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1 # 16 bit Compressed
2
3 Similar to VLE (but without immediate-prefixing) this encoding is designed
4 to fit on top of OpenPOWER ISA v3.0B when a "Modeswitch" bit is set (PCR
5 is recommended). Note that Compressed is *mutually exclusively incompatible*
6 with OpenPOWER v3.1B "prefixing" due to using (requiring) both EXT000
7 and EXT001. Hypothetically it could be made to use anything other than
8 EXT001, with some inconvenience (extra gates). The incompatibility is
9 "fixed" by swapping out of "Compressed" Mode and back into "Normal"
10 (v3.1B) Mode, at runtime, as needed.
11
12 Although initially intended to be augmented by Simple-V Prefixing (to
13 add Vector context, width overrides, e.g IEEE754 FP16, and predication) yet not put pressure on I-Cache power
14 or size, this Compressed Encoding is not critically dependent
15 *on* SV Prefixing, and may be used stand-alone.
16
17 See:
18
19 * <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=238>
20 * <https://ftp.libre-soc.org/VLE_314-68105.pdf> VLE Encoding
21 * <http://lists.mailinglist.openpowerfoundation.org/pipermail/openpower-hdl-cores/2020-November/000210.html>
22
23 This one is a conundrum. OpenPOWER ISA was never designed with 16
24 bit in mind. VLE was added 10 years ago but only by way of marking
25 an entire 64k page as "VLE". With VLE not maintained it is not
26 fully compatible with current PowerISA.
27
28 Here, in order to embed 16 bit into a predominantly 32 bit stream the
29 overhead of using an entire 16 bits just to switch into Compressed mode
30 is itself a significant overhead. The situation is made worse by
31 OpenPOWER ISA being fundamentally designed with 6 bits uniformly
32 taking up Major Opcode space, leaving only 10 bits to allocate
33 to actual instructions.
34
35 Contrast this with RVC which takes 3 out of 4 combinations of the first 2
36 bits for indicating 16-bit (anything with 0b00 to 0b10 in the LSBs), and
37 uses the 4th (0b11) as a Huffman-style escape-sequence, easily allowing
38 standard 32 bit and 16 bit to intermingle cleanly. To achieve the same
39 thing on OpenPOWER would require a whopping 24 6-bit Major Opcodes which
40 is clearly impractical: other schemes need to be devised.
41
42 In addition we would like to add SV-C32 which is a Vectorised version
43 of 16 bit Compressed, and ideally have a variant that adds the 27-bit
44 prefix format from SV-P64, as well.
45
46 Potential ways to reduce pressure on the 16 bit space are:
47
48 * To use more than one v3.0B Major Opcode, preferably an odd-even
49 contiguous pair
50 * To provide "paging". This involves bank-switching to alternative
51 optimised encodings for specific workloads
52 * To enter "16 bit mode" for durations specified at the start
53 * To reserve one bit of every 16 bit instruction to indicate that the
54 16 bit mode is to continue to be sustained
55
56 This latter would be useful in the Vector context to have an alternative
57 meaning: as the bit which determines whether the instruction is 11-bit
58 prefixed or 27-bit prefixed:
59
60 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 a b c d e f |
61 |major op | 11 bit vector prefix|
62 |16 bit opcode alt vec. mode ^ |
63 | extra vector prefix if alt set|
64
65 Using a major opcode to enter 16 bit mode, leaves 11 bits to find
66 something to use them for:
67
68 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 a b c d e f |
69 |major op | what to do here 1 |
70 |16 bit stay in 16bit mode 1 |
71 |16 bit stay in 16bit mode 1 |
72 |16 bit exit 16bit mode 0 |
73
74 One possibility is that the 11 bits are used for bank selection,
75 with some room for additional context such as altering the registers
76 used for the 16 bit operations (bank selection of which scalar regs).
77 However the downside is that short sequences of Compressed instructions
78 become penalised by the fixed overhead. Even a single 16 bit instruction
79 requires a 16 bit overhead to "gain access" to 16 bit "mode", making
80 the exercise pointless.
81
82 An alternative is to use the first 11 bits for only the utmost commonly
83 used instructions. That being the case then one of those 11 bits could
84 be dedicated to saying if 16 bit mode is to be continued, at which
85 point *all* 16 bits can be used for Compressed. 10 bits remain for
86 actual opcodes, which is ridiculously tight, however the opportunity to
87 subsequently use all 16 bits is worth it.
88
89 The reason for picking 2 contiguous Major v3.0B opcodes is illustrated below:
90
91 |0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 a b c d e f|
92 |major op..0| LO Half C space |
93 |major op..1| HI Half C space |
94 |N N N N N|<--11 bits C space-->|
95
96 If NNNNN is the same value (two contiguous Major v3.0B Opcodes) this
97 saves gates at a critical part of the decode phase.
