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1 # Simple-V (Parallelism Extension Proposal) Specification
2
3 * Copyright (C) 2017, 2018, 3029 Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
4 * Status: DRAFTv0.6
5 * Last edited: 21 jun 2019
6 * Ancillary resource: [[opcodes]] [[sv_prefix_proposal]]
7
8 With thanks to:
9
10 * Allen Baum
11 * Bruce Hoult
12 * comp.arch
13 * Jacob Bachmeyer
14 * Guy Lemurieux
15 * Jacob Lifshay
16 * Terje Mathisen
17 * The RISC-V Founders, without whom this all would not be possible.
18
19 [[!toc ]]
20
21 # Summary and Background: Rationale
22
23 Simple-V is a uniform parallelism API for RISC-V hardware that has several
24 unplanned side-effects including code-size reduction, expansion of
25 HINT space and more. The reason for
26 creating it is to provide a manageable way to turn a pre-existing design
27 into a parallel one, in a step-by-step incremental fashion, without adding any new opcodes, thus allowing
28 the implementor to focus on adding hardware where it is needed and necessary.
29 The primary target is for mobile-class 3D GPUs and VPUs, with secondary
30 goals being to reduce executable size and reduce context-switch latency.
31
32 Critically: **No new instructions are added**. The parallelism (if any
33 is implemented) is implicitly added by tagging *standard* scalar registers
34 for redirection. When such a tagged register is used in any instruction,
35 it indicates that the PC shall **not** be incremented; instead a loop
36 is activated where *multiple* instructions are issued to the pipeline
37 (as determined by a length CSR), with contiguously incrementing register
38 numbers starting from the tagged register. When the last "element"
39 has been reached, only then is the PC permitted to move on. Thus
40 Simple-V effectively sits (slots) *in between* the instruction decode phase
41 and the ALU(s).
42
43 The barrier to entry with SV is therefore very low. The minimum
44 compliant implementation is software-emulation (traps), requiring
45 only the CSRs and CSR tables, and that an exception be thrown if an
46 instruction's registers are detected to have been tagged. The looping
47 that would otherwise be done in hardware is thus carried out in software,
48 instead. Whilst much slower, it is "compliant" with the SV specification,
49 and may be suited for implementation in RV32E and also in situations
50 where the implementor wishes to focus on certain aspects of SV, without
51 unnecessary time and resources into the silicon, whilst also conforming
52 strictly with the API. A good area to punt to software would be the
53 polymorphic element width capability for example.
54
55 Hardware Parallelism, if any, is therefore added at the implementor's
56 discretion to turn what would otherwise be a sequential loop into a
57 parallel one.
58
59 To emphasise that clearly: Simple-V (SV) is *not*:
60
61 * A SIMD system
62 * A SIMT system
63 * A Vectorisation Microarchitecture
64 * A microarchitecture of any specific kind
65 * A mandary parallel processor microarchitecture of any kind
66 * A supercomputer extension
67
68 SV does **not** tell implementors how or even if they should implement
69 parallelism: it is a hardware "API" (Application Programming Interface)
70 that, if implemented, presents a uniform and consistent way to *express*
71 parallelism, at the same time leaving the choice of if, how, how much,
72 when and whether to parallelise operations **entirely to the implementor**.
73
74 # Basic Operation
75
76 The principle of SV is as follows:
77
78 * Standard RV instructions are "prefixed" (extended) through a 48/64
79 bit format (single instruction option) or a variable
80 length VLIW-like prefix (multi or "grouped" option).
81 * The prefix(es) indicate which registers are "tagged" as
82 "vectorised". Predicates can also be added.
83 * A "Vector Length" CSR is set, indicating the span of any future
84 "parallel" operations.
85 * If any operation (a **scalar** standard RV opcode) uses a register
86 that has been so "marked" ("tagged"), a hardware "macro-unrolling loop"
87 is activated, of length VL, that effectively issues **multiple**
88 identical instructions using contiguous sequentially-incrementing
89 register numbers, based on the "tags".
90 * **Whether they be executed sequentially or in parallel or a
91 mixture of both or punted to software-emulation in a trap handler
92 is entirely up to the implementor**.
93
94 In this way an entire scalar algorithm may be vectorised with
95 the minimum of modification to the hardware and to compiler toolchains.
96
97 To reiterate: **There are *no* new opcodes**. The scheme works *entirely*
98 on hidden context that augments *scalar* RISCV instructions.
99
100 # CSRs <a name="csrs"></a>
101
102 * An optional "reshaping" CSR key-value table which remaps from a 1D
103 linear shape to 2D or 3D, including full transposition.
104
105 There are also five additional User mode CSRs :
106
107 * uMVL (the Maximum Vector Length)
108 * uVL (which has different characteristics from standard CSRs)
109 * uSUBVL (effectively a kind of SIMD)
110 * uEPCVLIW (a copy of the sub-execution Program Counter, that is relative
111 to the start of the current VLIW Group, set on a trap).
112 * uSTATE (useful for saving and restoring during context switch,
113 and for providing fast transitions)
114
115 There are also five additional CSRs for Supervisor-Mode:
116
117 * SMVL
118 * SVL
119 * SSUBVL
120 * SEPCVLIW
121 * SSTATE
122
123 And likewise for M-Mode:
124
125 * MMVL
126 * MVL
127 * MSUBVL
128 * MEPCVLIW
129 * MSTATE
130
131 Both Supervisor and M-Mode have their own CSR registers, independent
132 of the other privilege levels, in order to make it easier to use
133 Vectorisation in each level without affecting other privilege levels.
134
135 The access pattern for these groups of CSRs in each mode follows the
136 same pattern for other CSRs that have M-Mode and S-Mode "mirrors":
137
138 * In M-Mode, the S-Mode and U-Mode CSRs are separate and distinct.
