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1 [[!tag standards]]
2
3 Obligatory Dilbert:
4
5 <img src="https://assets.amuniversal.com/7fada35026ca01393d3d005056a9545d" width="600" />
6
7 Links:
8
9 * <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=213>
10 * <https://youtu.be/ZQ5hw9AwO1U> walkthrough video (19jun2022)
11 * <https://ftp.libre-soc.org/simple_v_spec.pdf>
12 PDF version of this DRAFT specification
13
14 **SV is in DRAFT STATUS**. SV has not yet been submitted to the OpenPOWER Foundation ISA WG for review.
15
16 ===
17
18 # Scalable Vectors for the Power ISA
19
20 SV is designed as a strict RISC-paradigm
21 Scalable Vector ISA for Hybrid 3D CPU GPU VPU workloads.
22 As such it brings features normally only found in Cray Supercomputers
23 (Cray-1, NEC SX-Aurora)
24 and in GPUs, but keeps strictly to a *Simple* RISC principle of leveraging
25 a *Scalar* ISA, exclusively using "Prefixing". **Not one single actual
26 explicit Vector opcode exists in SV, at all**. It is suitable for
27 low-power Embedded and DSP Workloads as much as it is for power-efficient
28 Supercomputing.
29
30 Fundamental design principles:
31
32 * Taking the simplicity of the RISC paradigm and applying it strictly and
33 uniformly to create a Scalable Vector ISA.
34 * Effectively a hardware for-loop, pausing PC, issuing multiple scalar
35 operations
36 * Preserving the underlying scalar execution dependencies as if the
37 for-loop had been expanded as actual scalar instructions
38 (termed "preserving Program Order")
39 * Specifically designed to be Precise-Interruptible at all times
40 (many Vector ISAs have operations which, due to higher internal
41 accuracy or other complexity, must be effectively atomic for
42 the full Vector operation's duration, adversely affecting interrupt
43 response latency, or be abandoned and started again)
44 * Augments ("tags") existing instructions, providing Vectorisation
45 "context" rather than adding new instructions.
46 * Strictly does not interfere with or alter the non-Scalable Power ISA
47 in any way
48 * In the Prefix space, does not modify or deviate from the underlying
49 scalar Power ISA
50 unless it provides significant performance or other advantage to do so
51 in the Vector space (dropping the "sticky" characteristics
52 of XER.SO and CR0.SO for example)
53 * Designed for Supercomputing: avoids creating significant sequential
54 dependency hazards, allowing standard
55 high performance superscalar multi-issue
56 micro-architectures to be leveraged.
57 * Divided into Compliancy Levels to reduce cost of implementation for
58 specific needs.
59
60 Advantages of these design principles:
61
62 * Simplicity of introduction and implementation on top of
63 the existing Power ISA without disruption.
64 * It is therefore easy to create a first (and sometimes only)
65 implementation as literally a for-loop in hardware, simulators, and
66 compilers.
67 * Hardware Architects may understand and implement SV as being an
68 extra pipeline stage, inserted between decode and issue, that is
69 a simple for-loop issuing element-level sub-instructions.
70 * More complex HDL can be done by repeating existing scalar ALUs and
71 pipelines as blocks and leveraging existing Multi-Issue Infrastructure
72 * As (mostly) a high-level "context" that does not (significantly) deviate
73 from scalar Power ISA and, in its purest form being "a for loop around
74 scalar instructions", it is minimally-disruptive and consequently stands
75 a reasonable chance of broad community adoption and acceptance
76 * Completely wipes not just SIMD opcode proliferation off the
77 map (SIMD is O(N^6) opcode proliferation)
78 but off of Vectorisation ISAs as well. No more separate Vector
79 instructions.
80
81 Comparative instruction count:
82
83 * ARM NEON SIMD: around 2,000 instructions, prerequisite: ARM Scalar.
84 * ARM SVE: around 4,000 instructions, prerequisite: NEON and ARM Scalar
85 * ARM SVE2: around 1,000 instructions, prerequisite: SVE, NEON, and
86 ARM Scalar
87 * Intel AVX-512: around 4,000 instructions, prerequisite AVX, AVX2,
88 AVX-128 and AVX-256 which in turn critically rely on the rest of
89 x86, for a grand total of well over 10,000 instructions.
90 * RISV-V RVV: 192 instructions, prerequisite 96 Scalar RV64GC instructions
91 * SVP64: **six** instructions, two of which are in the same space
92 (svshape, svshape2), with 24-bit prefixing of
93 prerequisite SFS (150) or
94 SFFS (214) Compliancy Subsets.
95 **There are no dedicated Vector instructions, only Scalar-prefixed**.