98
99 ## ABI considerations
100
101 Unlike RISC-V RVC, the above "context" encodings require state, to be stored
102 in the PCR, MSR, or a dedicated SPR. These bits (just like LE/BE 32bit
103 mode and the IEEE754 FPCSR mode) all require taking that context into
104 consideration.
105
106 In particular it is critically important to recognise that context (in
107 general) is an implicit part of the ABI implemented for example by glibc6.
108 Therefore (in specific) Compressed Mode Context **must not** be permitted
109 to cross into or out of a function call.
110
111 Thus it is the mandatory responsibility of the compiler to ensure that
112 context returns to "v3.0B Standard" prior to entering a function call
113 (responsibility of caller) and prior to exit from a function call
114 (responsibility of callee).
115
116 Trap Handlers also take responsibility for saving and restoring of
117 Compressed Mode state, just as they already take responsibility for
118 other critical state. This makes traps transparent to functions as
119 far as Compressed Mode Context is concerned, just as traps are already
120 transparent to functions.
121
122 Note however that there are exceptions in a compiler to the otherwise
123 hard rule that Compressed Mode context not be permitted to cross function
124 boundaries: inline functions and static functions. static functions,
125 if correctly identified as never to be called externally, may, as an
126 optimisation, disregard standard ABIs, bearing in mind that this will
127 be fraught (pointers to functions) and not easy to get right.
128
129 # Opcode Allocation Ideas
130
131 * one bit from the 16-bit mode is used to indicate that standard
132 (v3.0B) mode is to be dropped into for only one single instruction
133 <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=238#c2>
134
135 ## Opcodes exploration (Attempt 1)
136
137 Switching between different encoding modes is controlled by M (alone)
138 in 10-bit mode, and M and N in 16-bit mode.
139
140 * M in 10-bit mode if zero indicates that following instructions are
141 standard OpenPOWER ISA 32-bit encoded (including, redundantly,
142 further 10/16-bit instructions)
143 * M in 10-bit mode if 1 indicates that following instructions are
144 in 16-bit encoding mode
145
146 Once in 16-bit mode:
147
148 * 0b01 (M=1, N=0): stay in 16-bit mode
149 * 0b00: leave 16-bit mode permanently (return to standard OpenPOWER ISA)
150 * 0b10: leave 16-bit mode for one cycle (return to standard OpenPOWER ISA)
151 * 0b11: free to be used for something completely different.
152
153 The current "top" idea for 0b11 is to use it for a new encoding format
154 of predominantly "immediates-based" 16-bit instructions (branch-conditional,
155 addi, mulli etc.)
156
157 * The Compressed Major Opcode is in bits 5-7.
158 * Minor opcode in bit 8.
159 * In some cases bit 9 is taken as an additional sub-opcode, followed
160 by bits 0-4 (for CR operations)
161 * M+N mode-switching is not available for C-Major.minor 0b001.1
162 * 10 bit mode may be expanded by 16 bit mode, adding capabilities
163 that do not fit in the extreme limited space.
164
165 Mode-switching FSM showing relationship between v3.0B, C 10bit and C 16bit.
166 16-bit immediate mode remains in 16-bit.
167
168 | 0 | 1234 | 567 8 | 9abcde | f | explanation
169 | - | ---- | ------ | ------ | - | -----------
170 | EXT000/1 | Cmaj.m | fields | 0 | 10bit then v3.0B
171 | EXT000/1 | Cmaj.m | fields | 1 | 10bit then 16bit
172 | 0 | flds | Cmaj.m | fields | 0 | 16bit then v3.0B
173 | 0 | flds | Cmaj.m | fields | 1 | 16bit then 16bit
174 | 1 | flds | Cmaj.m | fields | 0 | 16b then 1x v3.0B thrn 16b
175 | 1 | flds | Cmaj.m | fields | 1 | 16b/imm then 16bit
176
177 Notes:
178
179 * Cmaj.m is the C major/minor opcode: 3 bits for major, 1 for minor
180 * EXT000 and EXT001 are v3.0B Major Opcodes. The first 5 bits
181 are zero, therefore the 6th bit is actually part of Cmaj.
