(no commit message)
[libreriscv.git] / openpower / sv / svp64 / appendix.mdwn
1 [[!tag standards]]
2
3 # Appendix
4
5 * <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=574> Saturation
6 * <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=558#c47> Parallel Prefix
7 * <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697> Reduce Modes
8 * <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=864> parallel prefix simulator
9 * <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=809> OV sv.addex discussion
10 * ARM SVE Fault-first <https://alastairreid.github.io/papers/sve-ieee-micro-2017.pdf>
11
12 This is the appendix to [[sv/svp64]], providing explanations of modes
13 etc. leaving the main svp64 page's primary purpose as outlining the
14 instruction format.
15
16 Table of contents:
17
18 [[!toc]]
19
20 # Partial Implementations
21
22 It is perfectly legal to implement subsets of SVP64 as long as illegal
23 instruction traps are always raised on unimplemented features,
24 so that soft-emulation is possible,
25 even for future revisions of SVP64. With SVP64 being partly controlled
26 through contextual SPRs, a little care has to be taken.
27
28 **All** SPRs
29 not implemented including reserved ones for future use must raise an illegal
30 instruction trap if read or written. This allows software the
31 opportunity to emulate the context created by the given SPR.
32
33 See [[sv/compliancy_levels]] for full details.
34
35 # XER, SO and other global flags
36
37 Vector systems are expected to be high performance. This is achieved
38 through parallelism, which requires that elements in the vector be
39 independent. XER SO/OV and other global "accumulation" flags (CR.SO) cause
40 Read-Write Hazards on single-bit global resources, having a significant
41 detrimental effect.
42
43 Consequently in SV, XER.SO behaviour is disregarded (including
44 in `cmp` instructions). XER.SO is not read, but XER.OV may be written,
45 breaking the Read-Modify-Write Hazard Chain that complicates
46 microarchitectural implementations.
47 This includes when `scalar identity behaviour` occurs. If precise
48 OpenPOWER v3.0/1 scalar behaviour is desired then OpenPOWER v3.0/1
49 instructions should be used without an SV Prefix.
50
51 TODO jacob add about OV https://www.intel.com/content/dam/www/public/us/en/documents/white-papers/ia-large-integer-arithmetic-paper.pdf
52
53 Of note here is that XER.SO and OV may already be disregarded in the
54 Power ISA v3.0/1 SFFS (Scalar Fixed and Floating) Compliancy Subset.
55 SVP64 simply makes it mandatory to disregard XER.SO even for other Subsets,
56 but only for SVP64 Prefixed Operations.
57
58 XER.CA/CA32 on the other hand is expected and required to be implemented
59 according to standard Power ISA Scalar behaviour. Interestingly, due
60 to SVP64 being in effect a hardware for-loop around Scalar instructions
61 executing in precise Program Order, a little thought shows that a Vectorised
62 Carry-In-Out add is in effect a Big Integer Add, taking a single bit Carry In
63 and producing, at the end, a single bit Carry out. High performance
64 implementations may exploit this observation to deploy efficient
65 Parallel Carry Lookahead.
66
67 # assume VL=4, this results in 4 sequential ops (below)
68 sv.adde r0.v, r4.v, r8.v
69
70 # instructions that get executed in backend hardware:
71 adde r0, r4, r8 # takes carry-in, produces carry-out
72 adde r1, r5, r9 # takes carry from previous
73 ...
74 adde r3, r7, r11 # likewise
75
76 It can clearly be seen that the carry chains from one
77 64 bit add to the next, the end result being that a
78 256-bit "Big Integer Add with Carry" has been performed, and that
79 CA contains the 257th bit. A one-instruction 512-bit Add-with-Carry
80 may be performed by setting VL=8, and a one-instruction
81 1024-bit Add-with-Carry by setting VL=16, and so on. More on
82 this in [[openpower/sv/biginteger]]
83
84 # v3.0B/v3.1 relevant instructions
85
86 SV is primarily designed for use as an efficient hybrid 3D GPU / VPU /
87 CPU ISA.
88
89 Vectorisation of the VSX Packed SIMD system makes no sense whatsoever,
90 the sole exceptions potentially being any operations with 128-bit
91 operands such as `vrlq` (Rotate Quad Word) and `xsaddqp` (Scalar
92 Quad-precision Add).
93 SV effectively *replaces* the majority of VSX, requiring far less
94 instructions, and provides, at the very minimum, predication
95 (which VSX was designed without).
96
97 Likewise, Load/Store Multiple make no sense to
98 have because they are not only provided by SV, the SV alternatives may
99 be predicated as well, making them far better suited to use in function
100 calls and context-switching.
101
102 Additionally, some v3.0/1 instructions simply make no sense at all in a
103 Vector context: `rfid` falls into this category,
104 as well as `sc` and `scv`. Here there is simply no point
105 trying to Vectorise them: the standard OpenPOWER v3.0/1 instructions
106 should be called instead.
107
108 Fortuitously this leaves several Major Opcodes free for use by SV
109 to fit alternative future instructions. In a 3D context this means
110 Vector Product, Vector Normalise, [[sv/mv.swizzle]], Texture LD/ST
111 operations, and others critical to an efficient, effective 3D GPU and
112 VPU ISA. With such instructions being included as standard in other
113 commercially-successful GPU ISAs it is likewise critical that a 3D
114 GPU/VPU based on svp64 also have such instructions.
115
116 Note however that svp64 is stand-alone and is in no way
117 critically dependent on the existence or provision of 3D GPU or VPU
118 instructions. These should be considered entirely separate
119 extensions, and their discussion
120 and specification is out of scope for this document.
121
122 ## Major opcode map (v3.0B)
123
124 This table is taken from v3.0B.
125 Table 9: Primary Opcode Map (opcode bits 0:5)
126
127 ```
128 | 000 | 001 | 010 | 011 | 100 | 101 | 110 | 111
129 000 | | | tdi | twi | EXT04 | | | mulli | 000
130 001 | subfic | | cmpli | cmpi | addic | addic. | addi | addis | 001
131 010 | bc/l/a | EXT17 | b/l/a | EXT19 | rlwimi| rlwinm | | rlwnm | 010
132 011 | ori | oris | xori | xoris | andi. | andis. | EXT30 | EXT31 | 011
133 100 | lwz | lwzu | lbz | lbzu | stw | stwu | stb | stbu | 100
134 101 | lhz | lhzu | lha | lhau | sth | sthu | lmw | stmw | 101
135 110 | lfs | lfsu | lfd | lfdu | stfs | stfsu | stfd | stfdu | 110
136 111 | lq | EXT57 | EXT58 | EXT59 | EXT60 | EXT61 | EXT62 | EXT63 | 111
137 | 000 | 001 | 010 | 011 | 100 | 101 | 110 | 111
138 ```
139
140 It is important to note that having a different v3.0B Scalar opcode
141 that is different from an SVP64 one is highly undesirable: the complexity
142 in the decoder is greatly increased, through breaking of the RISC paradigm.
143
144 # EXTRA Field Mapping
145
146 The purpose of the 9-bit EXTRA field mapping is to mark individual
147 registers (RT, RA, BFA) as either scalar or vector, and to extend
148 their numbering from 0..31 in Power ISA v3.0 to 0..127 in SVP64.