139 * In S-Mode, accessing and changing of the M-Mode CSRs is transparently
140 identical
141 to changing the S-Mode CSRs. Accessing and changing the U-Mode
142 CSRs is permitted.
143 * In U-Mode, accessing and changing of the S-Mode and U-Mode CSRs
144 is prohibited.
145
146 In M-Mode, only the M-Mode CSRs are in effect, i.e. it is only the
147 M-Mode MVL, the M-Mode STATE and so on that influences the processor
148 behaviour. Likewise for S-Mode, and likewise for U-Mode.
149
150 This has the interesting benefit of allowing M-Mode (or S-Mode) to be set
151 up, for context-switching to take place, and, on return back to the higher
152 privileged mode, the CSRs of that mode will be exactly as they were.
153 Thus, it becomes possible for example to set up CSRs suited best to aiding
154 and assisting low-latency fast context-switching *once and only once*
155 (for example at boot time), without the need for re-initialising the
156 CSRs needed to do so.
157
158 Another interesting side effect of separate S Mode CSRs is that Vectorised
159 saving of the entire register file to the stack is a single instruction
160 (accidental provision of LOAD-MULTI semantics). It can even be predicated,
161 which opens up some very interesting possibilities.
162
163 The xEPCVLIW CSRs must be treated exactly like their corresponding xepc
164 equivalents. See VLIW section for details.
165
166 ## MAXVECTORLENGTH (MVL) <a name="mvl" />
167
168 MAXVECTORLENGTH is the same concept as MVL in RVV, except that it
169 is variable length and may be dynamically set. MVL is
170 however limited to the regfile bitwidth XLEN (1-32 for RV32,
171 1-64 for RV64 and so on).
172
173 The reason for setting this limit is so that predication registers, when
174 marked as such, may fit into a single register as opposed to fanning out
175 over several registers. This keeps the implementation a little simpler.
176
177 The other important factor to note is that the actual MVL is internally
178 stored **offset by one**, so that it can fit into only 6 bits (for RV64)
179 and still cover a range up to XLEN bits. Attempts to set MVL to zero will
180 return an exception. This is expressed more clearly in the "pseudocode"
181 section, where there are subtle differences between CSRRW and CSRRWI.
182
183 ## Vector Length (VL) <a name="vl" />
184
185 VSETVL is slightly different from RVV. Similar to RVV, VL is set to be within
186 the range 1 <= VL <= MVL (where MVL in turn is limited to 1 <= MVL <= XLEN)
187
188 VL = rd = MIN(vlen, MVL)
189
190 where 1 <= MVL <= XLEN
191
192 However just like MVL it is important to note that the range for VL has
193 subtle design implications, covered in the "CSR pseudocode" section
194
195 The fixed (specific) setting of VL allows vector LOAD/STORE to be used
196 to switch the entire bank of registers using a single instruction (see
197 Appendix, "Context Switch Example"). The reason for limiting VL to XLEN
198 is down to the fact that predication bits fit into a single register of
199 length XLEN bits.
200
201 The second change is that when VSETVL is requested to be stored
202 into x0, it is *ignored* silently (VSETVL x0, x5)
203
204 The third and most important change is that, within the limits set by
205 MVL, the value passed in **must** be set in VL (and in the
206 destination register).
207
208 This has implication for the microarchitecture, as VL is required to be
209 set (limits from MVL notwithstanding) to the actual value
210 requested. RVV has the option to set VL to an arbitrary value that suits
211 the conditions and the micro-architecture: SV does *not* permit this.
212
213 The reason is so that if SV is to be used for a context-switch or as a
214 substitute for LOAD/STORE-Multiple, the operation can be done with only
215 2-3 instructions (setup of the CSRs, VSETVL x0, x0, #{regfilelen-1},
216 single LD/ST operation). If VL does *not* get set to the register file
217 length when VSETVL is called, then a software-loop would be needed.
218 To avoid this need, VL *must* be set to exactly what is requested
219 (limits notwithstanding).
220
221 Therefore, in turn, unlike RVV, implementors *must* provide
222 pseudo-parallelism (using sequential loops in hardware) if actual
223 hardware-parallelism in the ALUs is not deployed. A hybrid is also
224 permitted (as used in Broadcom's VideoCore-IV) however this must be
225 *entirely* transparent to the ISA.
226
227 The fourth change is that VSETVL is implemented as a CSR, where the
228 behaviour of CSRRW (and CSRRWI) must be changed to specifically store
229 the *new* value in the destination register, **not** the old value.
230 Where context-load/save is to be implemented in the usual fashion
231 by using a single CSRRW instruction to obtain the old value, the
232 *secondary* CSR must be used (SVSTATE). This CSR behaves
233 exactly as standard CSRs, and contains more than just VL.
234
235 One interesting side-effect of using CSRRWI to set VL is that this
236 may be done with a single instruction, useful particularly for a
237 context-load/save. There are however limitations: CSRWI's immediate
238 is limited to 0-31 (representing VL=1-32).
239
240 Note that when VL is set to 1, all parallel operations cease: the
241 hardware loop is reduced to a single element: scalar operations.