182 * "10bit then 16bit" means "this instruction is encoded C 10bit
183 and the following one in C 16bit"
184
185 ### C Instruction Encoding types
186
187 10-bit Opcode formats (all start with v3.0B EXT000 or EXT001
188 Major Opcodes)
189
190 | 01234 | 567 8 | 9 | a b | c | d e | f | enc
191 | E01 | Cmaj.m | fld1 | fld2 | M | 10b
192 | E01 | Cmaj.m | offset | M | 10b b
193 | E01 | 001.1 | S1 | fd1 | S2 | fd2 | M | 10b sub
194 | E01 | 111.m | fld1 | fld2 | M | 10b LDST
195
196 16-bit Opcode formats (including 10/16/v3.0B Switching)
197
198 | 0 | 1234 | 567 8 | 9 | a b | c | d e | f | enc
199 | N | immf | Cmaj.m | fld1 | fld2 | M | 16b
200 | 1 | immf | Cmaj.m | fld1 | imm | 1 | 16b imm
201 | fd3 | 001.1 | S1 | fd1 | S2 | fd2 | M | 16b sub
202 | N | fd4 | 111.m | fld1 | fld2 | M | 16b LDST
203
204 Notes:
205
206 * fld1 and fld2 can contain reg numbers, immediates, or opcode
207 fields (BO, BI, LK)
208 * S1 and S2 are further sub-selectors of C 001.1
209
210 ### Immediate Opcodes
211
212 only available in 16-bit mode, only available when M=1 and N=1
213 and when Cmaj.min is not 0b001.1.
214
215 instruction counts from objdump on /bin/bash:
216
217 466 extsw r1,r1
218 649 stw r1,1(r1)
219 691 lwz r1,1(r1)
220 705 cmpdi r1,1
221 791 cmpwi r1,1
222 794 addis r1,r1,1
223 1474 std r1,1(r1)
224 1846 li r1,1
225 2031 mr r1,r1
226 2473 addi r1,r1,1
227 3012 nop
228 3028 ld r1,1(r1)
229
230
231 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 4 | | 567.8 | 9ab | cde | f |
232 | 1 | 0 | 0 0 0 | | 001.0 | | 000 | 1 | TBD
233 | 1 | 0 | sh2 | | 001.0 | RA | sh | 1 | sradi.
234 | 1 | 1 | 0 0 0 | | 001.0 | | 000 | 1 | TBD
235 | 1 | 1 | 0 | sh2 | | 001.0 | RA | sh | 1 | srawi.
236 | 1 | 1 | 1 | | | 001.0 | 000 | imm | 1 | TBD
237 | 1 | 1 | 1 | i2 | | 001.0 | RA!=0| imm | 1 | addis
238 | 1 | | | 010.0 | 000 | | 1 | TBD
239 | 1 | i2 | | 010.0 | RA!=0| imm | 1 | addi
240 | 1 | 0 | i2 | | 010.1 | RA | imm | 1 | cmpdi
241 | 1 | 1 | i2 | | 010.1 | RA | imm | 1 | cmpwi
242 | 1 | 0 | i2 | | 011.0 | RT | imm | 1 | ldspi
243 | 1 | 1 | i2 | | 011.0 | RT | imm | 1 | lwspi
244 | 1 | 0 | i2 | | 011.1 | RT | imm | 1 | stwspi
245 | 1 | 1 | i2 | | 011.1 | RT | imm | 1 | stdspi
246 | 1 | i2 | RA | | 100.0 | RT | imm | 1 | stwi
247 | 1 | i2 | RA | | 100.1 | RT | imm | 1 | stdi
248 | 1 | i2 | RT | | 101.0 | RA | imm | 1 | ldi
249 | 1 | i2 | RT | | 101.1 | RA | imm | 1 | lwi
250 | 1 | i2 | RA | | 110.0 | RT | imm | 1 | fsti
251 | 1 | i2 | RA | | 110.1 | RT | imm | 1 | fstdi
252 | 1 | i2 | RT | | 111.0 | RA | imm | 1 | flwi
253 | 1 | i2 | RT | | 111.1 | RA | imm | 1 | fldi
254
255 Construction of immediate:
256
257 * LD/ST r1 (SP) variants should be offset by -256
258 see <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=238#c43>
259 - SP variants map to e.g ld RT, imm(r1)
260 - SV Prefixing can be used to map r1 to alternate regs
261 * [1] not the same as v3.0B addis: the shift amount is smaller and actually
262 still maps to within the v3.0B addi immediate range.
