indicates custom meanings. When set to 0, the top bit is for official usage.
39 * Bits 15 thru 23 are reserved.
40 * Bits 24 thru 31 are for custom usage.
41 * bit 6 ("B") is LE/BE
42
43 16 bit page examples:
44
45 * 0b0000 STANDARD (2019) RVC
46 * 0b0001 RVCv2
47 * 0b0010 RV16
48 * 0b0011 RVCv3
49 * ...
50 * 0b1000 custom 16 bit opcode meanings 1
51 * 0b1001 custom 16 bit opcode meanings 2
52 * .....
53
54 Foreign Arch Mode
55
56 * when bit 0 is 1, "Foreign arch" mode is selected.
57 * Bits 1 thru 7 are a table of foreign arches.
58 * when the MSB is 1, this is for custom use.
59 * when the MSB is 0, bits 1 thru 6 are reserved for 64 possible official foreign archs.
60
61 Foreign archs could be (examples):
62
63 * 0b0000000 x86_32
64 * 0b0000001 x86_64
65 * 0b0000010 MIPS32
66 * 0b0000011 MIPS64
67 * ....
68 * 0b0010000 Java Bytecode
69 * 0b0010001 N.E.Other Bytecode
70 * ....
71 * 0b1000000 custom foreign arch 1
72 * 0b1000001 custom foreign arch 2
73 * ....
74
75 Note that "official" foreign archs have a binary value where the MSB is zero,
76 and custom foreign archs have a binary value where the MSB is 1.
77
78 # Namespaces are permitted to swap to new state <a name="stateswap"></a>
79
80 In each privilege level, on a change of ISANS (whether through manual setting of ISANS or through trap entry or exit changing the ISANS CSR), an implementation is permitted to completely and arbitrarily switch not only the instruction set, it is permitted to switch to a new bank of CSRs (or a subset of the same), and even to switch to a new PC.
81
82 This to occur immediately and atomically at the point at which the change in ISANS occurs.
83
84 The most obvious application of this is for Foreign Archs, which may have their own completely separate PC. Thus, foreign assembly code and RISCV assembly code need not be mixed in the same binary.
85
86 Further use-cases may be envisaged however great care needs to be taken to not cause massive complications for JIT emulation, as the RV ISANS is unary encoded (2^31 permutations).
87
88 In addition, the state information of *all* namespaces has to be saved and restored on a context-switch (unless the SP is also switched as part of the state!) which is quite severely burdensome and getting exceptionally complex.
89
90 Switching CSR, PC (and potentially SP) and other state on a NS change in the RISCV unary NS therefore needs to be done wisely and responsibly, i.e. minimised!
91
92 To be discussed. Context <https://groups.google.com/a/groups.riscv.org/d/msg/isa-dev/x-uFZDXiOxY/27QDW5KvBQAJ>
93
94 # Privileged Modes / Traps <a name="privtraps"></a>
95
96 An additional WLRL CSR per priv-level named "LAST-ISANS" is required, and
97 another called "TRAP-ISANS"
98 These mirrors the ISANS CSR, and, on a trap, the current ISANS in
99 that privilege level is atomically
100 transferred into LAST-ISANS by the hardware, and ISANS in that trap
101 is set to TRAP-ISANS. Hardware is *only then* permitted to modify the PC to
102 begin execution of the trap.
103
104 On exit from the trap, LAST-ISANS is copied into the ISANS CSR, and
105 LAST-ISANS is set to TRAP-ISANS. *Only then* is the hardware permitted
106 to modify the PC to begin execution where the trap left off.
107
108 This is identical to how xepc is handled.
109
110 Note 1: in the case of Supervisor Mode (context switches in particular),
111 saving and changing of LAST-ISANS (to and from the stack) must be done
112 atomically and under the protection of the SIE bit. Failure to do so
113 could result in corruption of LAST-ISANS when multiple traps occur in
114 the same privilege level.
115
116 Note 2: question - should the trap due to illegal (unsupported) values
117 written into LAST-ISANS occur when the *software* writes to LAST-ISANS,
118 or when the *trap* (on exit) writes into LAST-ISANS? this latter seems
119 fraught: a trap, on exit, causing another trap??