242
243 ## SUBVL - Sub Vector Length
244
245 This is a "group by quantity" that effectivrly asks each iteration of the hardware loop to load SUBVL elements of width elwidth at a time. Effectively, SUBVL is like a SIMD multiplier: instead of just 1 operation issued, SUBVL operations are issued.
246
247 Another way to view SUBVL is that each element in the VL length vector is now SUBVL times elwidth bits in length.
248
249 The primary use case for SUBVL is for 3D FP Vectors. A Vector of 3D coordinates X,Y,Z for example may be loaded and multiplied the stored, per VL element iteration, rather than having to set VL to three times larger.
250
251 Legal values are 1, 2, 3 and 4, and the STATE CSR must hold the 2 bit values 0b00 thru 0b11.
252
253 Setting this CSR to 0 must raise an exception. Setting it to a value
254 greater than 4 likewise.
255
256 The main effect of SUBVL is that predication bits are applied per **group**,
257 rather than by individual element.
258
259 This saves a not insignificant number of instructions when handling 3D
260 vectors, as otherwise a much longer predicate mask would have to be set
261 up with regularly-repeated bit patterns.
262
263 See SUBVL Pseudocode illustration for details.
264
265 ## STATE
266
267 This is a standard CSR that contains sufficient information for a
268 full context save/restore. It contains (and permits setting of):
269
270 * MVL
271 * VL
272 * SUBVL
273 * the destination element offset of the current parallel instruction
274 being executed
275 * and, for twin-predication, the source element offset as well.
276
277 Interestingly STATE may hypothetically also be used to make the
278 immediately-following instruction to skip a certain number of elements,
279 by playing with destoffs and srcoffs.
280
281 Setting destoffs and srcoffs is realistically intended for saving state
282 so that exceptions (page faults in particular) may be serviced and the
283 hardware-loop that was being executed at the time of the trap, from
284 user-mode (or Supervisor-mode), may be returned to and continued from exactly
285 where it left off. The reason why this works is because setting
286 User-Mode STATE will not change (not be used) in M-Mode or S-Mode
287 (and is entirely why M-Mode and S-Mode have their own STATE CSRs).
288
289 The format of the STATE CSR is as follows:
290
291 | (28..27) | (26..24) | (23..18) | (17..12) | (11..6) | (5...0) |
292 | -------- | -------- | -------- | -------- | ------- | ------- |
293 | rsvd | subvl | destoffs | srcoffs | vl | maxvl |
294
295 When setting this CSR, the following characteristics will be enforced:
296
297 * **MAXVL** will be truncated (after offset) to be within the range 1 to XLEN
298 * **VL** will be truncated (after offset) to be within the range 1 to MAXVL
299 * **SUBVL** which sets a SIMD-like quantity, has only 4 values however
300 if VL is not a multiple of SUBVL an exception will be raised.
301 * **srcoffs** will be truncated to be within the range 0 to VL-1
302 * **destoffs** will be truncated to be within the range 0 to VL-1
303
304 ## MVL and VL Pseudocode
305
306 The pseudo-code for get and set of VL and MVL use the following internal
307 functions as follows:
308
309 set_mvl_csr(value, rd):
310 regs[rd] = MVL
311 MVL = MIN(value, MVL)
312
313 get_mvl_csr(rd):
314 regs[rd] = VL
315
316 set_vl_csr(value, rd):
317 VL = MIN(value, MVL)
318 regs[rd] = VL # yes returning the new value NOT the old CSR
319 return VL
320
321 get_vl_csr(rd):
322 regs[rd] = VL
323 return VL
324
325 Note that where setting MVL behaves as a normal CSR (returns the old
326 value), unlike standard CSR behaviour, setting VL will return the **new**
327 value of VL **not** the old one.
328
329 For CSRRWI, the range of the immediate is restricted to 5 bits. In order to
330 maximise the effectiveness, an immediate of 0 is used to set VL=1,
331 an immediate of 1 is used to set VL=2 and so on:
332
333 CSRRWI_Set_MVL(value):
334 set_mvl_csr(value+1, x0)
335
336 CSRRWI_Set_VL(value):
337 set_vl_csr(value+1, x0)
338
339 However for CSRRW the following pseudocode is used for MVL and VL,
340 where setting the value to zero will cause an exception to be raised.
341 The reason is that if VL or MVL are set to zero, the STATE CSR is
342 not capable of returning that value.