149 Three of the 9 bits may also be used up for a 2nd Predicate (Twin
150 Predication) leaving a mere 6 bits for qualifying registers. As can
151 be seen there is significant pressure on these (and in fact all) SVP64 bits.
152
153 In Power ISA v3.1 prefixing there are bits which describe and classify
154 the prefix in a fashion that is independent of the suffix. MLSS for
155 example. For SVP64 there is insufficient space to make the SVP64 Prefix
156 "self-describing", and consequently every single Scalar instruction
157 had to be individually analysed, by rote, to craft an EXTRA Field Mapping.
158 This process was semi-automated and is described in this section.
159 The final results, which are part of the SVP64 Specification, are here:
160 [[openpower/opcode_regs_deduped]]
161
162 * Firstly, every instruction's mnemonic (`add RT, RA, RB`) was analysed
163 from reading the markdown formatted version of the Scalar pseudocode
164 which is machine-readable and found in [[openpower/isatables]]. The
165 analysis gives, by instruction, a "Register Profile". `add RT, RA, RB`
166 for example is given a designation `RM-2R-1W` because it requires
167 two GPR reads and one GPR write.
168 * Secondly, the total number of registers was added up (2R-1W is 3 registers)
169 and if less than or equal to three then that instruction could be given an
170 EXTRA3 designation. Four or more is given an EXTRA2 designation because
171 there are only 9 bits available.
172 * Thirdly, the instruction was analysed to see if Twin or Single
173 Predication was suitable. As a general rule this was if there
174 was only a single operand and a single result (`extw` and LD/ST)
175 however it was found that some 2 or 3 operand instructions also
176 qualify. Given that 3 of the 9 bits of EXTRA had to be sacrificed for use
177 in Twin Predication, some compromises were made, here. LDST is
178 Twin but also has 3 operands in some operations, so only EXTRA2 can be used.
179 * Fourthly, a packing format was decided: for 2R-1W an EXTRA3 indexing
180 could have been decided
181 that RA would be indexed 0 (EXTRA bits 0-2), RB indexed 1 (EXTRA bits 3-5)
182 and RT indexed 2 (EXTRA bits 6-8). In some cases (LD/ST with update)
183 RA-as-a-source is given a **different** EXTRA index from RA-as-a-result
184 (because it is possible to do, and perceived to be useful). Rc=1
185 co-results (CR0, CR1) are always given the same EXTRA index as their
186 main result (RT, FRT).
187 * Fifthly, in an automated process the results of the analysis
188 were outputted in CSV Format for use in machine-readable form
189 by sv_analysis.py <https://git.libre-soc.org/?p=openpower-isa.git;a=blob;f=src/openpower/sv/sv_analysis.py;hb=HEAD>
190
191 This process was laborious but logical, and, crucially, once a
192 decision is made (and ratified) cannot be reversed.
193 Qualifying future Power ISA Scalar instructions for SVP64
194 is **strongly** advised to utilise this same process and the same
195 sv_analysis.py program as a canonical method of maintaining the
196 relationships. Alterations to that same program which
197 change the Designation is **prohibited** once finalised (ratified
198 through the Power ISA WG Process). It would
199 be similar to deciding that `add` should be changed from X-Form
200 to D-Form.
201
202 # Single Predication <a name="1p"> </a>
203
204 This is a standard mode normally found in Vector ISAs. every element in every source Vector and in the destination uses the same bit of one single predicate mask.
205
206 In SVSTATE, for Single-predication, implementors MUST increment both srcstep and dststep, but depending on whether sz and/or dz are set, srcstep and
207 dststep can still potentially become different indices. Only when sz=dz
208 is srcstep guaranteed to equal dststep at all times.
209
210 Note that in some Mode Formats there is only one flag (zz). This indicates
211 that *both* sz *and* dz are set to the same.
212
213 Example 1:
214
215 * VL=4
216 * mask=0b1101
217 * sz=0, dz=1
218
219 The following schedule for srcstep and dststep will occur:
220
221 | srcstep | dststep | comment |
222 | ---- | ----- | -------- |
223 | 0 | 0 | both mask[src=0] and mask[dst=0] are 1 |
224 | 1 | 2 | sz=1 but dz=0: dst skips mask[1], src soes not |
225 | 2 | 3 | mask[src=2] and mask[dst=3] are 1 |
226 | end | end | loop has ended because dst reached VL-1 |
227
228 Example 2:
229
230 * VL=4
231 * mask=0b1101
232 * sz=1, dz=0
233
234 The following schedule for srcstep and dststep will occur:
235
236 | srcstep | dststep | comment |
237 | ---- | ----- | -------- |
238 | 0 | 0 | both mask[src=0] and mask[dst=0] are 1 |
239 | 2 | 1 | sz=0 but dz=1: src skips mask[1], dst does not |
240 | 3 | 2 | mask[src=3] and mask[dst=2] are 1 |
241 | end | end | loop has ended because src reached VL-1 |
242
243 In both these examples it is crucial to note that despite there being
244 a single predicate mask, with sz and dz being different, srcstep and
245 dststep are being requested to react differently.
246
247 Example 3:
248
249 * VL=4
250 * mask=0b1101
251 * sz=0, dz=0
252
253 The following schedule for srcstep and dststep will occur:
254
255 | srcstep | dststep | comment |
256 | ---- | ----- | -------- |
257 | 0 | 0 | both mask[src=0] and mask[dst=0] are 1 |
258 | 2 | 2 | sz=0 and dz=0: both src and dst skip mask[1] |
259 | 3 | 3 | mask[src=3] and mask[dst=3] are 1 |
260 | end | end | loop has ended because src and dst reached VL-1 |
261
262 Here, both srcstep and dststep remain in lockstep because sz=dz=1
263
264 # Twin Predication <a name="2p"> </a>
265
266 This is a novel concept that allows predication to be applied to a single
267 source and a single dest register. The following types of traditional
268 Vector operations may be encoded with it, *without requiring explicit
269 opcodes to do so*
270
271 * VSPLAT (a single scalar distributed across a vector)
272 * VEXTRACT (like LLVM IR [`extractelement`](https://releases.llvm.org/11.0.0/docs/LangRef.html#extractelement-instruction))
273 * VINSERT (like LLVM IR [`insertelement`](https://releases.llvm.org/11.0.0/docs/LangRef.html#insertelement-instruction))
274 * VCOMPRESS (like LLVM IR [`llvm.masked.compressstore.*`](https://releases.llvm.org/11.0.0/docs/LangRef.html#llvm-masked-compressstore-intrinsics))
275 * VEXPAND (like LLVM IR [`llvm.masked.expandload.*`](https://releases.llvm.org/11.0.0/docs/LangRef.html#llvm-masked-expandload-intrinsics))
276
277 Those patterns (and more) may be applied to:
278
279 * mv (the usual way that V\* ISA operations are created)
280 * exts\* sign-extension
281 * rwlinm and other RS-RA shift operations (**note**: excluding
282 those that take RA as both a src and dest. These are not
283 1-src 1-dest, they are 2-src, 1-dest)
284 * LD and ST (treating AGEN as one source)
285 * FP fclass, fsgn, fneg, fabs, fcvt, frecip, fsqrt etc.