120
121 Per-privilege-level pseudocode (there exists UISANS, UTRAPISANS, ULASTISANS,
122 MISANS, MTRAPISANS, MLASTISANS and so on):
123
124 <pre>
125 trap_entry()
126 {
127     LAST-ISANS = ISANS // record the old NS
128     ISANS = TRAP_ISANS // traps are executed in "trap" NS
129 }
130
131 and trap_exit:
132
133 trap_exit():
134 {
135     ISANS = LAST-ISANS
136     LAST-ISANS = TRAP_ISANS
137 }
138 </pre>
139
140 # Alternative RVC 16 Bit Opcode meanings
141
142 Here is appropriate to raise an idea how to cover RVC and future
143 variants, including RV16.
144
145 Just as with foreign archs, and you quite rightly highlight above, it
146 makes absolutely no sense to try to select both RVCv1, v2, v3 and so on,
147 all simultaneously. An unary bit vector for RVC modes, changing the 16
148 BIT opcode space meaning, is wasteful and again has us believe that WARL
149 is the "solution".
150
151 The correct thing to do is, again, just like with foreign archs, to
152 treat RVCs as a *binary* namespace selector. Bits 1 thru 3 would give
153 8 possible completely new alternative meanings, just like how the Z80
154 and the 286 and 386 used to do bank switching.
155
156 All zeros is clearly reserved for the present RVC. 0b001 for RVCv2. 0b010
157 for RV16 (look it up) and there should definitely be room reserved here
158 for custom reencodings of the 16 bit opcode space.
159
160 # FAQ
161
162 ## Why not have TRAP-ISANS as a vector table, matching mtvec? <a name="trap-isans-vec"></a>
163
164 Use case to be determined. Rather than be a global per-priv-level value,
165 TRAP-ISANS is a table of length exactly equal to the mtvec/utvec/stvec table,
166 with corresponding entries that specify the assembly-code namespace in which
167 the trap handler routine is written.
168
169 Open question: see <https://groups.google.com/a/groups.riscv.org/d/msg/isa-dev/IAhyOqEZoWA/BM0G3J2zBgAJ>
170
171 <pre>
172 trap_entry(x_cause)
173 {
174     LAST-ISANS = ISANS // record the old NS
175     ISANS = TRAP_ISANS_VEC[xcause] // traps are executed in "trap" NS
176 }
177
178 and trap_exit:
179
180 trap_exit(x_cause):
181 {
182     ISANS = LAST-ISANS
183     LAST-ISANS = TRAP_ISANS_VEC[x_cause]
184 }
185 </pre>
186
187 ## Is this like MISA? <a name="misa"></a>
188
189 No.
190
191 * MISA's space is entirely taken up (and running out).
192 * There is no allocation (provision) for custom extensions.
193 * MISA switches on and off entire extensions: ISAMUX/NS may be used to switch multiple opcodes (present and future), to alternate meanings.
194 * MISA is WARL and is inaccessible from everything but M-Mode (not even readable).
195
196 MISA is therefore wholly unsuited to U-Mode usage; ISANS is specifically permitted to be called by userspace to switch (with no stalling) between namespaces, repeatedly and in quick succession.
197
198 ## What happens if this scheme is not adopted? Why is it better than leaving things well alone? <a name="laissezfaire"></a>
199
200 At the first sign of an emergency non-backwards compatible and unavoidable
201 change to the *frozen* RISCV *official* Standards, the entire RISCV
202 community is fragmented and divided into two:
203
204 * Those vendors that are hardware compatible with the legacy standard.
205 * Those that are compatible with the new standard.
206
207 *These two communities would be mutually exclusively incompatible*. If
208 a second emergency occurs, RISCV becomes even less tenable.
209
210 Hardware that wished to be "compatible" with either flavour would require
211 JIT or offline static binary recompilation. No vendor would willingly
212 accept this as a condition of the standards divergence in the first place,
213 locking up decision making to the detriment of RISCV as a whole.
214
215 By providing a "safety valve" in the form of a hidden namespace, at least
216 newer hardware has the option to implement both (or more) variations,
217 *and still apply for Certification*.
218
219 However to also allow "legacy" hardware to at least be JIT soft
220 compatible, some very strict rules *must* be adhered to, that appear at
221 first sight not to make any sense.