96
97 Comparative Basic Design Principle:
98
99 * ARM NEON and VSX: PackedSIMD. No instruction-overloaded meaning
100 (every instruction is unique for a given register bitwidth,
101 guaranteeing binary interoperability)
102 * Intel AVX-512 (and below): Hybrid Packed-Predicated SIMD with no
103 instruction-overloading, guaranteeing binary interoperability
104 * ARM SVE/SVE2: Hybrid Packed-Predicated SIMD with instruction-overloading
105 that destroys binary interoperability. This is hidden behind the
106 misuse of the word "Scalable".
107 * RISC-V RVV: Cray-style Scalable Vector but with instruction-overloading
108 that destroys binary interoperability.
109 * SVP64: Cray-style Scalable Vector with no instruction-overloaded
110 meanings. The regfile numbers and bitwidths shall **not** change
111 in a future revision: "Silicon Partner" Scaling is prohibited,
112 in order to guarantee binary interoperability. Future revisions
113 of SVP64 will extend VSX to achieve larger regfiles and once
114 chosen, change will also be prohibited.
115
116 SV comprises several [[sv/compliancy_levels]] suited to Embedded, Energy
117 efficient High-Performance Compute, Distributed Computing and Advanced
118 Computational Supercomputing. The Compliancy Levels are arranged such
119 that even at the bare minimum Level, full Soft-Emulation of all
120 optional and future features is possible.
121
122 # Sub-pages
123
124 Pages being developed and examples
125
126 * [[sv/executive_summary]]
127 * [[sv/overview]] explaining the basics.
128 * [[sv/compliancy_levels]] for minimum subsets through to Advanced
129 Supercomputing.
130 * [[sv/implementation]] implementation planning and coordination
131 * [[sv/svp64]] contains the packet-format *only*, the [[svp64/appendix]]
132 contains explanations and further details
133 * [[sv/svp64_quirks]] things in SVP64 that slightly break the rules
134 or are not immediately apparent despite the RISC paradigm
135 * [[opcode_regs_deduped]] autogenerated table of SVP64 decoder augmentation
136 * [[sv/sprs]] SPRs
137
138 SVP64 "Modes":
139
140 * For condition register operations see [[sv/cr_ops]] - SVP64 Condition
141 Register ops: Guidelines
142 on Vectorisation of any v3.0B base operations which return
143 or modify a Condition Register bit or field.
144 * For LD/ST Modes, see [[sv/ldst]].
145 * For Branch modes, see [[sv/branches]] - SVP64 Conditional Branch
146 behaviour: All/Some Vector CRs
147 * For arithmetic and logical, see [[sv/normal]]
148 * [[sv/mv.vec]] pack/unpack move to and from vec2/3/4,
149 actually an RM.EXTRA Mode and a [[sv/remap]] mode
150
151 Core SVP64 instructions:
152
153 * [[sv/setvl]] the Cray-style "Vector Length" instruction
154 * svremap, svindex and svshape: part of [[sv/remap]] "Remapping" for
155 Matrix Multiply, DCT/FFT and RGB-style "Structure Packing"
156 as well as general-purpose Indexing. Also describes associated SPRs.
157 * [[sv/svstep]] Key stepping instruction, primarily for
158 Vertical-First Mode and also providing traditional "Vector Iota"
159 capability.
160
161 *Please note: there are only six instructions in the whole of SV.
162 Beyond this point are additional **Scalar** instructions related to
163 specific workloads that have nothing to do with the SV Specification*
164
165 # Optional Scalar instructions
166
167 **Additional Instructions for specific purposes (not SVP64)**
168
169 All of these instructions below have nothing to do with SV.
170 They are all entirely designed as Scalar instructions that, as
171 Scalar instructions, stand on their own merit. Considerable
172 lengths have been made to provide justifications for each of these
173 *Scalar* instructions in a *Scalar* context, completely independently
174 of SVP64.
175
176 Some of these Scalar instructions happen also designed to make
177 Scalable Vector binaries more efficient, such
178 as the crweird group. Others are to bring the Scalar Power ISA
179 up-to-date within specific workloads,
180 such as a Javascript Rounding instruction
181 (which saves 35 instructions including 5 branches). None of them are strictly
182 necessary but performance and power consumption may be (or, is already)
183 compromised
184 in certain workloads and use-cases without them.