263 * addi is EXTS(i2||imm) to give a 4-bit range -8 to +7
264 * addis is EXTS(i2||imm||000) to give a 11-bit range -1024 to +1023 in
265 increments of 8
266 * all others are EXTS(i2||imm) to give a 7-bit range -128 to +127
267 (further for LD/ST due to word/dword-alignment)
268
269 Further Notes:
270
271 * bc also has an immediate mode, listed separately below in Branch section
272 * for LD/ST, offset is aligned. 8-byte: i2||imm||0b000 4-byte: 0b00
273 * SV Prefix over-rides help provide alternative bitwidths for LD/ST
274 * RA|0 if RA is zero, addi. becomes "li"
275 - this only works if RT takes part of opcode
276 - mv is also possible by specifying an immediate of zero
277
278 ### Illegal, nop and attn
279
280 Note that illeg is all zeros, including in the 16-bit mode.
281 Given that C is allocated to OpenPOWER ISA Major opcodes EXT000 and
282 EXT001 this ensures that in both 10-bit *and* 16-bit mode, a 16-bit
283 run of all zeros is considered "illegal" whilst 0b0000.0000.1000.0000
284 is "nop"
285
286 | 16-bit mode | | 10-bit mode |
287 | 0 | 1 | 234 | | 567.8 | 9 ab | c de | f |
288 | - | - | --- | | ----- | ----- | ------ | - |
289 | 0 | 0 000 | | 000.0 | 0 00 | 0 00 | 0 | illeg
290 | 0 | 0 000 | | 000.0 | 0 00 | 0 00 | 1 | nop
291
292 16 bit mode only:
293
294 | - | - | --- | | ----- | ----- | ------ | - |
295 | 1 | 0 000 | | 000.0 | 0 00 | 0 00 | 0 | nop
296 | 1 | 1 000 | | 000.0 | 0 00 | 0 00 | 0 | attn
297 | 1 | nonzero | | 000.0 | 0 00 | 0 00 | 0 | TBD
298
299 Notes:
300
301 * All-zeros being an illegal instruction is normal for ISAs. Ensuring that
302 this remains true at all times i.e. for both 10 bit and 16 bit mode is
303 common sense.
304 * The 10-bit nop (bit 15, M=1) is intended for circumstances
305 where alignment to 32-bit before returning to v3.0B is required.
306 M=1 being an indication "return to Standard v3.0B Encoding Mode".
307 * The 16-bit nop (bit 0, N=1) is intended for circumstances where a
308 return to Standard v3.0B Encoding is required for one cycle
309 but one cycle where alignment to a 32-bit boundary is needed.
310 Examples of this would be to return to "strict" (non-C) mode
311 where the PC may not be on a non-word-aligned boundary.
312 * If for any reason multiple 16 bit nops are needed in succession
313 the M=1 variant can be used, because each one returns to
314 Standard v3.0B Encoding Mode, each time.
315
316 In essence the 2 nops are needed due to there being 2 different C forms:
317 10 and 16 bit.
318
319 ### Branch
320
321 | 16-bit mode | | 10-bit mode |
322 | 0 | 1 | 234 | | 567.8 | 9 ab | c de | f |
323 | - | - | --- | | ----- | ----- | ------ | - |
324 | N | offs2 | | 000.LK | offs!=0 | M | b, bl
325 | 1 | offs2 | | 000.LK | BI | BO1 oo | 1 | bc, bcl
326 | N | BO3 BI3 | | 001.0 | LK BI | BO | M | bclr, bclrl
327
328 16 bit mode:
329
330 * bc only available when N,M=0b11
331 * offs2 extends offset in MSBs
332 * BI3 extends BI in MSBs to allow selection of full CR
333 * BO3 extends BO
334 * bc offset constructed from oo as LSBs and offs2 as MSBs
335 * bc BI allows selection of all bits from CR0 or CR1
336 * bc CR check is always active (as if BO0=1) therefore BO1 inverts
337
338 10 bit mode:
339
340 * illegal (all zeros) covers part of branch (offs=0,M=0,LK=0)
341 * nop also covers part of branch (offs=0,M=0,LK=1)
342 * bc **not available** in 10-bit mode
343 * BO[0] enables CR check, BO[1] inverts check
344 * BI refers to CR0 only (4 bits of)
345 * no Branch Conditional with immediate
346 * no Absolute Address
347 * CTR mode allowed with BO[2] for b only.
348 * offs is to 2 byte (signed) aligned
349 * all branches to 2 byte aligned
350
351 ### LD/ST
352
353 Note: for 10-bit, ignore bits 0-4 (used by EXTNNN=Compressed)
354
355 | 16-bit mode | | 10-bit mode |
356 | 0 | 1 | 234 | | 567.8 | 9 a b | c d e | f |
357 | --- | -- | --- | | ----- | ----- | ----- | - |
358 | RA2 | SZ | RB | | 001.1 | 1 RA | 0 RT | M | st
359 | RA2 | SZ | RB | | 001.1 | 1 RA | 1 RT | M | fst
360 | N | SZ | RT | | 111.0 | RA | RB | M | ld
361 | N | SZ | RT | | 111.1 | RA | RB | M | fld
362
363 * elwidth overrides can set different widths
364
365 16 bit mode:
366
367 * SZ=1 is 64 bit, SZ=0 is 32 bit
368 * RA2 extends RA to 3 bits (MSB)
369 * RT2 extends RT to 3 bits (MSB)
370
371 10 bit mode:
372
373 * RA and RB are only 2 bit (0-3)
374 * for LD, RT is implicitly RB: "ld RT=RB, RA(RB)"
375 * for ST, there is no offset: "st RT, RA(0)"
376
377 ### Arithmetic
378
379 * 10-bit, ignore bits 0-4 (used by EXTNNN=Compressed)
380 * 16-bit: note that bit 1==0 (sub-sub-encoding)
381
382 10 and 16 bit:
383
384 | 16-bit mode | | 10-bit mode |
385 | 0 | 1 | 234 | | 567.8 | 9ab | c d e | f |
386 | - | - | --- | | ----- | --- | ----- | - |
387 | N | 0 | RT | | 010.0 | RB | RA!=0 | M | add
388 | N | 0 | RT | | 010.1 | RB | RA|0 | M | sub.