222
223 It's complicated in other words!
224
225 ## Surely it's okay to just tell people to use 48-bit encodings? <a name="use48bit"></a>
226
227 Short answer: it doesn't help resolve conflicts, and costs hardware and
228 redesigns to do so. Softcores in cost-sensitive embedded applications may
229 even not actually be able to fit the required 48 bit instruction decode engine
230 into a (small, ICE40) FPGA. 48-bit instruction decoding is much more complex
231 than straight 32-bit decoding, requiring a queue.
232
233 Second answer: conflicts can still occur in the (unregulated, custom) 48-bit
234 space, which *could* be resolved by ISAMUX/ISANS as applied to the *48* bit
235 space in exactly the same way. And the 64-bit space.
236
237 ## Why not leave this to individual custom vendors to solve on a case by case basis? <a name="case-by-case"></a>
238
239 The suggestion was raised that a custom extension vendor could create
240 their own CSR that selects between conflicting namespaces that resolve
241 the meaning of the exact same opcode. This to be done by all and any
242 vendors, as they see fit, with little to no collaboration or coordination
243 towards standardisation in any form.
244
245 The problems with this approach are numerous, when presented to a
246 worldwide context that the UNIX Platform, in particular, has to face
247 (where the embedded platform does not)
248
249 First: lack of coordination, in the proliferation of arbitrary solutions,
250 has to primarily be borne by gcc, binutils, LLVM and other compilers.
251
252 Secondly: CSR space is precious. With each vendor likely needing only one
253 or two bits to express the namespace collision avoidance, if they make
254 even a token effort to use worldwide unique CSRs (an effort that would
255 benefit compiler writers), the CSR register space is quickly exhausted.
256
257 Thirdly: JIT Emulation of such an unregulated space becomes just as
258 much hell as it is for compiler writers. In addition, if two vendors
259 use conflicting CSR addresses, the only sane way to tell the emulator
260 what to do is to give the emulator a runtime commandline argument.
261
262 Fourthly: with each vendor coming up with their own way of handling
263 conflicts, not only are the chances of mistakes higher, it is against the
264 very principles of collaboration and cooperation that save vendors money
265 on development and ongoing maintenance. Each custom vendor will have
266 to maintain their own separate hard fork of the toolchain and software,
267 which is well known to result in security vulnerabilities.
268
269 By coordinating and managing the allocation of namespace bits (unary
270 or binary) the above issues are solved. CSR space is no longer wasted,
271 compiler and JIT software writers have an easier time, clashes are
272 avoided, and RISCV is stabilised and has a trustable long term future.
273
274 ## Why ISAMUX / ISANS has to be WLRL and mandatory trap on illegal writes <a name="wlrlmandatorytrap"></a>
275
276 The namespaces, set by bits in the CSR, are functionally directly
277 equivalent to c++ namespaces, even down to the use of braces.
278
279 WARL, by allowing implementors to choose the value, prevents and prohibits
280 the critical and necessary raising of an exception that would begin the
281 JIT process in the case of ongoing standards evolution.
282
283 Without this opportunity, an implementation has no reliable guaranteed way of knowing
284 when to drop into full JIT mode,
285 which is the only guaranteed way to distinguish
286 any given conflicting opcode. It is as if the c++
287 standard was given a similar optional
288 opportunity to completely ignore the
289 "using namespace" prefix!
290
291 --
292
293 Ok so I trust it's now clear why WLRL (thanks Allen) is needed.
294
295 When Dan raised the WARL concern initially a situation was masked by
296 the conflict, that if gone unnoticed would jeapordise ISAMUX/ISANS
297 entirely. Actually, two separate errors. So thank you for raising the
298 question.
299
300 The situation arises when foreign archs are to be given their own NS
301 bit. MIPS is allocated bit 8, x86 bit 9, whilst LE/BE is given bit 0,
302 RVCv2 bit 1 andso on. All of this potential rather than actual, clearly.
303
304 Imagine then that software tries to write and set not just bit 8 and
305 bit 9, it also tries to set bit 0 and 1 as well.
306
307 This *IS* on the face of it a legitimate reason to make ISAMUX/ISANS WARL.
308
309 However it masks a fundamental flaw that has to be addressed, which
310 brings us back much closer to the original design of 18 months ago,
311 and it's highlighted thus:
312
313 x86 and simultaneous RVCv2 modes are total nonsense in the first place!