343
344 CSRRW_Set_MVL(rs1, rd):
345 value = regs[rs1]
346 if value == 0 or value > XLEN:
347 raise Exception
348 set_mvl_csr(value, rd)
349
350 CSRRW_Set_VL(rs1, rd):
351 value = regs[rs1]
352 if value == 0 or value > XLEN:
353 raise Exception
354 set_vl_csr(value, rd)
355
356 In this way, when CSRRW is utilised with a loop variable, the value
357 that goes into VL (and into the destination register) may be used
358 in an instruction-minimal fashion:
359
360 CSRvect1 = {type: F, key: a3, val: a3, elwidth: dflt}
361 CSRvect2 = {type: F, key: a7, val: a7, elwidth: dflt}
362 CSRRWI MVL, 3 # sets MVL == **4** (not 3)
363 j zerotest # in case loop counter a0 already 0
364 loop:
365 CSRRW VL, t0, a0 # vl = t0 = min(mvl, a0)
366 ld a3, a1 # load 4 registers a3-6 from x
367 slli t1, t0, 3 # t1 = vl * 8 (in bytes)
368 ld a7, a2 # load 4 registers a7-10 from y
369 add a1, a1, t1 # increment pointer to x by vl*8
370 fmadd a7, a3, fa0, a7 # v1 += v0 * fa0 (y = a * x + y)
371 sub a0, a0, t0 # n -= vl (t0)
372 st a7, a2 # store 4 registers a7-10 to y
373 add a2, a2, t1 # increment pointer to y by vl*8
374 zerotest:
375 bnez a0, loop # repeat if n != 0
376
377 With the STATE CSR, just like with CSRRWI, in order to maximise the
378 utilisation of the limited bitspace, "000000" in binary represents
379 VL==1, "00001" represents VL==2 and so on (likewise for MVL):
380
381 CSRRW_Set_SV_STATE(rs1, rd):
382 value = regs[rs1]
383 get_state_csr(rd)
384 MVL = set_mvl_csr(value[11:6]+1)
385 VL = set_vl_csr(value[5:0]+1)
386 destoffs = value[23:18]>>18
387 srcoffs = value[23:18]>>12
388
389 get_state_csr(rd):
390 regs[rd] = (MVL-1) | (VL-1)<<6 | (srcoffs)<<12 |
391 (destoffs)<<18
392 return regs[rd]
393
394 In both cases, whilst CSR read of VL and MVL return the exact values
395 of VL and MVL respectively, reading and writing the STATE CSR returns
396 those values **minus one**. This is absolutely critical to implement
397 if the STATE CSR is to be used for fast context-switching.
398
399 ## Register key-value (CAM) table <a name="regcsrtable" />
400
401 *NOTE: in prior versions of SV, this table used to be writable and
402 accessible via CSRs. It is now stored in the VLIW instruction format,
403 and entries may be overridden by the SVPrefix format*
404
405 The purpose of the Register table is four-fold:
406
407 * To mark integer and floating-point registers as requiring "redirection"
408 if it is ever used as a source or destination in any given operation.
409 This involves a level of indirection through a 5-to-7-bit lookup table,
410 such that **unmodified** operands with 5 bit (3 for Compressed) may
411 access up to **128** registers.
412 * To indicate whether, after redirection through the lookup table, the
413 register is a vector (or remains a scalar).
414 * To over-ride the implicit or explicit bitwidth that the operation would
415 normally give the register.
416
417 16 bit format:
418
419 | RegCAM | | 15 | (14..8) | 7 | (6..5) | (4..0) |
420 | ------ | | - | - | - | ------ | ------- |
421 | 0 | | isvec0 | regidx0 | i/f | vew0 | regkey |
422 | 1 | | isvec1 | regidx1 | i/f | vew1 | regkey |
423 | .. | | isvec.. | regidx.. | i/f | vew.. | regkey |
424 | 15 | | isvec15 | regidx15 | i/f | vew15 | regkey |
425
426 8 bit format:
427
428 | RegCAM | | 7 | (6..5) | (4..0) |
429 | ------ | | - | ------ | ------- |
430 | 0 | | i/f | vew0 | regnum |
431
432 i/f is set to "1" to indicate that the redirection/tag entry is to be applied
433 to integer registers; 0 indicates that it is relevant to floating-point
434 registers.
435
436 The 8 bit format is used for a much more compact expression. "isvec"
437 is implicit and, similar to [[sv-prefix-proposal]], the target vector
438 is "regnum<<2", implicitly. Contrast this with the 16-bit format where
439 the target vector is *explicitly* named in bits 8 to 14, and bit 15 may
440 optionally set "scalar" mode.
441
442 Note that whilst SVPrefis adds one extra bit to each of rd, rs1 etc.,
443 and thus the "vector" mode need only shift the (6 bit) regnum by 1 to
444 get the actual (7 bit) register number to use, there is not enough space
445 in the 8 bit format so "regnum<<2" is required.
446
447 vew has the following meanings, indicating that the instruction's
448 operand size is "over-ridden" in a polymorphic fashion:
449
450 | vew | bitwidth |
451 | --- | ------------------- |
452 | 00 | default (XLEN/FLEN) |
453 | 01 | 8 bit |
454 | 10 | 16 bit |
455 | 11 | 32 bit |
456
457 As the above table is a CAM (key-value store) it may be appropriate
458 (faster, implementation-wise) to expand it as follows:
459
460 struct vectorised fp_vec[32], int_vec[32];
461
462 for (i = 0; i < 16; i++) // 16 CSRs?
463 tb = int_vec if CSRvec[i].type == 0 else fp_vec
464 idx = CSRvec[i].regkey // INT/FP src/dst reg in opcode
465 tb[idx].elwidth = CSRvec[i].elwidth
466 tb[idx].regidx = CSRvec[i].regidx // indirection
467 tb[idx].isvector = CSRvec[i].isvector // 0=scalar
468 tb[idx].packed = CSRvec[i].packed // SIMD or not
469
470
471
472 ## Predication Table <a name="predication_csr_table"></a>
473
474 *NOTE: in prior versions of SV, this table used to be writable and
475 accessible via CSRs. It is now stored in the VLIW instruction format,
476 and entries may be overridden by the SVPrefix format*
477
478 The Predication Table is a key-value store indicating whether, if a
479 given destination register (integer or floating-point) is referred to
480 in an instruction, it is to be predicated. Like the Register table, it
481 is an indirect lookup that allows the RV opcodes to not need modification.