286 * Condition Register ops mfcr, mtcr and other similar
287
288 This is a huge list that creates extremely powerful combinations,
289 particularly given that one of the predicate options is `(1<<r3)`
290
291 Additional unusual capabilities of Twin Predication include a back-to-back
292 version of VCOMPRESS-VEXPAND which is effectively the ability to do
293 sequentially ordered multiple VINSERTs. The source predicate selects a
294 sequentially ordered subset of elements to be inserted; the destination
295 predicate specifies the sequentially ordered recipient locations.
296 This is equivalent to
297 `llvm.masked.compressstore.*`
298 followed by
299 `llvm.masked.expandload.*`
300 with a single instruction.
301
302 This extreme power and flexibility comes down to the fact that SVP64
303 is not actually a Vector ISA: it is a loop-abstraction-concept that
304 is applied *in general* to Scalar operations, just like the x86
305 `REP` instruction (if put on steroids).
306
307 # EXTRA Pack/Unpack bits
308
309 The pack/unpack concept of VSX `vpack` is abstracted out as a Sub-Vector
310 reordering Schedule.
311 Two bits in the `RM` field
312 enable either "packing" or "unpacking"
313 on the subvectors vec2/3/4.
314
315 First, llustrating a
316 "normal" SVP64 operation with `SUBVL!=1:` (assuming no elwidth overrides),
317 note that the VL loop is outer and the SUBVL loop inner:
318
319 def index():
320 for i in range(VL):
321 for j in range(SUBVL):
322 yield i*SUBVL+j
323
324 for idx in index():
325 operation_on(RA+idx)
326
327 For pack/unpack (again, no elwidth overrides), note that now there is the
328 option to swap the SUBVL and VL loop orders.
329 In effect the Pack/Unpack performs a Transpose of the subvector elements:
330
331 # yield an outer-SUBVL or inner VL loop with SUBVL
332 def index_p(outer):
333 if outer:
334 for j in range(SUBVL):
335 for i in range(VL):
336 yield i+VL*j
337 else:
338 for i in range(VL):
339 for j in range(SUBVL):
340 yield i*SUBVL+j
341
342 # walk through both source and dest indices simultaneously
343 for src_idx, dst_idx in zip(index_p(PACK), index_p(UNPACK)):
344 move_operation(RT+dst_idx, RA+src_idx)
345
346 "yield" from python is used here for simplicity and clarity.
347 The two Finite State Machines for the generation of the source
348 and destination element offsets progress incrementally in
349 lock-step.
350
351 Example VL=2, SUBVL=3, PACK_en=1 - elements grouped by
352 vec3 will be redistributed such that Sub-elements 0 are
353 packed together, Sub-elements 1 are packed together, as
354 are Sub-elements 2.
355
356 srcstep=0 srcstep=1
357 0 1 2 3 4 5
358
359 dststep=0 dststep=1 dststep=2
360 0 3 1 4 2 5
361
362 Setting of both `PACK_en` and `UNPACK_en` is neither prohibited nor
363 `UNDEFINED` because the reordering is fully deterministic, and
364 additional REMAP reordering may be applied. Combined with
365 Matrix REMAP this would
366 give potentially up to 4 Dimensions of reordering.
367
368 Pack/Unpack applies primarily to mv operations, mv.swizzle,
369 and some other single-source
370 single-destination operations such as Indexed LD/ST and extsw.
371 [[sv/mv.swizzle]] has a slightly different pseudocode algorithm
372 for Vertical-First Mode.
373
374 # Reduce modes
375
376 Reduction in SVP64 is deterministic and somewhat of a misnomer. A normal
377 Vector ISA would have explicit Reduce opcodes with defined characteristics
378 per operation: in SX Aurora there is even an additional scalar argument
379 containing the initial reduction value, and the default is either 0
380 or 1 depending on the specifics of the explicit opcode.
381 SVP64 fundamentally has to
382 utilise *existing* Scalar Power ISA v3.0B operations, which presents some
383 unique challenges.
384
385 The solution turns out to be to simply define reduction as permitting
386 deterministic element-based schedules to be issued using the base Scalar
387 operations, and to rely on the underlying microarchitecture to resolve
388 Register Hazards at the element level. This goes back to
389 the fundamental principle that SV is nothing more than a Sub-Program-Counter
390 sitting between Decode and Issue phases.
391
392 For Scalar Reduction,
393 Microarchitectures *may* take opportunities to parallelise the reduction
394 but only if in doing so they preserve strict Program Order at the Element Level.
395 Opportunities where this is possible include an `OR` operation
396 or a MIN/MAX operation: it may be possible to parallelise the reduction,
397 but for Floating Point it is not permitted due to different results
398 being obtained if the reduction is not executed in strict Program-Sequential
399 Order.
400
401 In essence it becomes the programmer's responsibility to leverage the
402 pre-determined schedules to desired effect.
403
404 ## Scalar result reduction and iteration
405
406 Scalar Reduction per se does not exist, instead is implemented in SVP64
407 as a simple and natural relaxation of the usual restriction on the Vector
408 Looping which would terminate if the destination was marked as a Scalar.
409 Scalar Reduction by contrast *keeps issuing Vector Element Operations*
410 even though the destination register is marked as scalar.
411 Thus it is up to the programmer to be aware of this, observe some
412 conventions, and thus end up achieving the desired outcome of scalar
413 reduction.
414
415 It is also important to appreciate that there is no
416 actual imposition or restriction on how this mode is utilised: there
417 will therefore be several valuable uses (including Vector Iteration
418 and "Reverse-Gear")
419 and it is up to the programmer to make best use of the
420 (strictly deterministic) capability
421 provided.
422
423 In this mode, which is suited to operations involving carry or overflow,
424 one register must be assigned, by convention by the programmer to be the
425 "accumulator". Scalar reduction is thus categorised by:
426
427 * One of the sources is a Vector
428 * the destination is a scalar
429 * optionally but most usefully when one source scalar register is
430 also the scalar destination (which may be informally termed
431 the "accumulator")
432 * That the source register type is the same as the destination register
433 type identified as the "accumulator". Scalar reduction on `cmp`,
434 `setb` or `isel` makes no sense for example because of the mixture
435 between CRs and GPRs.
436
437 *Note that issuing instructions in Scalar reduce mode such as `setb`
438 are neither `UNDEFINED` nor prohibited, despite them not making much
439 sense at first glance.
440 Scalar reduce is strictly defined behaviour, and the cost in
441 hardware terms of prohibition of seemingly non-sensical operations is too great.
442 Therefore it is permitted and required to be executed successfully.
443 Implementors **MAY** choose to optimise such instructions in instances
444 where their use results in "extraneous execution", i.e. where it is clear
445 that the sequence of operations, comprising multiple overwrites to
446 a scalar destination **without** cumulative, iterative, or reductive
447 behaviour (no "accumulator"), may discard all but the last element
448 operation. Identification
449 of such is trivial to do for `setb` and `cmp`: the source register type is
450 a completely different register file from the destination.