314
315 The solution instead is to have a NS bit (bit0) that SPECIFICALLY
316 determines if the arch is RV or not. If 0, the rest of the ISAMUX/ISANS
317 is very specifically RV *only*, and if 1, the ISAMUX/ISANS is a *binary*
318 table of foreign architectures and foreign architectures only.
319
320 Exactly how many bits are used for the foreign arch table, is to
321 be determined. 7 bits, one of which is reserved for custom usage,
322 leaving a whopping 64 possible "official" foreign instruction sets to
323 be hardware-supported/JIT-emulated seems to be sufficiently gratuitous,
324 to me.
325
326 One of those could even be Java Bytecode!
327
328 Now, it could *hypothetically* be argued that the permutation of setting
329 LE/BE and MIPS for example is desirable. A simple analysis shows this
330 not to be the case: once in the MIPS foreign NS, it is the MIPS hardware
331 implementation that should have its own way of setting and managing its
332 LE/BE mode, because to do otherwise drastically interferes with MIPS
333 binary compatibility.
334
335 Thus, it is officially Not Our Problem: only flipping into one foreign
336 arch at a time makes sense, thus this has to be reflected in the
337 ISAMUX/ISANS CSR itself, completely side-stepping the (apparent) need
338 to make the NS CSR WARL (which would not work anyway, as previously
339 mentioned).
340
341 So, thank you, again, Dan, for raising this. It would have completely
342 jeapordised ISAMUX/NS if not spotted.
343
344 The second issue is: how does any hardware system, whether it support
345 ISANS or not, and whether any future hardware supports some Namespaces
346 and, in a transitive fashion, has to support *more* future namespaces,
347 through JIT emulation, if this is not planned properly in advance?
348
349 Let us take the simple case first: a current 2019 RISCV fully compliant
350 RV64GC UNIX capable system (with mandatory traps on all unsupported CSRs).
351
352 Fast forward 20 years, there are now 5 ISAMUX/NS unary bits, and 3
353 foreign arch binary table entries.
354
355 Such a system is perfectly possible of software JIT emulating ALL of these
356 options because the write to the (illegal, for that system) ISAMUX/NS
357 CSR generates the trap that is needed for that system ti begin JIT mode.
358
359 (This again emphasises exactly why the trap is mandatory).
360
361 Now let us take the case of a hypothetical system from say 2021 that
362 implements RVCv2 at the hardware level.
363
364 Fast forward 20 years: if the CSR were made WARL, that system would be
365 absolutely screwed. The implementor would be under the false impression
366 that ignoring setting of "illegal" bits was acceptable, making the
367 transition to JIT mode flat-out impossible to detect.
368
369 When this is considered transitively, considering all future additions to
370 the NS, and all permutations, it can be logically deduced that there is
371 a need to reserve a *full* set of bits in the ISAMUX/NS CSR *in advance*.
372
373 i.e. that *right now*, in the year 2019, the entire ISAMUX/NS CSR cannot
374 be added to piecemeal, the full 32 (or 64) bits *has* to be reserved,
375 and reserved bits set at zero.
376
377 Furthermore, if any software attempts to write to those reserved bits,
378 it *must* be treated just as if those bits were distinct and nonexistent
379 CSRs, and a trap raised.
380
381 It makes more sense to consider each NS as having its own completely
382 separate CSR, which, if it does not exist, clearly it should be obvious
383 that, as an unsupported CSR, a trap should be raised (and JIT emulation
384 activated).
385
386 However given that only the one bit is needed (in RV NS Mode, not
387 Foreign NS Mode), it would be terribly wasteful of the CSRs to do this,
388 despite it being technically correct and much easier to understand why
389 trap raising is so essential (mandatory).
390
391 This again should emphasise how to mentally get one's head round this
392 mind-bendingly complex problem space: think of each NS bit as its own
393 totally separate CSR that every implementor is free and clear to implement
394 (or leave to JIT Emulation) as they see fit.
395
396 Only then does the mandatory need to trap on write really start to hit
397 home, as does the need to preallocate a full set of reserved zero values
398 in the RV ISAMUX/NS.