389 | N | 0 | BF | | 011.0 | RB | RA|0 | M | cmpl
390
391 Notes:
392
393 * sub. and cmpl: default CR target is CR0
394 * for (RA|0) when RA=0 the input is a zero immediate,
395 meaning that sub. becomes neg. and cmp becomes cmpi against zero
396 * RT is implicitly RB: "add RT(=RB), RA, RB"
397 * Opcode 0b010.0 RA=0 is not missing from the above:
398 it is a system-wide instruction, "cbank" (section below)
399
400 16 bit mode only:
401
402 | 0 | 1 | 234 | | 567.8 | 9ab | cde | f |
403 | - | - | --- | | ----- | --- | ----- | - |
404 | N | 1 | RA | | 010.0 | RB | RS | 0 | sld.
405 | N | 1 | RA | | 010.1 | RB | RS!=0 | 0 | srd.
406 | N | 1 | RA | | 010.1 | RB | 000 | 0 | srad.
407 | N | 1 | BF | | 011.0 | RB | RA|0 | 0 | cmpw
408
409 Notes:
410
411 * for srad, RS=RA: "srad. RA(=RS), RS, RB"
412
413 ### Logical
414
415 * 10-bit, ignore bits 0-4 (used by EXTNNN=Compressed)
416 * 16-bit: note that bit 1==0 (sub-sub-encoding)
417
418 10 and 16 bit:
419
420 | 16-bit mode | | 10-bit mode |
421 | 0 | 1 | 234 | | 567.8 | 9ab | c d e | f |
422 | - | - | --- | | ----- | --- | ----- | - |
423 | N | 0 | RT | | 100.0 | RB | RA!=0 | M | and
424 | N | 0 | RT | | 100.1 | RB | RA!=0 | M | nand
425 | N | 0 | RT | | 101.0 | RB | RA!=0 | M | or
426 | N | 0 | RT | | 101.1 | RB | RA!=0 | M | nor/mr
427 | N | 0 | RT | | 100.0 | RB | 0 0 0 | M | extsw
428 | N | 0 | RT | | 100.1 | RB | 0 0 0 | M | cntlz
429 | N | 0 | RT | | 101.0 | RB | 0 0 0 | M | popcnt
430 | N | 0 | RT | | 101.1 | RB | 0 0 0 | M | not
431
432 16-bit mode only (note that bit 1 == 1):
433
434 | 0 | 1 | 234 | | 567.8 | 9ab | c d e | f |
435 | - | - | --- | | ----- | --- | ----- | - |
436 | N | 1 | RT | | 100.0 | RB | RA!=0 | 0 | TBD
437 | N | 1 | RT | | 100.1 | RB | RA!=0 | 0 | TBD
438 | N | 1 | RT | | 101.0 | RB | RA!=0 | 0 | xor
439 | N | 1 | RT | | 101.1 | RB | RA!=0 | 0 | eqv (xnor)
440 | N | 1 | RT | | 100.0 | RB | 0 0 0 | 0 | extsb
441 | N | 1 | RT | | 100.1 | RB | 0 0 0 | 0 | cnttz
442 | N | 1 | RT | | 101.0 | RB | 0 0 0 | 0 | TBD
443 | N | 1 | RT | | 101.1 | RB | 0 0 0 | 0 | extsh
444
445 10 bit mode:
446
447 * idea: for 10bit mode, nor is actually 'mr' because mr is
448 a more common operation. in 16bit however, this encoding
449 (Cmaj.min=0b101.1, N=0) is 'nor'
450 * for (RA|0) when RA=0 the input is a zero immediate,
451 meaning that nor becomes not
452 * cntlz, popcnt, exts **not available** in 10-bit mode
453 * RT is implicitly RB: "and RT(=RB), RA, RB"
454
455 ### Floating Point
456
457 Note here that elwidth overrides (SV Prefix) can be used to select FP16/32/64
458
459 * 10-bit, ignore bits 0-4 (used by EXTNNN=Compressed)
460 * 16-bit: note that bit 1==0 (sub-sub-encoding)
461
462 10 and 16 bit:
463
464 | 16-bit mode | | 10-bit mode |
465 | 0 | 1 | 234 | | 567.8 | 9ab | c d e | f |
466 | - | - | --- | | ----- | --- | ----- | - |
467 | N | | RT | | 011.1 | RB | RA!=0 | M | fsub.