451 Likewise Scalar reduction when the destination is a Vector
452 is as if the Reduction Mode was not requested. However it would clearly
453 be unacceptable to perform such optimisations on cache-inhibited LD/ST,
454 so some considerable care needs to be taken.*
455
456 Typical applications include simple operations such as `ADD r3, r10.v,
457 r3` where, clearly, r3 is being used to accumulate the addition of all
458 elements of the vector starting at r10.
459
460 # add RT, RA,RB but when RT==RA
461 for i in range(VL):
462 iregs[RA] += iregs[RB+i] # RT==RA
463
464 However, *unless* the operation is marked as "mapreduce" (`sv.add/mr`)
465 SV ordinarily
466 **terminates** at the first scalar operation. Only by marking the
467 operation as "mapreduce" will it continue to issue multiple sub-looped
468 (element) instructions in `Program Order`.
469
470 To perform the loop in reverse order, the ```RG``` (reverse gear) bit must be set. This may be useful in situations where the results may be different
471 (floating-point) if executed in a different order. Given that there is
472 no actual prohibition on Reduce Mode being applied when the destination
473 is a Vector, the "Reverse Gear" bit turns out to be a way to apply Iterative
474 or Cumulative Vector operations in reverse. `sv.add/rg r3.v, r4.v, r4.v`
475 for example will start at the opposite end of the Vector and push
476 a cumulative series of overlapping add operations into the Execution units of
477 the underlying hardware.
478
479 Other examples include shift-mask operations where a Vector of inserts
480 into a single destination register is required (see [[sv/bitmanip]], bmset),
481 as a way to construct
482 a value quickly from multiple arbitrary bit-ranges and bit-offsets.
483 Using the same register as both the source and destination, with Vectors
484 of different offsets masks and values to be inserted has multiple
485 applications including Video, cryptography and JIT compilation.
486
487 # assume VL=4:
488 # * Vector of shift-offsets contained in RC (r12.v)
489 # * Vector of masks contained in RB (r8.v)
490 # * Vector of values to be masked-in in RA (r4.v)
491 # * Scalar destination RT (r0) to receive all mask-offset values
492 sv.bmset/mr r0, r4.v, r8.v, r12.v
493
494 Due to the Deterministic Scheduling,
495 Subtract and Divide are still permitted to be executed in this mode,
496 although from an algorithmic perspective it is strongly discouraged.
497 It would be better to use addition followed by one final subtract,
498 or in the case of divide, to get better accuracy, to perform a multiply
499 cascade followed by a final divide.
500
501 Note that single-operand or three-operand scalar-dest reduce is perfectly
502 well permitted: the programmer may still declare one register, used as
503 both a Vector source and Scalar destination, to be utilised as
504 the "accumulator". In the case of `sv.fmadds` and `sv.maddhw` etc
505 this naturally fits well with the normal expected usage of these
506 operations.
507
508 If an interrupt or exception occurs in the middle of the scalar mapreduce,
509 the scalar destination register **MUST** be updated with the current
510 (intermediate) result, because this is how ```Program Order``` is
511 preserved (Vector Loops are to be considered to be just another way of issuing instructions
512 in Program Order). In this way, after return from interrupt,
513 the scalar mapreduce may continue where it left off. This provides
514 "precise" exception behaviour.
515
516 Note that hardware is perfectly permitted to perform multi-issue
517 parallel optimisation of the scalar reduce operation: it's just that
518 as far as the user is concerned, all exceptions and interrupts **MUST**
519 be precise.
520
521 ## Vector result reduce mode
522
523 Vector Reduce Mode issues a deterministic tree-reduction schedule to the underlying micro-architecture. Like Scalar reduction, the "Scalar Base"
524 (Power ISA v3.0B) operation is leveraged, unmodified, to give the
525 *appearance* and *effect* of Reduction.
526
527 In Horizontal-First Mode, Vector-result reduction **requires**
528 the destination to be a Vector, which will be used to store
529 intermediary results.
530
531 Given that the tree-reduction schedule is deterministic,
532 Interrupts and exceptions
533 can therefore also be precise. The final result will be in the first
534 non-predicate-masked-out destination element, but due again to
535 the deterministic schedule programmers may find uses for the intermediate
536 results.
537
538 When Rc=1 a corresponding Vector of co-resultant CRs is also
539 created. No special action is taken: the result and its CR Field
540 are stored "as usual" exactly as all other SVP64 Rc=1 operations.
541
542 Note that the Schedule only makes sense on top of certain instructions:
543 X-Form with a Register Profile of `RT,RA,RB` is fine. Like Scalar
544 Reduction, nothing is prohibited:
545 the results of execution on an unsuitable instruction may simply
546 not make sense. Many 3-input instructions (madd, fmadd) unlike Scalar
547 Reduction in particular do not make sense, but `ternlogi`, if used
548 with care, would.
549
550 **Parallel-Reduction with Predication**
551
552 To avoid breaking the strict RISC-paradigm, keeping the Issue-Schedule
553 completely separate from the actual element-level (scalar) operations,
554 Move operations are **not** included in the Schedule. This means that
555 the Schedule leaves the final (scalar) result in the first-non-masked
556 element of the Vector used. With the predicate mask being dynamic
557 (but deterministic) this result could be anywhere.
558
559 If that result is needed to be moved to a (single) scalar register
560 then a follow-up `sv.mv/sm=predicate rt, ra.v` instruction will be
561 needed to get it, where the predicate is the exact same predicate used
562 in the prior Parallel-Reduction instruction. For *some* implementations
563 this may be a slow operation. It may be better to perform a pre-copy
564 of the values, compressing them (VREDUCE-style) into a contiguous block,
565 which will guarantee that the result goes into the very first element
566 of the destination vector.
567
568 **Usage conditions**
569
570 The simplest usage is to perform an overwrite, specifying all three
571 register operands the same.
572
573 setvl VL=6
574 sv.add/vr 8.v, 8.v, 8.v
575
576 The Reduction Schedule will issue the Parallel Tree Reduction spanning
577 registers 8 through 13, by adjusting the offsets to RT, RA and RB as
578 necessary (see "Parallel Reduction algorithm" in a later section).
579
580 A non-overwrite is possible as well but just as with the overwrite
581 version, only those destination elements necessary for storing
582 intermediary computations will be written to: the remaining elements
583 will **not** be overwritten and will **not** be zero'd.
584
585 setvl VL=4
586 sv.add/vr 0.v, 8.v, 8.v
587
588 ## Sub-Vector Horizontal Reduction
589
590 Note that when SVM is clear and SUBVL!=1 a Parallel Reduction is performed
591 on all first Subvector elements, followed by another separate independent
592 Parallel Reduction on all the second Subvector elements and so on.
593
594 By contrast, when SVM is set and SUBVL!=1, a Horizontal
595 Subvector mode is enabled, applying the Parallel Reduction
596 Algorithm to the Subvector Elements. The Parallel Reduction
597 is independently applied VL times, to each group of Subvector
598 elements. Bear in mind that predication is never applied down
599 into individual Subvector elements, but will be applied
600 to select whether the *entire* Parallel Reduction on each
601 group is performed or not.
602
603  for (i = 0; i < VL; i++)
604 if (predval & 1<<i) # predication
605 subvecparallelreduction(...)