482
483 It is particularly important to note
484 that the *actual* register used can be *different* from the one that is
485 in the instruction, due to the redirection through the lookup table.
486
487 * regidx is the register that in combination with the
488 i/f flag, if that integer or floating-point register is referred to
489 in a (standard RV) instruction
490 results in the lookup table being referenced to find the predication
491 mask to use for this operation.
492 * predidx is the
493 *actual* (full, 7 bit) register to be used for the predication mask.
494 * inv indicates that the predication mask bits are to be inverted
495 prior to use *without* actually modifying the contents of the
496 registerfrom which those bits originated.
497 * zeroing is either 1 or 0, and if set to 1, the operation must
498 place zeros in any element position where the predication mask is
499 set to zero. If zeroing is set to 0, unpredicated elements *must*
500 be left alone. Some microarchitectures may choose to interpret
501 this as skipping the operation entirely. Others which wish to
502 stick more closely to a SIMD architecture may choose instead to
503 interpret unpredicated elements as an internal "copy element"
504 operation (which would be necessary in SIMD microarchitectures
505 that perform register-renaming)
506
507 16 bit format:
508
509 | PrCSR | (15..11) | 10 | 9 | 8 | (7..1) | 0 |
510 | ----- | - | - | - | - | ------- | ------- |
511 | 0 | predkey | zero0 | inv0 | i/f | regidx | rsrvd |
512 | 1 | predkey | zero1 | inv1 | i/f | regidx | rsvd |
513 | ... | predkey | ..... | .... | i/f | ....... | ....... |
514 | 15 | predkey | zero15 | inv15 | i/f | regidx | rsvd |
515
516
517 8 bit format:
518
519 | PrCSR | 7 | 6 | 5 | (4..0) |
520 | ----- | - | - | - | ------- |
521 | 0 | zero0 | inv0 | i/f | regnum |
522
523 The 8 bit format is a compact and less expressive variant of the full
524 16 bit format. Using the 8 bit formatis very different: the predicate
525 register to use is implicit, and numbering begins inplicitly from x9. The
526 regnum is still used to "activate" predication, in the same fashion as
527 described above.
528
529 The 16 bit Predication CSR Table is a key-value store, so implementation-wise
530 it will be faster to turn the table around (maintain topologically
531 equivalent state):
532
533 struct pred {
534 bool zero;
535 bool inv;
536 bool enabled;
537 int predidx; // redirection: actual int register to use
538 }
539
540 struct pred fp_pred_reg[32]; // 64 in future (bank=1)
541 struct pred int_pred_reg[32]; // 64 in future (bank=1)
542
543 for (i = 0; i < 16; i++)
544 tb = int_pred_reg if CSRpred[i].type == 0 else fp_pred_reg;
545 idx = CSRpred[i].regidx
546 tb[idx].zero = CSRpred[i].zero
547 tb[idx].inv = CSRpred[i].inv
548 tb[idx].predidx = CSRpred[i].predidx
549 tb[idx].enabled = true
550
551 So when an operation is to be predicated, it is the internal state that
552 is used. In Section 6.4.2 of Hwacha's Manual (EECS-2015-262) the following
553 pseudo-code for operations is given, where p is the explicit (direct)
554 reference to the predication register to be used:
555
556 for (int i=0; i<vl; ++i)
557 if ([!]preg[p][i])
558 (d ? vreg[rd][i] : sreg[rd]) =
559 iop(s1 ? vreg[rs1][i] : sreg[rs1],
560 s2 ? vreg[rs2][i] : sreg[rs2]); // for insts with 2 inputs
561
562 This instead becomes an *indirect* reference using the *internal* state
563 table generated from the Predication CSR key-value store, which is used
564 as follows.
565
566 if type(iop) == INT:
567 preg = int_pred_reg[rd]
568 else:
569 preg = fp_pred_reg[rd]
570
571 for (int i=0; i<vl; ++i)
572 predicate, zeroing = get_pred_val(type(iop) == INT, rd):
573 if (predicate && (1<<i))
574 (d ? regfile[rd+i] : regfile[rd]) =
575 iop(s1 ? regfile[rs1+i] : regfile[rs1],
576 s2 ? regfile[rs2+i] : regfile[rs2]); // for insts with 2 inputs
577 else if (zeroing)
578 (d ? regfile[rd+i] : regfile[rd]) = 0
579
580 Note:
581
582 * d, s1 and s2 are booleans indicating whether destination,
583 source1 and source2 are vector or scalar
584 * key-value CSR-redirection of rd, rs1 and rs2 have NOT been included
585 above, for clarity. rd, rs1 and rs2 all also must ALSO go through
586 register-level redirection (from the Register table) if they are
587 vectors.
588
589 If written as a function, obtaining the predication mask (and whether
590 zeroing takes place) may be done as follows:
591
592 def get_pred_val(bool is_fp_op, int reg):
593 tb = int_reg if is_fp_op else fp_reg
594 if (!tb[reg].enabled):
595 return ~0x0, False // all enabled; no zeroing
596 tb = int_pred if is_fp_op else fp_pred
597 if (!tb[reg].enabled):
598 return ~0x0, False // all enabled; no zeroing
599 predidx = tb[reg].predidx // redirection occurs HERE
600 predicate = intreg[predidx] // actual predicate HERE
601 if (tb[reg].inv):
602 predicate = ~predicate // invert ALL bits
603 return predicate, tb[reg].zero
604
605 Note here, critically, that **only** if the register is marked
606 in its **register** table entry as being "active" does the testing
607 proceed further to check if the **predicate** table entry is
608 also active.