468 | N | 0 | RT | | 110.0 | RB | RA!=0 | M | fadd
469 | N | 0 | RT | | 110.1 | RB | RA!=0 | M | fmul
470 | N | 0 | RT | | 011.1 | RB | 0 0 0 | M | fneg.
471 | N | 0 | RT | | 110.0 | RB | 0 0 0 | M |
472 | N | 0 | RT | | 110.1 | RB | 0 0 0 | M |
473
474 16-bit mode only (note that bit 1 == 1):
475
476 | 0 | 1 | 234 | | 567.8 | 9ab | c d e | f |
477 | - | - | --- | | ----- | --- | ----- | - |
478 | N | 1 | RT | | 011.1 | RB | RA!=0 | 0 |
479 | N | 1 | RT | | 110.0 | RB | RA!=0 | 0 |
480 | N | 1 | RT | | 110.1 | RB | RA!=0 | 0 | fdiv
481 | N | 1 | RT | | 011.1 | RB | 0 0 0 | 0 | fabs.
482 | N | 1 | RT | | 110.0 | RB | 0 0 0 | 0 | fmr.
483 | N | 1 | RT | | 110.1 | RB | 0 0 0 | 0 |
484
485 16 bit only, FP to INT convert (using C 0b001.1 subencoding)
486
487 | 0123 | 4 | | 567.8 | 9 ab | cde | f |
488 | ---- | - | | ----- | ---- | ---- | - |
489 | 0010 | X | | 001.1 | 0 RA | Y RT | M | fp2int
490 | 0011 | X | | 001.1 | 0 RA | Y RT | M | int2fp
491
492 * X: signed=1, unsigned=0
493 * Y: FP32=0, FP64=1
494
495 10 bit mode:
496
497 * fsub. fneg. and fmr. default target is CR1
498 * fmr. is **not available** in 10-bit mode
499 * fdiv is **not available** in 10-bit mode
500
501 16 bit mode:
502
503 * fmr. copies RB to RT (and sets CR1)
504
505 ### Condition Register
506
507 10-bit or 16 bit:
508
509 | 16-bit mode| | 10-bit mode |
510 | 0123 | 4 | | 567.8 | 9 ab | cde | f |
511 | ---- | --- | | ----- | ---- | --- | - |
512 | 0000 | BF2 | | 001.1 | 0 BF | BFA | M | mcrf
513
514 16-bit only:
515
516 | 0123 | 4 | | 567.8 | 9 ab | cde | f |
517 | ---- | --- | | ----- | ---- | --- | - |
518 | 0001 | BA2 | | 001.1 | 0 BA | BB | M | crnor
519 | 0100 | BA2 | | 001.1 | 0 BA | BB | M | crandc
520 | 0110 | BA2 | | 001.1 | 0 BA | BB | M | crxor
521 | 0111 | BA2 | | 001.1 | 0 BA | BB | M | crnand
522 | 1000 | BA2 | | 001.1 | 0 BA | BB | M | crand
523 | 1001 | BA2 | | 001.1 | 0 BA | BB | M | creqv
524 | 1101 | BA2 | | 001.1 | 0 BA | BB | M | crorc
525 | 1110 | BA2 | | 001.1 | 0 BA | BB | M | cror
526
527 Notes
528
529 10 bit mode:
530
531 * mcrf BF is only 2 bits which means the destination is only CR0-CR3
532 * CR operations: **not available** in 10-bit mode (but mcrf is)
533
534 16 bit mode:
535
536 * mcrf BF2 extends BF (in MSB) to 3 bits
537 * CR operations: destination register is same as BA.