606
607 Note that as this is a Parallel Reduction, for best results
608 it should be an overwrite operation, where the result for
609 the Horizontal Reduction of each Subvector will be in the
610 first Subvector element.
611 Also note that use of Rc=1 is `UNDEFINED` behaviour.
612
613 In essence what is happening here is that Structure Packing is being
614 combined with Parallel Reduction. If the Subvector elements may be
615 laid out as a 2D matrix, with the Subvector elements on rows,
616 and Parallel Reduction is applied per row, then if `SVM` is **clear**
617 the Matrix is transposed (like Pack/Unpack)
618 before still applying the Parallel Reduction to the **row**.
619
620 # Fail-on-first <a name="fail-first"> </a>
621
622 Data-dependent fail-on-first has two distinct variants: one for LD/ST
623 (see [[sv/ldst]],
624 the other for arithmetic operations (actually, CR-driven)
625 [[sv/normal]] and CR operations [[sv/cr_ops]].
626 Note in each
627 case the assumption is that vector elements are required appear to be
628 executed in sequential Program Order, element 0 being the first.
629
630 * LD/ST ffirst treats the first LD/ST in a vector (element 0) as an
631 ordinary one. Exceptions occur "as normal". However for elements 1
632 and above, if an exception would occur, then VL is **truncated** to the
633 previous element.
634 * Data-driven (CR-driven) fail-on-first activates when Rc=1 or other
635 CR-creating operation produces a result (including cmp). Similar to
636 branch, an analysis of the CR is performed and if the test fails, the
637 vector operation terminates and discards all element operations
638 above the current one (and the current one if VLi is not set),
639 and VL is truncated to either
640 the *previous* element or the current one, depending on whether
641 VLi (VL "inclusive") is set.
642
643 Thus the new VL comprises a contiguous vector of results,
644 all of which pass the testing criteria (equal to zero, less than zero).
645
646 The CR-based data-driven fail-on-first is new and not found in ARM
647 SVE or RVV. At the same time it is also "old" because it is a generalisation
648 of the Z80
649 [Block compare](https://rvbelzen.tripod.com/z80prgtemp/z80prg04.htm)
650 instructions, especially
651 [CPIR](http://z80-heaven.wikidot.com/instructions-set:cpir)
652 which is based on CP (compare) as the ultimate "element" (suffix)
653 operation to which the repeat (prefix) is applied.
654 It is extremely useful for reducing instruction count,
655 however requires speculative execution involving modifications of VL
656 to get high performance implementations. An additional mode (RC1=1)
657 effectively turns what would otherwise be an arithmetic operation
658 into a type of `cmp`. The CR is stored (and the CR.eq bit tested
659 against the `inv` field).
660 If the CR.eq bit is equal to `inv` then the Vector is truncated and
661 the loop ends.
662 Note that when RC1=1 the result elements are never stored, only the CRs.
663
664 VLi is only available as an option when `Rc=0` (or for instructions
665 which do not have Rc). When set, the current element is always
666 also included in the count (the new length that VL will be set to).
667 This may be useful in combination with "inv" to truncate the Vector
668 to *exclude* elements that fail a test, or, in the case of implementations
669 of strncpy, to include the terminating zero.
670
671 In CR-based data-driven fail-on-first there is only the option to select
672 and test one bit of each CR (just as with branch BO). For more complex
673 tests this may be insufficient. If that is the case, a vectorised crops
674 (crand, cror) may be used, and ffirst applied to the crop instead of to
675 the arithmetic vector.
676
677 One extremely important aspect of ffirst is:
678
679 * LDST ffirst may never set VL equal to zero. This because on the first
680 element an exception must be raised "as normal".
681 * CR-based data-dependent ffirst on the other hand **can** set VL equal
682 to zero. This is the only means in the entirety of SV that VL may be set
683 to zero (with the exception of via the SV.STATE SPR). When VL is set
684 zero due to the first element failing the CR bit-test, all subsequent
685 vectorised operations are effectively `nops` which is
686 *precisely the desired and intended behaviour*.
687
688 Another aspect is that for ffirst LD/STs, VL may be truncated arbitrarily
689 to a nonzero value for any implementation-specific reason. For example:
690 it is perfectly reasonable for implementations to alter VL when ffirst
691 LD or ST operations are initiated on a nonaligned boundary, such that
692 within a loop the subsequent iteration of that loop begins subsequent
693 ffirst LD/ST operations on an aligned boundary. Likewise, to reduce
694 workloads or balance resources.
695
696 CR-based data-dependent first on the other hand MUST not truncate VL
697 arbitrarily to a length decided by the hardware: VL MUST only be
698 truncated based explicitly on whether a test fails.
699 This because it is a precise test on which algorithms
700 will rely.
701
702 *Note: there is no reverse-direction for Data-dependent Fail-First.
703 REMAP will need to be activated to invert the ordering of element
704 traversal.*
705
706 ## Data-dependent fail-first on CR operations (crand etc)
707
708 Operations that actually produce or alter CR Field as a result
709 do not also in turn have an Rc=1 mode. However it makes no
710 sense to try to test the 4 bits of a CR Field for being equal
711 or not equal to zero. Moreover, the result is already in the
712 form that is desired: it is a CR field. Therefore,
713 CR-based operations have their own SVP64 Mode, described
714 in [[sv/cr_ops]]
715
716 There are two primary different types of CR operations:
717
718 * Those which have a 3-bit operand field (referring to a CR Field)
719 * Those which have a 5-bit operand (referring to a bit within the
720 whole 32-bit CR)
721
722 More details can be found in [[sv/cr_ops]].
723
724 # pred-result mode
725
726 Pred-result mode may not be applied on CR-based operations.
727
728 Although CR operations (mtcr, crand, cror) may be Vectorised,
729 predicated, pred-result mode applies to operations that have
730 an Rc=1 mode, or make sense to add an RC1 option.
731
732 Predicate-result merges common CR testing with predication, saving on
733 instruction count. In essence, a Condition Register Field test
734 is performed, and if it fails it is considered to have been
735 *as if* the destination predicate bit was zero. Given that
736 there are no CR-based operations that produce Rc=1 co-results,
737 there can be no pred-result mode for mtcr and other CR-based instructions
738
739 Arithmetic and Logical Pred-result, which does have Rc=1 or for which
740 RC1 Mode makes sense, is covered in [[sv/normal]]
741
742 # CR Operations
743
744 CRs are slightly more involved than INT or FP registers due to the
745 possibility for indexing individual bits (crops BA/BB/BT). Again however
746 the access pattern needs to be understandable in relation to v3.0B / v3.1B
747 numbering, with a clear linear relationship and mapping existing when
748 SV is applied.
749
750 ## CR EXTRA mapping table and algorithm <a name="cr_extra"></a>
751
752 Numbering relationships for CR fields are already complex due to being
753 in BE format (*the relationship is not clearly explained in the v3.0B
754 or v3.1 specification*). However with some care and consideration
755 the exact same mapping used for INT and FP regfiles may be applied,
756 just to the upper bits, as explained below. The notation
757 `CR{field number}` is used to indicate access to a particular
758 Condition Register Field (as opposed to the notation `CR[bit]`
759 which accesses one bit of the 32 bit Power ISA v3.0B
760 Condition Register)
761
762 `CR{n}` refers to `CR0` when `n=0` and consequently, for CR0-7, is defined, in v3.0B pseudocode, as:
763
764 CR{7-n} = CR[32+n*4:35+n*4]
765
766 For SVP64 the relationship for the sequential
767 numbering of elements is to the CR **fields** within
768 the CR Register, not to individual bits within the CR register.