185
186 Vector-related but still Scalar:
187
188 * [[sv/mv.swizzle]] vec2/3/4 Swizzles (RGBA, XYZW) for 3D and CUDA.
189 designed as a Scalar instruction.
190 * [[sv/vector_ops]] scalar operations needed for supporting vectors
191 * [[sv/cr_int_predication]] scalar instructions needed for
192 effective predication
193
194 Stand-alone Scalar Instructions:
195
196 * [[sv/bitmanip]]
197 * [[sv/fcvt]] FP Conversion (due to OpenPOWER Scalar FP32)
198 * [[sv/fclass]] detect class of FP numbers
199 * [[sv/int_fp_mv]] Move and convert GPR <-> FPR, needed for !VSX
200 * [[sv/av_opcodes]] scalar opcodes for Audio/Video
201 * TODO: OpenPOWER adaptation [[openpower/transcendentals]]
202
203 Twin targetted instructions (two registers out, one implicit, just like
204 Load-with-Update).
205
206 * [[isa/svfixedarith]]
207 * [[isa/svfparith]]
208 * [[sv/biginteger]] Operations that help with big arithmetic
209
210 Explanation of the rules for twin register targets
211 (implicit RS, FRS) explained in SVP64 [[svp64/appendix]]
212
213 # Other Scalable Vector ISAs
214
215 These Scalable Vector ISAs are listed to aid in understanding and
216 context of what is involved.
217
218 * Original Cray ISA
219 <http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/cray/CRAY_Y-MP/HR-04001-0C_Cray_Y-MP_Computer_Systems_Functional_Description_Jun90.pdf>
220 * NEC SX Aurora (still in production, inspired by Cray)
221 <https://www.hpc.nec/documents/guide/pdfs/Aurora_ISA_guide.pdf>
222 * RISC-V RVV (inspired by Cray)
223 <https://github.com/riscv/riscv-v-spec>
224 * MRISC32 ISA Manual (under active development)
225 <https://github.com/mrisc32/mrisc32/tree/master/isa-manual>
226 * Mitch Alsup's MyISA 66000 Vector Processor ISA Manual is available from
227 Mitch on request.
228
229 A comprehensive list of 3D GPU, Packed SIMD, Predicated-SIMD and true Scalable
230 Vector ISAs may be found at the [[sv/vector_isa_comparison]] page.
231 Note: AVX-512 and SVE2 are *not Vector ISAs*, they are Predicated-SIMD.
232 *Public discussions have taken place at Conferences attended by both Intel
233 and ARM on adding a `setvl` instruction which would easily make both
234 AVX-512 and SVE2 truly "Scalable".* [[sv/comparison_table]] in tabular
235 form.
236
237 # Major opcodes summary <a name="major_op_summary"> </a>
238
239 Simple-V itself only requires five instructions with 6-bit Minor XO
240 (bits 26-31), and the SVP64 Prefix Encoding requires
241 25% space of the EXT001 Major Opcode.
242 There are **no** Vector Instructions and consequently **no further
243 opcode space is required**. Even though they are currently
244 placed in the EXT022 Sandbox, the "Management" instructions
245 (setvl, svstep, svremap, svshape, svindex) are designed to fit
246 cleanly into EXT019 (exactly like `addpcis`) or other 5/6-bit Minor
247 XO area (bits 25-31) that has space for Rc=1.
248
249 That said: for the target workloads for which Scalable Vectors are typically
250 used, the Scalar ISA on which those workloads critically rely
251 is somewhat anaemic.
252 The Libre-SOC Team has therefore been addressing that by developing
253 a number of Scalar instructions in specialist areas (Big Integer,
254 Cryptography, 3D, Audio/Video, DSP) and it is these which require
255 considerable Scalar opcode space.
256
257 Please be advised that even though SV is entirely DRAFT status, there
258 is considerable concern that because there is not yet any two-way
259 day-to-day communication established with the OPF ISA WG, we have
260 no idea if any of these are conflicting with future plans by any OPF
261 Members. **The External ISA WG RFC Process is yet to be ratified
262 and Libre-SOC may not join the OPF as an entity because it does
263 not exist except in name. Even if it existed it would be a conflict
264 of interest to join the OPF, due to our funding remit from NLnet**.
265 We therefore proceed on the basis of making public the intention to
266 submit RFCs once the External ISA WG RFC Process is in place and,
267 in a wholly unsatisfactory manner have to *hope and trust* that
268 OPF ISA WG Members are reading this and take it into consideration.
269
270 **Scalar Summary**
271
272 As in above sections, it is emphasised strongly that Simple-V in no
273 way critically depends on the 100 or so *Scalar* instructions also
274 being developed by Libre-SOC.