538 * CR operations: only possible on CR0 and CR1
539
540 SV (Vector Mode):
541
542 * CR operations: greatly extended reach/range (useful for predicates)
543
544 ### System
545
546 cbank: Selection of Compressed-encoding "Bank". Different "banks"
547 give different meanings to opcodes. Example: CBank=0b001 is heavily
548 optimised to A/Video Encode/Decode. cbank borrows from add's encoding
549 space (when RA==0)
550
551 | 16-bit mode | | 10-bit mode |
552 | 0 | 1 2 3 4 | | 567.8 | 9ab | cde | f |
553 | - | ------- | | ----- | ----- | --- | - |
554 | N | 0 Bank2 | | 010.0 | CBank | 000 | M | cbank
555
556 **not available** in 10-bit mode, **only** in 16-bit mode:
557
558 | 0123 | 4 | | 567.8 | 9 ab | cde | f |
559 | ---- | - | | ----- | ---- | ---- | - |
560 | 1111 | 0 | | 001.1 | 0 00 | RT | M | mtlr
561 | 1111 | 0 | | 001.1 | 0 01 | RT | M | mtctr
562 | 1111 | 0 | | 001.1 | 0 11 | RT | M | mtcr
563 | 1111 | 1 | | 001.1 | 0 00 | RA | M | mflr
564 | 1111 | 1 | | 001.1 | 0 01 | RA | M | mfctr
565 | 1111 | 1 | | 001.1 | 0 11 | RA | M | mfcr
566
567 ### Unallocated
568
569 | 0123 | 4 | | 567.8 | 9 ab | cde | f |
570 | ---- | - | | ----- | ---- | ---- | - |
571 | 0101 | | | 001.1 | 0 | | M |
572 | 1010 | | | 001.1 | 0 | | M |
573 | 1011 | | | 001.1 | 0 | | M |
574 | 1100 | | | 001.1 | 0 | | M |
575 | 1111 | | | 001.1 | 0 10 | | M |
576
577 ## Other ideas (Attempt 2)
578
579 ### 8-bit mode-switching instructions, odd addresses for C mode
580
581 Drop the complexity of the 16-bit encoding further reduced to 10-bit,
582 and use a single byte instead of two to switch between modes. This
583 would place compressed (C) mode instructions at odd bytes, so the LSB
584 of the PC can be used for the processor to tell which mode it is in.
585
586 To switch from traditional to compressed mode, the single-byte
587 instruction would be at the MSByte, that holds the EXT bits. (When we
588 break up a 32-bit instruction across words, the most significant half
589 should go in the word with the lower address.)
590
591 To switch from compressed mode to traditional mode, the single-byte
592 instruction would also be at the opcode/format portion, placed in the
593 lower-address word if split across words, so that the instruction can
594 be recognized as the mode-switching one without going for its second
595 byte.
596
597 The C-mode nop should be encoded so that its second byte encodes a
598 switch to compressed mode, if decoded in traditional mode. This
599 enables such a nop to straddle across a label:
600
601 8-bit first half of nop
602 Label:
603 8-bit second half of nop AKA switch to compressed mode
604 16-bit insns...
605
606 so that if traditional code jumps to the word-aligned label (because
607 traditional branches drop the 2 LSB), it immediately switches to
608 compressed mode; if we fall-through, we remain in 16-bit mode; and if
609 we branch to it from compressed mode, whether we jump to the odd or
610 the even address, we end up in compressed mode as desired.
611
612 Tables explaining encoding:
613
614 | byte 0 | byte 1 | byte 2 | byte 3 |
615 | v3.0B standard 32 bit instruction |
616 | EXT000 | 16 bit | 16... |
617 | .. bit | 8nop | v3.0b stand... |
618 | .. ard 32 bit | EXT000 | 16... |
619 | .. bit | 16 bit | 8nop |
620 | v3.0B standard 32 bit instruction |
621
622
623 # TODO
624
625 * make a preliminary assessment of branch in/out viability
626 * confirm FSM encoding (is LSB of PC really enough?)
627 * guestimate opcode and register allocation (without necessarily doing
628 a full encoding)
629 * write throwaway python program that estimates compression ratio from
630 objdump raw parsing
631 * finally do full opcode allocation
632 * rerun objdump compression ratio estimates
633
634 ### Use 2- rather than 3-register opcodes
635
636 Successful compact ISAs have used 2- rather than 3-register insns, in
637 which the same register serves as input and output. Some 20% of
638 general-purpose 3-register insns already use either input register as
639 output, without any effort by the compiler to do so.
640
641 Repurposing the 3 bits used to encode one one of the input registers
642 in arithmetic, logical and floating-pointer registers, and the 2 bits
643 used to encode the mode of the next two insns, we could make the full
644 register files available to the opcodes already selected for
645 compressed mode, with one bit to spare to bring additional opcodes in.
646
647 An opcode could be assigned to an instruction that combines and
648 extends with the subsequent instruction, providing it with a separate
649 input operand to use rather than the output register, or with
650 additional range for immediate and offset operands, effectively
651 forming a 32-bit operation, enabling us to remain in compressed mode
652 even longer.