769
770 In OpenPOWER v3.0/1, BF/BT/BA/BB are all 5 bits. The top 3 bits (0:2)
771 select one of the 8 CRs; the bottom 2 bits (3:4) select one of 4 bits
772 *in* that CR (EQ/LT/GT/SO). The numbering was determined (after 4 months of
773 analysis and research) to be as follows:
774
775 CR_index = 7-(BA>>2) # top 3 bits but BE
776 bit_index = 3-(BA & 0b11) # low 2 bits but BE
777 CR_reg = CR{CR_index} # get the CR
778 # finally get the bit from the CR.
779 CR_bit = (CR_reg & (1<<bit_index)) != 0
780
781 When it comes to applying SV, it is the CR\_reg number to which SV EXTRA2/3
782 applies, **not** the CR\_bit portion (bits 3-4):
783
784 if extra3_mode:
785 spec = EXTRA3
786 else:
787 spec = EXTRA2<<1 | 0b0
788 if spec[0]:
789 # vector constructs "BA[0:2] spec[1:2] 00 BA[3:4]"
790 return ((BA >> 2)<<6) | # hi 3 bits shifted up
791 (spec[1:2]<<4) | # to make room for these
792 (BA & 0b11) # CR_bit on the end
793 else:
794 # scalar constructs "00 spec[1:2] BA[0:4]"
795 return (spec[1:2] << 5) | BA
796
797 Thus, for example, to access a given bit for a CR in SV mode, the v3.0B
798 algorithm to determine CR\_reg is modified to as follows:
799
800 CR_index = 7-(BA>>2) # top 3 bits but BE
801 if spec[0]:
802 # vector mode, 0-124 increments of 4
803 CR_index = (CR_index<<4) | (spec[1:2] << 2)
804 else:
805 # scalar mode, 0-32 increments of 1
806 CR_index = (spec[1:2]<<3) | CR_index
807 # same as for v3.0/v3.1 from this point onwards
808 bit_index = 3-(BA & 0b11) # low 2 bits but BE
809 CR_reg = CR{CR_index} # get the CR
810 # finally get the bit from the CR.
811 CR_bit = (CR_reg & (1<<bit_index)) != 0
812
813 Note here that the decoding pattern to determine CR\_bit does not change.
814
815 Note: high-performance implementations may read/write Vectors of CRs in
816 batches of aligned 32-bit chunks (CR0-7, CR7-15). This is to greatly
817 simplify internal design. If instructions are issued where CR Vectors
818 do not start on a 32-bit aligned boundary, performance may be affected.
819
820 ## CR fields as inputs/outputs of vector operations
821
822 CRs (or, the arithmetic operations associated with them)
823 may be marked as Vectorised or Scalar. When Rc=1 in arithmetic operations that have no explicit EXTRA to cover the CR, the CR is Vectorised if the destination is Vectorised. Likewise if the destination is scalar then so is the CR.
824
825 When vectorized, the CR inputs/outputs are sequentially read/written
826 to 4-bit CR fields. Vectorised Integer results, when Rc=1, will begin
827 writing to CR8 (TBD evaluate) and increase sequentially from there.
828 This is so that:
829
830 * implementations may rely on the Vector CRs being aligned to 8. This
831 means that CRs may be read or written in aligned batches of 32 bits
832 (8 CRs per batch), for high performance implementations.
833 * scalar Rc=1 operation (CR0, CR1) and callee-saved CRs (CR2-4) are not
834 overwritten by vector Rc=1 operations except for very large VL
835 * CR-based predication, from CR32, is also not interfered with
836 (except by large VL).
837
838 However when the SV result (destination) is marked as a scalar by the
839 EXTRA field the *standard* v3.0B behaviour applies: the accompanying
840 CR when Rc=1 is written to. This is CR0 for integer operations and CR1
841 for FP operations.
842
843 Note that yes, the CR Fields are genuinely Vectorised. Unlike in SIMD VSX which
844 has a single CR (CR6) for a given SIMD result, SV Vectorised OpenPOWER
845 v3.0B scalar operations produce a **tuple** of element results: the
846 result of the operation as one part of that element *and a corresponding
847 CR element*. Greatly simplified pseudocode:
848
849 for i in range(VL):
850 # calculate the vector result of an add
851 iregs[RT+i] = iregs[RA+i] + iregs[RB+i]
852 # now calculate CR bits
853 CRs{8+i}.eq = iregs[RT+i] == 0
854 CRs{8+i}.gt = iregs[RT+i] > 0
855 ... etc
856
857 If a "cumulated" CR based analysis of results is desired (a la VSX CR6)
858 then a followup instruction must be performed, setting "reduce" mode on
859 the Vector of CRs, using cr ops (crand, crnor) to do so. This provides far
860 more flexibility in analysing vectors than standard Vector ISAs. Normal
861 Vector ISAs are typically restricted to "were all results nonzero" and
862 "were some results nonzero". The application of mapreduce to Vectorised
863 cr operations allows far more sophisticated analysis, particularly in
864 conjunction with the new crweird operations see [[sv/cr_int_predication]].
865
866 Note in particular that the use of a separate instruction in this way
867 ensures that high performance multi-issue OoO inplementations do not
868 have the computation of the cumulative analysis CR as a bottleneck and
869 hindrance, regardless of the length of VL.
870
871 Additionally,
872 SVP64 [[sv/branches]] may be used, even when the branch itself is to
873 the following instruction. The combined side-effects of CTR reduction
874 and VL truncation provide several benefits.
875
876 (see [[discussion]]. some alternative schemes are described there)
877
878 ## Rc=1 when SUBVL!=1
879
880 sub-vectors are effectively a form of Packed SIMD (length 2 to 4). Only 1 bit of
881 predicate is allocated per subvector; likewise only one CR is allocated
882 per subvector.
883
884 This leaves a conundrum as to how to apply CR computation per subvector,
885 when normally Rc=1 is exclusively applied to scalar elements. A solution
886 is to perform a bitwise OR or AND of the subvector tests. Given that
887 OE is ignored in SVP64, this field may (when available) be used to select OR or
888 AND behavior.
889
890 ### Table of CR fields
891
892 CRn is the notation used by the OpenPower spec to refer to CR field #i,
893 so FP instructions with Rc=1 write to CR1 (n=1).
894
895 CRs are not stored in SPRs: they are registers in their own right.
896 Therefore context-switching the full set of CRs involves a Vectorised
897 mfcr or mtcr, using VL=8 to do so. This is exactly as how
898 scalar OpenPOWER context-switches CRs: it is just that there are now
899 more of them.
900
901 The 64 SV CRs are arranged similarly to the way the 128 integer registers
902 are arranged. TODO a python program that auto-generates a CSV file
903 which can be included in a table, which is in a new page (so as not to
904 overwhelm this one). [[svp64/cr_names]]
905
906 # Register Profiles
907
908 Instructions are broken down by Register Profiles as listed in the
909 following auto-generated page: [[opcode_regs_deduped]]. These tables,
910 despite being auto-generated, are part of the Specification.