399
400 Lastly, I *think* it's ok to only reserve say 32 bits, and, in 50 years
401 time if that genuinely is not enough, start the process all over again
402 with a new CSR. ISAMUX2/NS2.
403
404 Subdivision of the RV NS (support for RVCv3/4/5/RV16 without wasting
405 precious CSR bits) best left for discussion another time, the above is
406 a heck of a lot to absorb, already.
407
408 ## Why WARL will not work and why WLRL is required
409
410 WARL requires a follow-up read of the CSR to ascertain what heuristic
411 the hardware *might* have applied, and if that procedure is followed in
412 this proposal, performance even on hardware would be severely compromised.
413
414 In addition when switching to foreign architectures, the switch has to
415 be done atomically and guaranteed to occur.
416
417 In the case of JIT emulation, the WARL "detection" code will be in an
418 assembly language that is alien to hardware.
419
420 Support for both assembly languages immediately after the CSR write
421 is clearly impossible, this leaves no other option but to have the CSR
422 be WLRL (on all platforms) and for traps to be mandatory (on the UNIX
423 Platform).
424
425 ## Is it strictly necessary for foreign archs to switch back? <a name="foreignswitch"></a>
426
427 No, because LAST-ISANS handles the setting and unsetting of the ISANS CSR
428 in a completely transparent fashion as far as the foreign arch is concerned.
429 Supervisor or Hypervisor traps take care of the context switch in a way
430 that the user mode (or guest) need not be aware of, in any way.
431
432 Thus, in e.g. Hypervisor Mode, the foreign guest arch has no knowledge
433 or need to know that the hypervisor is flipping back to RV at the time of
434 a trap.
435
436 Note however that this is **not** the same as the foreign arch executing
437 *foreign* traps! Foreign architecture trap and interrupt handling mechanisms
438 are **out of scope** of this document and MUST be handled by the foreign
439 architecture implementation in a completely transparent fashion that in
440 no way interacts or interferes with this proposal.
441
442 ## Can we have dynamic declaration and runtime declaration of capabilities? <a name="dynamic"></a>
443
444 Answer: don't know (yet). Quoted from Rogier:
445
446 > "A SOC may have several devices that one may want to directly control
447 > with custom instructions. If independent vendors use the same opcodes you
448 > either have to change the encodings for every different chip (not very
449 > nice for software) or you can give the device an ID which is defined in
450 > some device tree or something like that and use that."
451
452 dynamic detection wasn't originally planned: static
453 compilation was envisaged to solve the need, with a table of
454 mvendorid-marchid-isamux/isans being maintained inside gcc / binutils /
455 llvm (or separate library?) that, like the linux kernel ARCH table,
456 requires a world-wide atomic "git commit" to add globally-unique
457 registered entries that map functionality to actual namespaces.
458
459 where that goes wrong is if there is ever a pair (or more) of vendors
460 that use the exact same custom feature that maps to different opcodes,
461 a statically-compiled binary has no hope of executing natively on both
462 systems.
463
464 at that point: yes, something akin to device-tree would be needed.
465
466 # Open Questions <a name="open-questions"></a>
467
468 This section from a post by Rogier Bruisse
469 <http://hands.com/~lkcl/gmail_re_isadev_isamux.html>
470
471 ## is the ISANS CSR a 32 or XLEN bit value? <a name="isans-32-or-xlen"></a>
472
473 This is partly answered in another FAQ above: if 32 bits is not enough
474 for a full suite of official, custom-with-atomic-registration and custom-without
475 then a second CSR group (ISANS2) may be added at a future date (10-20 years
476 hence).
477
478 32 bits would not inconvenience RV32, and implementors wishing to
479 make significant altnernative modifications to opcodes in the RV32 ISA space
480 could do so without the burden of having to support a split 32/LO 32/HI
481 CSR across two locations.
482
483 ## is the ISANS a flat number space or should some bits be reserved for use as flags?
484
485 See 16-bit RV namespace "page" concept, above. Some bits have to be unary
486 (multiple simultaneous features such as LE/BE in one bit, and augmented
487 Floating-point rounding / clipping in another), whilst others definitely
488 need to be binary (the most obvious one being "paging" in the space currently
489 occupied by RVC).
490
491 ## should the ISANS space be partitioned between reserved, custom with registration guaranteed non clashing, custom, very likely non clashing?