609
610 Note also that this is in direct contrast to branch operations
611 for the storage of comparisions: in these specific circumstances
612 the requirement for there to be an active *register* entry
613 is removed.
614
615 ## REMAP CSR <a name="remap" />
616
617 (Note: both the REMAP and SHAPE sections are best read after the
618 rest of the document has been read)
619
620 There is one 32-bit CSR which may be used to indicate which registers,
621 if used in any operation, must be "reshaped" (re-mapped) from a linear
622 form to a 2D or 3D transposed form, or "offset" to permit arbitrary
623 access to elements within a register.
624
625 The 32-bit REMAP CSR may reshape up to 3 registers:
626
627 | 29..28 | 27..26 | 25..24 | 23 | 22..16 | 15 | 14..8 | 7 | 6..0 |
628 | ------ | ------ | ------ | -- | ------- | -- | ------- | -- | ------- |
629 | shape2 | shape1 | shape0 | 0 | regidx2 | 0 | regidx1 | 0 | regidx0 |
630
631 regidx0-2 refer not to the Register CSR CAM entry but to the underlying
632 *real* register (see regidx, the value) and consequently is 7-bits wide.
633 When set to zero (referring to x0), clearly reshaping x0 is pointless,
634 so is used to indicate "disabled".
635 shape0-2 refers to one of three SHAPE CSRs. A value of 0x3 is reserved.
636 Bits 7, 15, 23, 30 and 31 are also reserved, and must be set to zero.
637
638 It is anticipated that these specialist CSRs not be very often used.
639 Unlike the CSR Register and Predication tables, the REMAP CSRs use
640 the full 7-bit regidx so that they can be set once and left alone,
641 whilst the CSR Register entries pointing to them are disabled, instead.
642
643 ## SHAPE 1D/2D/3D vector-matrix remapping CSRs
644
645 (Note: both the REMAP and SHAPE sections are best read after the
646 rest of the document has been read)
647
648 There are three "shape" CSRs, SHAPE0, SHAPE1, SHAPE2, 32-bits in each,
649 which have the same format. When each SHAPE CSR is set entirely to zeros,
650 remapping is disabled: the register's elements are a linear (1D) vector.
651
652 | 26..24 | 23 | 22..16 | 15 | 14..8 | 7 | 6..0 |
653 | ------- | -- | ------- | -- | ------- | -- | ------- |
654 | permute | offs[2] | zdimsz | offs[1] | ydimsz | offs[0] | xdimsz |
655
656 offs is a 3-bit field, spread out across bits 7, 15 and 23, which
657 is added to the element index during the loop calculation.
658
659 xdimsz, ydimsz and zdimsz are offset by 1, such that a value of 0 indicates
660 that the array dimensionality for that dimension is 1. A value of xdimsz=2
661 would indicate that in the first dimension there are 3 elements in the
662 array. The format of the array is therefore as follows:
663
664 array[xdim+1][ydim+1][zdim+1]
665
666 However whilst illustrative of the dimensionality, that does not take the
667 "permute" setting into account. "permute" may be any one of six values
668 (0-5, with values of 6 and 7 being reserved, and not legal). The table
669 below shows how the permutation dimensionality order works:
670
671 | permute | order | array format |
672 | ------- | ----- | ------------------------ |
673 | 000 | 0,1,2 | (xdim+1)(ydim+1)(zdim+1) |
674 | 001 | 0,2,1 | (xdim+1)(zdim+1)(ydim+1) |
675 | 010 | 1,0,2 | (ydim+1)(xdim+1)(zdim+1) |
676 | 011 | 1,2,0 | (ydim+1)(zdim+1)(xdim+1) |
677 | 100 | 2,0,1 | (zdim+1)(xdim+1)(ydim+1) |
678 | 101 | 2,1,0 | (zdim+1)(ydim+1)(xdim+1) |
679
680 In other words, the "permute" option changes the order in which
681 nested for-loops over the array would be done. The algorithm below
682 shows this more clearly, and may be executed as a python program:
683
684 # mapidx = REMAP.shape2
685 xdim = 3 # SHAPE[mapidx].xdim_sz+1
686 ydim = 4 # SHAPE[mapidx].ydim_sz+1
687 zdim = 5 # SHAPE[mapidx].zdim_sz+1
688
689 lims = [xdim, ydim, zdim]
690 idxs = [0,0,0] # starting indices
691 order = [1,0,2] # experiment with different permutations, here
692 offs = 0 # experiment with different offsets, here
693
694 for idx in range(xdim * ydim * zdim):
695 new_idx = offs + idxs[0] + idxs[1] * xdim + idxs[2] * xdim * ydim
696 print new_idx,
697 for i in range(3):
698 idxs[order[i]] = idxs[order[i]] + 1
699 if (idxs[order[i]] != lims[order[i]]):
700 break
701 print
702 idxs[order[i]] = 0
703
704 Here, it is assumed that this algorithm be run within all pseudo-code
705 throughout this document where a (parallelism) for-loop would normally
706 run from 0 to VL-1 to refer to contiguous register
707 elements; instead, where REMAP indicates to do so, the element index
708 is run through the above algorithm to work out the **actual** element
709 index, instead. Given that there are three possible SHAPE entries, up to
710 three separate registers in any given operation may be simultaneously
711 remapped:
712
713 function op_add(rd, rs1, rs2) # add not VADD!