653
654 # Appendix
655
656 ## Analysis techniques and tools
657
658 objdump -d --no-show-raw-insn /bin/bash | sed 'y/\t/ /;
659 s/^[ x0-9A-F]*: *\([a-z.]\+\) *\(.*\)/\1 \2 /p; d' |
660 sed 's/\([, (]\)r[1-9][0-9]*/\1r1/g;
661 s/\([ ,]\)-*[0-9]\+\([^0-9]\)/\11\2/g' | sort | uniq --count |
662 sort -n | less
663
664 ## gcc register allocation
665
666 FTR, information extracted from gcc's gcc/config/rs6000/rs6000.h about
667 fixed registers (assigned to special purposes) and register allocation
668 order:
669
670 Special-purpose registers on ppc are:
671
672 r0: constant zero/throw-away
673 r1: stack pointer
674 r2: thread-local storage pointer in 32-bit mode
675 r2: non-minimal TOC register
676 r10: EH return stack adjust register
677 r11: static chain pointer
678 r13: thread-local storage pointer in 64-bit mode
679 r30: minimal-TOC/-fPIC/-fpic base register
680 r31: frame pointer
681 lr: return address register
682
683 the register allocation order in GCC (i.e., it takes the earliest
684 available register that fits the constraints) is:
685
686 We allocate in the following order:
687
688 fp0 (not saved or used for anything)
689 fp13 - fp2 (not saved; incoming fp arg registers)
690 fp1 (not saved; return value)
691 fp31 - fp14 (saved; order given to save least number)
692 cr7, cr5 (not saved or special)
693 cr6 (not saved, but used for vector operations)
694 cr1 (not saved, but used for FP operations)
695 cr0 (not saved, but used for arithmetic operations)
696 cr4, cr3, cr2 (saved)
697 r9 (not saved; best for TImode)
698 r10, r8-r4 (not saved; highest first for less conflict with params)
699 r3 (not saved; return value register)
700 r11 (not saved; later alloc to help shrink-wrap)
701 r0 (not saved; cannot be base reg)
702 r31 - r13 (saved; order given to save least number)
703 r12 (not saved; if used for DImode or DFmode would use r13)
704 ctr (not saved; when we have the choice ctr is better)
705 lr (saved)
706 r1, r2, ap, ca (fixed)
707 v0 - v1 (not saved or used for anything)
708 v13 - v3 (not saved; incoming vector arg registers)
709 v2 (not saved; incoming vector arg reg; return value)
710 v19 - v14 (not saved or used for anything)
711 v31 - v20 (saved; order given to save least number)
712 vrsave, vscr (fixed)
713 sfp (fixed)
714
715 ## Comparison to VLE
716
717 VLE was a means to reduce executable size through three interleaved methods:
718
719 * (1) invention of 16 bit encodings (of exactly 16 bit in length)
720 * (2) invention of 16+16 bit encodings (a 16 bit instruction format but with
721 an *additional* 16 bit immediate "tacked on" to the end, actually
722 making a 32-bit instruction format)
723 * (3) seamless and transparent embedding and intermingling of the
724 above in amongst arbitrary v2.06/7 BE 32 bit instruction sequences,
725 with no additional state,
726 including when the PC was not aligned on a 4-byte boundary.
727
728 Whilst (1) and (3) make perfect sense, (2) makes no sense at all given that, as inspection of "ori" and others show, I-Form 16 bit immediates is the "norm" for v2.06/7 and v3.0B standard instructions. (2) in effect **is** a 32 bit instruction. (2) **is not** a 16 bit instruction.
729
730 *Why "reinvent" an encoding that is 32 bit, when there already exists a 32 bit encoding that does the exact same job?*
731
732 Consequently, we do **not** envisage a scenario where (2) would ever be implemented, nor in the future would this Compressed Encoding be extended beyond 16 bit. Compressed is Compressed and is **by definition** limited to precisely - and only - 16 bit.
733
734 The additional reason why that is the case is because VLE is exceptionally complex to implement. In a single-issue, low clock rate "Embedded" environment for which VLE was originally designed, VLE was perfectly well matched.
735
736 However this Compressed Encoding is designed for High performance multi-issue systems *as well* as Embedded scenarios, and consequently, the complexity of "deep packet inspection" down into the depths of a 16 bit sequence in order to ascertain if it might not be 16 bit after all, is wholly unacceptable.
737
738 By eliminating such 16+16 (actually, 32bit conflation) tricks outlined in (2), Compressed is *specifically* designed to fit into a very small FSM, suitable for multi-issue, that in no way requires "deep-dive" analysis. Yet, despite it never being designed with 16 bit encodings in mind, is still suitable for retro-fitting onto OpenPOWER.
739
740 ## Demo of encoding that's backward-compatible with PowerISA v3.1 in both LE and BE mode
741
742 [[demo]]
743
744 ### Efficient Decoding Algorithm
745
746 [[decoding]]