492
493 Yes. Format TBD.
494
495 ## should only compiler visible/generated constant setting with CSRRWI and/or using a clearly recognisable LI/LUI be accommodated or should dynamic setting be accommodated as well?
496
497 This is almost certainly a software design issue, not so much a hardware
498 issue.
499
500 ## How should the ISANS be (re)stored in a trap and in context switch?
501
502 See section above on privilege mode: LAST-ISANS has been introduced that
503 mirrors (x)CAUSE and (x)EPC pretty much exactly. Context switches change
504 uepc just before exit from the trap, in order to change the user-mode PC
505 to switch to a new process, and ulast-isans can - must - be treated in
506 exactly the same way. When the context switch sets ulast-isans (and uepc),
507 the hardware flips both ulast-isans into uisans and uepc into pc (atomically):
508 both the new NS and the new PC activate immediately, on return to usermode.
509
510 Quite simple.
511
512 ## Should the mechanism accommodate "foreign ISA's" and if so how does one restore the ISA.
513
514 See section above on LAST-ISANS. With the introduction of LAST-ISANS, the
515 change is entirely transparent, and handled by the Supervisor (or Hypervisor)
516 trap, in a fashion that the foreign ISA need not even know of the existence
517 of ISANS. At all.
518
519 ## Where is the default ISA stored and what is responsible for what it is after
520
521 Options:
522 * start up
523 * starting a program
524 * calling into a dynamically linked library
525 * taking a trap
526 * changing privilege levels
527
528 These first four are entirely at the discretion of (and the
529 responsibility of) the software. There is precedent for most of these
530 having been implemented, historically, at some point, in relation to
531 LE/BE mode CSRs in other hardware (MIPSEL vs MIPS distros for example).
532
533 Traps are responsible for saving LAST-ISANS on the stack, exactly as they
534 are also responsible for saving other context-sensitive information such
535 as the registers and xEPC.
536
537 The hardware is responsible for atomically switching out ISANS into the
538 relevant xLAST-ISANS (and back again on exit). See Privileged Traps,
539 above.
540
541 ## If the ISANS is just bits of an instruction that are to be prefixed by the cpu, can those bits contain immediates? Register numbers?
542
543 The concept of a CSR containing an immediate makes no sense. The concept
544 of a CSR containing a register number, the contents of which would, presumably,
545 be inserted into the NS, would immediately make that register a permanent
546 and irrevocably reserved register that could not be utilised for any other
547 purpose.
548
549 This is what the CSRs are supposed to be for!
550
551 It would be better just to have a second CSR - ISANS2 - potentially even ISANS3
552 in 60+ years time, rather than try to use a GPR for the purposes for which CSRs
553 are intended.
554
555 ## How does the system indicate a namespace is not recognised? Does it trap or can/must a recoverable mechanism be provided?
556
557 It doesn't "indicate" that a namespace is not recognised. WLRL fields only
558 hold supported values. If the hardware cannot hold the value, a trap
559 **MUST** be thrown (in the UNIX platform), and at that point it becomes the
560 responsibility of software to deal with it.
561
562 ## What are the security implications? Can some ISA namespaces be set by user space?
563
564 Of course they can. It becomes the responsibility of the Supervisor Mode
565 (the kernel) to treat ISANS in a fashion orthogonal to the PC. If the OS
566 is not capable of properly context-switching securely by setting the right
567 PC, it's not going to be capable of properly looking after changes to ISANS.
568
569 ## Does the validity of an ISA namespace depend on privilege level? If so how?
570
571 The question does not exactly make sense, and may need a re-reading of the
572 section on how Privilege Modes, above. In RISC-V, privilege modes do not
573 actually change very much state of the system: the absolute minimum changes
574 are made (swapped out) - xEPC, xSTATUS and so on - and the privilege mode
575 is expected to handle the context switching (or other actions) itself.
576
577 ISANS - through LAST-ISANS - is absolutely no different. The trap and the
578 kernel (Supervisor or Hypervisor) are provided the *mechanism* by which
579 ISA Namespace *may* be set: it is up to the software to use that mechanism
580 correctly, just as the software is expected to use the mechanisms provided
581 to correctly implement context-switching by saving and restoring register
582 files, the PC, and other state. The NS effectively becomes just another
583 part of that state.
584
585