714 ...
715 ...
716  for (i = 0; i < VL; i++)
717 if (predval & 1<<i) # predication uses intregs
718    ireg[rd+remap(id)] <= ireg[rs1+remap(irs1)] +
719 ireg[rs2+remap(irs2)];
720 if (!int_vec[rd ].isvector) break;
721 if (int_vec[rd ].isvector)  { id += 1; }
722 if (int_vec[rs1].isvector)  { irs1 += 1; }
723 if (int_vec[rs2].isvector)  { irs2 += 1; }
724
725 By changing remappings, 2D matrices may be transposed "in-place" for one
726 operation, followed by setting a different permutation order without
727 having to move the values in the registers to or from memory. Also,
728 the reason for having REMAP separate from the three SHAPE CSRs is so
729 that in a chain of matrix multiplications and additions, for example,
730 the SHAPE CSRs need only be set up once; only the REMAP CSR need be
731 changed to target different registers.
732
733 Note that:
734
735 * Over-running the register file clearly has to be detected and
736 an illegal instruction exception thrown
737 * When non-default elwidths are set, the exact same algorithm still
738 applies (i.e. it offsets elements *within* registers rather than
739 entire registers).
740 * If permute option 000 is utilised, the actual order of the
741 reindexing does not change!
742 * If two or more dimensions are set to zero, the actual order does not change!
743 * The above algorithm is pseudo-code **only**. Actual implementations
744 will need to take into account the fact that the element for-looping
745 must be **re-entrant**, due to the possibility of exceptions occurring.
746 See MSTATE CSR, which records the current element index.
747 * Twin-predicated operations require **two** separate and distinct
748 element offsets. The above pseudo-code algorithm will be applied
749 separately and independently to each, should each of the two
750 operands be remapped. *This even includes C.LDSP* and other operations
751 in that category, where in that case it will be the **offset** that is
752 remapped (see Compressed Stack LOAD/STORE section).
753 * Offset is especially useful, on its own, for accessing elements
754 within the middle of a register. Without offsets, it is necessary
755 to either use a predicated MV, skipping the first elements, or
756 performing a LOAD/STORE cycle to memory.
757 With offsets, the data does not have to be moved.
758 * Setting the total elements (xdim+1) times (ydim+1) times (zdim+1) to
759 less than MVL is **perfectly legal**, albeit very obscure. It permits
760 entries to be regularly presented to operands **more than once**, thus
761 allowing the same underlying registers to act as an accumulator of
762 multiple vector or matrix operations, for example.
763
764 Clearly here some considerable care needs to be taken as the remapping
765 could hypothetically create arithmetic operations that target the
766 exact same underlying registers, resulting in data corruption due to
767 pipeline overlaps. Out-of-order / Superscalar micro-architectures with
768 register-renaming will have an easier time dealing with this than
769 DSP-style SIMD micro-architectures.
770
771 # Instruction Execution Order
772
773 Simple-V behaves as if it is a hardware-level "macro expansion system",
774 substituting and expanding a single instruction into multiple sequential
775 instructions with contiguous and sequentially-incrementing registers.
776 As such, it does **not** modify - or specify - the behaviour and semantics of
777 the execution order: that may be deduced from the **existing** RV
778 specification in each and every case.
779
780 So for example if a particular micro-architecture permits out-of-order
781 execution, and it is augmented with Simple-V, then wherever instructions
782 may be out-of-order then so may the "post-expansion" SV ones.
783
784 If on the other hand there are memory guarantees which specifically
785 prevent and prohibit certain instructions from being re-ordered
786 (such as the Atomicity Axiom, or FENCE constraints), then clearly
787 those constraints **MUST** also be obeyed "post-expansion".
788
789 It should be absolutely clear that SV is **not** about providing new
790 functionality or changing the existing behaviour of a micro-architetural
791 design, or about changing the RISC-V Specification.
792 It is **purely** about compacting what would otherwise be contiguous
793 instructions that use sequentially-increasing register numbers down
794 to the **one** instruction.
795
796 # Instructions <a name="instructions" />
797
798 Despite being a 98% complete and accurate topological remap of RVV
799 concepts and functionality, no new instructions are needed.
800 Compared to RVV: *All* RVV instructions can be re-mapped, however xBitManip
801 becomes a critical dependency for efficient manipulation of predication
802 masks (as a bit-field). Despite the removal of all operations,
803 with the exception of CLIP and VSELECT.X
804 *all instructions from RVV Base are topologically re-mapped and retain their
805 complete functionality, intact*. Note that if RV64G ever had
806 a MV.X added as well as FCLIP, the full functionality of RVV-Base would
807 be obtained in SV.
808
809 Three instructions, VSELECT, VCLIP and VCLIPI, do not have RV Standard
810 equivalents, so are left out of Simple-V. VSELECT could be included if
811 there existed a MV.X instruction in RV (MV.X is a hypothetical
812 non-immediate variant of MV that would allow another register to
813 specify which register was to be copied). Note that if any of these three
814 instructions are added to any given RV extension, their functionality
815 will be inherently parallelised.