275
276 **None of these Draft opcodes are intended for private custom
277 secret proprietary usage. They are all intended for entirely
278 public, upstream, high-profile mass-volume day-to-day usage at the
279 same level as add, popcnt and fld**
280
281 * bitmanip requires two major opcodes (due to 16+ bit immediates)
282 those are currently EXT022 and EXT05.
283 * brownfield encoding in one of those two major opcodes still
284 requires multiple VA-Form operations (in greater numbers
285 than EXT04 has spare)
286 * space in EXT019 next to addpcis and crops is recommended
287 (or any other 5-6 bit Minor XO areas)
288 * many X-Form opcodes currently in EXT022 have no preference
289 for a location at all, and may be moved to EXT059, EXT019,
290 EXT031 or other much more suitable location.
291 * even if ratified and even if the majority (mostly X-Form)
292 is moved to other locations, the large immediate sizes of
293 the remaining bitmanip instructions means
294 it would be highly likely these remaining instructions would need two
295 major opcodes. Fortuitously the v3.1 Spec states that
296 both EXT005 and EXT009 are
297 available.
298
299 **Additional observations**
300
301 Note that there is no Sandbox allocation in the published ISA Spec for
302 v3.1 EXT01 usage, and because SVP64 is already 64-bit Prefixed,
303 Prefixed-Prefixed-instructions (SVP64 Prefixed v3.1 Prefixed)
304 would become a whopping 96-bit long instruction. Avoiding this
305 situation is a high priority which in turn by necessity puts pressure
306 on the 32-bit Major Opcode space.
307
308 SVP64 itself is already under pressure, being only 24 bits. If it is
309 not permitted to take up 25% of EXT001 then it would have to be proposed
310 in its own Major Opcode, which on first consideration would be beneficial
311 for SVP64 due to the availability of 2 extra bits.
312 However when combined with the bitmanip scalar instructions
313 requiring two Major opcodes this would come to a grand total of 3 precious
314 Major opcodes. On balance, then, sacrificing 25% of EXT001 is the "least
315 difficult" choice.
316
317 Note also that EXT022, the Official Architectural Sandbox area
318 available for "Custom non-approved purposes" according to the Power
319 ISA Spec,
320 is under severe design pressure as it is insufficient to hold
321 the full extent of the instruction additions required to create
322 a Hybrid 3D CPU-VPU-GPU. Akthough the wording of the Power ISA
323 Specification leaves open the *possibility* of not needing to
324 propose ISA Extensions to the ISA WG, it is clear that EXT022
325 is an inappropriate location for a large high-profile Extension
326 intended for mass-volume product deployment. Every in-good-faith effort will
327 therefore be made to work with the OPF ISA WG to
328 submit SVP64 via the External RFC Process.
329
330 **Whilst SVP64 is only 5 instructions
331 the heavy focus on VSX for the past 12 years has left the SFFS Level
332 anaemic and out-of-date compared to ARM and x86.**
333 This is very much
334 a blessing, as the Scalar ISA has remained clean, making it
335 highly suited to RISC-paradigm Scalable Vector Prefixing. Approximately
336 100 additional (optional) Scalar Instructions are up for proposal to bring SFFS
337 up-to-date. None of them require or depend on PackedSIMD VSX (or VMX).
338
339 # Other
340
341 Examples experiments future ideas discussion:
342
343 * [Scalar register access](https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=905)
344 above r31 and CR7.
345 * [[sv/propagation]] Context propagation including svp64, swizzle and remap
346 * [[sv/masked_vector_chaining]]
347 * [[sv/discussion]]
348 * [[sv/example_dep_matrices]]
349 * [[sv/major_opcode_allocation]]
350 * [[sv/byteswap]]
351 * [[sv/16_bit_compressed]] experimental
352 * [[sv/toc_data_pointer]] experimental
353 * [[sv/predication]] discussion on predication concepts
354 * [[sv/register_type_tags]]
355 * [[sv/mv.x]] deprecated in favour of Indexed REMAP
356
357 Additional links:
358
359 * <https://www.sigarch.org/simd-instructions-considered-harmful/>
360 * [[sv/vector_isa_comparison]] - a list of Packed SIMD, GPU,
361 and other Scalable Vector ISAs
362 * [[sv/comparison_table]] - a one-off (experimental) table comparing ISAs
363 * [[simple_v_extension]] old (deprecated) version
364 * [[openpower/sv/llvm]]
365