911
912 # SV pseudocode illustration
913
914 ## Single-predicated Instruction
915
916 illustration of normal mode add operation: zeroing not included, elwidth
917 overrides not included. if there is no predicate, it is set to all 1s
918
919 function op_add(rd, rs1, rs2) # add not VADD!
920 int i, id=0, irs1=0, irs2=0;
921 predval = get_pred_val(FALSE, rd);
922 for (i = 0; i < VL; i++)
923 STATE.srcoffs = i # save context
924 if (predval & 1<<i) # predication uses intregs
925 ireg[rd+id] <= ireg[rs1+irs1] + ireg[rs2+irs2];
926 if (!int_vec[rd].isvec) break;
927 if (rd.isvec) { id += 1; }
928 if (rs1.isvec) { irs1 += 1; }
929 if (rs2.isvec) { irs2 += 1; }
930 if (id == VL or irs1 == VL or irs2 == VL) {
931 # end VL hardware loop
932 STATE.srcoffs = 0; # reset
933 return;
934 }
935
936 This has several modes:
937
938 * RT.v = RA.v RB.v
939 * RT.v = RA.v RB.s (and RA.s RB.v)
940 * RT.v = RA.s RB.s
941 * RT.s = RA.v RB.v
942 * RT.s = RA.v RB.s (and RA.s RB.v)
943 * RT.s = RA.s RB.s
944
945 All of these may be predicated. Vector-Vector is straightfoward.
946 When one of source is a Vector and the other a Scalar, it is clear that
947 each element of the Vector source should be added to the Scalar source,
948 each result placed into the Vector (or, if the destination is a scalar,
949 only the first nonpredicated result).
950
951 The one that is not obvious is RT=vector but both RA/RB=scalar.
952 Here this acts as a "splat scalar result", copying the same result into
953 all nonpredicated result elements. If a fixed destination scalar was
954 intended, then an all-Scalar operation should be used.
955
956 See <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=552>
957
958 # Assembly Annotation
959
960 Assembly code annotation is required for SV to be able to successfully
961 mark instructions as "prefixed".
962
963 A reasonable (prototype) starting point:
964
965 svp64 [field=value]*
966
967 Fields:
968
969 * ew=8/16/32 - element width
970 * sew=8/16/32 - source element width
971 * vec=2/3/4 - SUBVL
972 * mode=mr/satu/sats/crpred
973 * pred=1\<\<3/r3/~r3/r10/~r10/r30/~r30/lt/gt/le/ge/eq/ne
974
975 similar to x86 "rex" prefix.
976
977 For actual assembler:
978
979 sv.asmcode/mode.vec{N}.ew=8,sw=16,m={pred},sm={pred} reg.v, src.s
980
981 Qualifiers:
982
983 * m={pred}: predicate mask mode
984 * sm={pred}: source-predicate mask mode (only allowed in Twin-predication)
985 * vec{N}: vec2 OR vec3 OR vec4 - sets SUBVL=2/3/4
986 * ew={N}: ew=8/16/32 - sets elwidth override
987 * sw={N}: sw=8/16/32 - sets source elwidth override
988 * ff={xx}: see fail-first mode
989 * pr={xx}: see predicate-result mode
990 * sat{x}: satu / sats - see saturation mode
991 * mr: see map-reduce mode
992 * mrr: map-reduce, reverse-gear (VL-1 downto 0)
993 * mr.svm see map-reduce with sub-vector mode
994 * crm: see map-reduce CR mode
995 * crm.svm see map-reduce CR with sub-vector mode
996 * sz: predication with source-zeroing
997 * dz: predication with dest-zeroing
998
999 For modes:
1000
1001 * pred-result:
1002 - pm=lt/gt/le/ge/eq/ne/so/ns
1003 - RC1 mode
1004 * fail-first
1005 - ff=lt/gt/le/ge/eq/ne/so/ns
1006 - RC1 mode
1007 * saturation:
1008 - sats
1009 - satu
1010 * map-reduce:
1011 - mr OR crm: "normal" map-reduce mode or CR-mode.
1012 - mr.svm OR crm.svm: when vec2/3/4 set, sub-vector mapreduce is enabled
1013
1014 # Parallel-reduction algorithm
1015
1016 The principle of SVP64 is that SVP64 is a fully-independent
1017 Abstraction of hardware-looping in between issue and execute phases
1018 that has no relation to the operation it issues.
1019 Additional state cannot be saved on context-switching beyond that
1020 of SVSTATE, making things slightly tricky.
1021
1022 Executable demo pseudocode, full version
1023 [here](https://git.libre-soc.org/?p=libreriscv.git;a=blob;f=openpower/sv/test_preduce.py;hb=HEAD)
1024
1025 ```
1026 [[!inline pages="openpower/sv/preduce.py" raw="yes" ]]
1027 ```
1028
1029 This algorithm works by noting when data remains in-place rather than
1030 being reduced, and referring to that alternative position on subsequent
1031 layers of reduction. It is re-entrant. If however interrupted and
1032 restored, some implementations may take longer to re-establish the
1033 context.
1034
1035 Its application by default is that:
1036
1037 * RA, FRA or BFA is the first register as the first operand
1038 (ci index offset in the above pseudocode)
1039 * RB, FRB or BFB is the second (co index offset)
1040 * RT (result) also uses ci **if RA==RT**
1041
1042 For more complex applications a REMAP Schedule must be used
1043
1044 *Programmers's note:
1045 if passed a predicate mask with only one bit set, this algorithm
1046 takes no action, similar to when a predicate mask is all zero.*
1047
1048 *Implementor's Note: many SIMD-based Parallel Reduction Algorithms are
1049 implemented in hardware with MVs that ensure lane-crossing is minimised.
1050 The mistake which would be catastrophic to SVP64 to make is to then
1051 limit the Reduction Sequence for all implementors
1052 based solely and exclusively on what one
1053 specific internal microarchitecture does.
1054 In SIMD ISAs the internal SIMD Architectural design is exposed and imposed on the programmer. Cray-style Vector ISAs on the other hand provide convenient,
1055 compact and efficient encodings of abstract concepts.*
1056 **It is the Implementor's responsibility to produce a design
1057 that complies with the above algorithm,
1058 utilising internal Micro-coding and other techniques to transparently
1059 insert micro-architectural lane-crossing Move operations
1060 if necessary or desired, to give the level of efficiency or performance
1061 required.**
1062
1063 # Element-width overrides <a name="elwidth"> </>
1064
1065 Element-width overrides are best illustrated with a packed structure
1066 union in the c programming language. The following should be taken
1067 literally, and assume always a little-endian layout:
1068
1069 typedef union {
1070 uint8_t b[];
1071 uint16_t s[];
1072 uint32_t i[];
1073 uint64_t l[];
1074 uint8_t actual_bytes[8];
1075 } el_reg_t;
1076
1077 elreg_t int_regfile[128];
1078
1079 get_polymorphed_reg(reg, bitwidth, offset):
1080 el_reg_t res;
1081 res.l = 0; // TODO: going to need sign-extending / zero-extending
1082 if bitwidth == 8:
1083 reg.b = int_regfile[reg].b[offset]
1084 elif bitwidth == 16:
1085 reg.s = int_regfile[reg].s[offset]
1086 elif bitwidth == 32:
1087 reg.i = int_regfile[reg].i[offset]
1088 elif bitwidth == 64:
1089 reg.l = int_regfile[reg].l[offset]
1090 return res
1091
1092 set_polymorphed_reg(reg, bitwidth, offset, val):
1093 if (!reg.isvec):
1094 # not a vector: first element only, overwrites high bits
1095 int_regfile[reg].l[0] = val
1096 elif bitwidth == 8:
1097 int_regfile[reg].b[offset] = val
1098 elif bitwidth == 16:
1099 int_regfile[reg].s[offset] = val
1100 elif bitwidth == 32:
1101 int_regfile[reg].i[offset] = val
1102 elif bitwidth == 64:
1103 int_regfile[reg].l[offset] = val
1104
1105 In effect the GPR registers r0 to r127 (and corresponding FPRs fp0
1106 to fp127) are reinterpreted to be "starting points" in a byte-addressable
1107 memory. Vectors - which become just a virtual naming construct - effectively
1108 overlap.
1109
1110 It is extremely important for implementors to note that the only circumstance
1111 where upper portions of an underlying 64-bit register are zero'd out is
1112 when the destination is a scalar. The ideal register file has byte-level
1113 write-enable lines, just like most SRAMs, in order to avoid READ-MODIFY-WRITE.
1114
1115 An example ADD operation with predication and element width overrides:
1116
1117  for (i = 0; i < VL; i++)
1118 if (predval & 1<<i) # predication
1119 src1 = get_polymorphed_reg(RA, srcwid, irs1)
1120 src2 = get_polymorphed_reg(RB, srcwid, irs2)
1121 result = src1 + src2 # actual add here
1122 set_polymorphed_reg(RT, destwid, ird, result)
1123 if (!RT.isvec) break
1124 if (RT.isvec)  { id += 1; }
1125 if (RA.isvec)  { irs1 += 1; }
1126 if (RB.isvec)  { irs2 += 1; }
1127
1128 Thus it can be clearly seen that elements are packed by their
1129 element width, and the packing starts from the source (or destination)
1130 specified by the instruction.
1131
1132 # Twin (implicit) result operations
1133
1134 Some operations in the Power ISA already target two 64-bit scalar
1135 registers: `lq` for example, and LD with update.
1136 Some mathematical algorithms are more
1137 efficient when there are two outputs rather than one, providing
1138 feedback loops between elements (the most well-known being add with
1139 carry). 64-bit multiply
1140 for example actually internally produces a 128 bit result, which clearly
1141 cannot be stored in a single 64 bit register. Some ISAs recommend
1142 "macro op fusion": the practice of setting a convention whereby if
1143 two commonly used instructions (mullo, mulhi) use the same ALU but
1144 one selects the low part of an identical operation and the other
1145 selects the high part, then optimised micro-architectures may
1146 "fuse" those two instructions together, using Micro-coding techniques,
1147 internally.
1148
1149 The practice and convention of macro-op fusion however is not compatible
1150 with SVP64 Horizontal-First, because Horizontal Mode may only
1151 be applied to a single instruction at a time, and SVP64 is based on
1152 the principle of strict Program Order even at the element
1153 level. Thus it becomes
1154 necessary to add explicit more complex single instructions with
1155 more operands than would normally be seen in the average RISC ISA
1156 (3-in, 2-out, in some cases). If it
1157 was not for Power ISA already having LD/ST with update as well as
1158 Condition Codes and `lq` this would be hard to justify.
1159
1160 With limited space in the `EXTRA` Field, and Power ISA opcodes
1161 being only 32 bit, 5 operands is quite an ask. `lq` however sets
1162 a precedent: `RTp` stands for "RT pair". In other words the result
1163 is stored in RT and RT+1. For Scalar operations, following this
1164 precedent is perfectly reasonable. In Scalar mode,
1165 `madded` therefore stores the two halves of the 128-bit multiply
1166 into RT and RT+1.
1167
1168 What, then, of `sv.madded`? If the destination is hard-coded to
1169 RT and RT+1 the instruction is not useful when Vectorised because
1170 the output will be overwritten on the next element. To solve this
1171 is easy: define the destination registers as RT and RT+MAXVL
1172 respectively. This makes it easy for compilers to statically allocate
1173 registers even when VL changes dynamically.
1174
1175 Bear in mind that both RT and RT+MAXVL are starting points for Vectors,
1176 and bear in mind that element-width overrides still have to be taken
1177 into consideration, the starting point for the implicit destination
1178 is best illustrated in pseudocode:
1179
1180 # demo of madded
1181  for (i = 0; i < VL; i++)
1182 if (predval & 1<<i) # predication
1183 src1 = get_polymorphed_reg(RA, srcwid, irs1)
1184 src2 = get_polymorphed_reg(RB, srcwid, irs2)
1185 src2 = get_polymorphed_reg(RC, srcwid, irs3)
1186 result = src1*src2 + src2
1187 destmask = (2<<destwid)-1
1188 # store two halves of result, both start from RT.
1189 set_polymorphed_reg(RT, destwid, ird , result&destmask)
1190 set_polymorphed_reg(RT, destwid, ird+MAXVL, result>>destwid)
1191 if (!RT.isvec) break
1192 if (RT.isvec)  { id += 1; }
1193 if (RA.isvec)  { irs1 += 1; }
1194 if (RB.isvec)  { irs2 += 1; }
1195 if (RC.isvec)  { irs3 += 1; }
1196
1197 The significant part here is that the second half is stored
1198 starting not from RT+MAXVL at all: it is the *element* index
1199 that is offset by MAXVL, both halves actually starting from RT.
1200 If VL is 3, MAXVL is 5, RT is 1, and dest elwidth is 32 then the elements
1201 RT0 to RT2 are stored:
1202
1203 0..31 32..63
1204 r0 unchanged unchanged
1205 r1 RT0.lo RT1.lo
1206 r2 RT2.lo unchanged
1207 r3 unchanged RT0.hi
1208 r4 RT1.hi RT2.hi
1209 r5 unchanged unchanged
1210
1211 Note that all of the LO halves start from r1, but that the HI halves
1212 start from half-way into r3. The reason is that with MAXVL bring
1213 5 and elwidth being 32, this is the 5th element
1214 offset (in 32 bit quantities) counting from r1.
1215
1216 *Programmer's note: accessing registers that have been placed
1217 starting on a non-contiguous boundary (half-way along a scalar
1218 register) can be inconvenient: REMAP can provide an offset but
1219 it requires extra instructions to set up. A simple solution
1220 is to ensure that MAXVL is rounded up such that the Vector
1221 ends cleanly on a contiguous register boundary. MAXVL=6 in
1222 the above example would achieve that*
1223
1224 Additional DRAFT Scalar instructions in 3-in 2-out form
1225 with an implicit 2nd destination:
1226
1227 * [[isa/svfixedarith]]
1228 * [[isa/svfparith]]
1229