816
817 With some exceptions, where it does not make sense or is simply too
818 challenging, all RV-Base instructions are parallelised:
819
820 * CSR instructions, whilst a case could be made for fast-polling of
821 a CSR into multiple registers, or for being able to copy multiple
822 contiguously addressed CSRs into contiguous registers, and so on,
823 are the fundamental core basis of SV. If parallelised, extreme
824 care would need to be taken. Additionally, CSR reads are done
825 using x0, and it is *really* inadviseable to tag x0.
826 * LUI, C.J, C.JR, WFI, AUIPC are not suitable for parallelising so are
827 left as scalar.
828 * LR/SC could hypothetically be parallelised however their purpose is
829 single (complex) atomic memory operations where the LR must be followed
830 up by a matching SC. A sequence of parallel LR instructions followed
831 by a sequence of parallel SC instructions therefore is guaranteed to
832 not be useful. Not least: the guarantees of a Multi-LR/SC
833 would be impossible to provide if emulated in a trap.
834 * EBREAK, NOP, FENCE and others do not use registers so are not inherently
835 paralleliseable anyway.
836
837 All other operations using registers are automatically parallelised.
838 This includes AMOMAX, AMOSWAP and so on, where particular care and
839 attention must be paid.
840
841 Example pseudo-code for an integer ADD operation (including scalar operations).
842 Floating-point uses fp csrs.
843
844 function op_add(rd, rs1, rs2) # add not VADD!
845  int i, id=0, irs1=0, irs2=0;
846  predval = get_pred_val(FALSE, rd);
847  rd = int_vec[rd ].isvector ? int_vec[rd ].regidx : rd;
848  rs1 = int_vec[rs1].isvector ? int_vec[rs1].regidx : rs1;
849  rs2 = int_vec[rs2].isvector ? int_vec[rs2].regidx : rs2;
850  for (i = 0; i < VL; i++)
851 if (predval & 1<<i) # predication uses intregs
852    ireg[rd+id] <= ireg[rs1+irs1] + ireg[rs2+irs2];
853 if (!int_vec[rd ].isvector) break;
854 if (int_vec[rd ].isvector)  { id += 1; }
855 if (int_vec[rs1].isvector)  { irs1 += 1; }
856 if (int_vec[rs2].isvector)  { irs2 += 1; }
857
858 Note that for simplicity there is quite a lot missing from the above
859 pseudo-code: element widths, zeroing on predication, dimensional
860 reshaping and offsets and so on. However it demonstrates the basic
861 principle. Augmentations that produce the full pseudo-code are covered in
862 other sections.
863
864 ## Instruction Format
865
866 It is critical to appreciate that there are
867 **no operations added to SV, at all**.
868
869 Instead, by using CSRs to tag registers as an indication of "changed
870 behaviour", SV *overloads* pre-existing branch operations into predicated
871 variants, and implicitly overloads arithmetic operations, MV, FCVT, and
872 LOAD/STORE depending on CSR configurations for bitwidth and predication.
873 **Everything** becomes parallelised. *This includes Compressed
874 instructions* as well as any future instructions and Custom Extensions.
875
876 Note: CSR tags to change behaviour of instructions is nothing new, including
877 in RISC-V. UXL, SXL and MXL change the behaviour so that XLEN=32/64/128.
878 FRM changes the behaviour of the floating-point unit, to alter the rounding
879 mode. Other architectures change the LOAD/STORE byte-order from big-endian
880 to little-endian on a per-instruction basis. SV is just a little more...
881 comprehensive in its effect on instructions.
882
883 ## Branch Instructions
884
885 ### Standard Branch <a name="standard_branch"></a>
886
887 Branch operations use standard RV opcodes that are reinterpreted to
888 be "predicate variants" in the instance where either of the two src
889 registers are marked as vectors (active=1, vector=1).
890
891 Note that the predication register to use (if one is enabled) is taken from
892 the *first* src register, and that this is used, just as with predicated
893 arithmetic operations, to mask whether the comparison operations take
894 place or not. The target (destination) predication register
895 to use (if one is enabled) is taken from the *second* src register.
896
897 If either of src1 or src2 are scalars (whether by there being no
898 CSR register entry or whether by the CSR entry specifically marking
899 the register as "scalar") the comparison goes ahead as vector-scalar
900 or scalar-vector.
901
902 In instances where no vectorisation is detected on either src registers
903 the operation is treated as an absolutely standard scalar branch operation.
904 Where vectorisation is present on either or both src registers, the
905 branch may stil go ahead if any only if *all* tests succeed (i.e. excluding
906 those tests that are predicated out).
907
908 Note that when zero-predication is enabled (from source rs1),
909 a cleared bit in the predicate indicates that the result
910 of the compare is set to "false", i.e. that the corresponding
911 destination bit (or result)) be set to zero. Contrast this with
912 when zeroing is not set: bits in the destination predicate are
913 only *set*; they are **not** cleared. This is important to appreciate,
914 as there may be an expectation that, going into the hardware-loop,
915 the destination predicate is always expected to be set to zero:
916 this is **not** the case. The destination predicate is only set
917 to zero if **zeroing** is enabled.
918
919 Note that just as with the standard (scalar, non-predicated) branch
920 operations, BLE, BGT, BLEU and BTGU may be synthesised by inverting
921 src1 and src2.
922
923 In Hwacha EECS-2015-262 Section 6.7.2 the following pseudocode is given
924 for predicated compare operations of function "cmp":
925
926 for (int i=0; i<vl; ++i)
927 if ([!]preg[p][i])
928 preg[pd][i] = cmp(s1 ? vreg[rs1][i] : sreg[rs1],
929 s2 ? vreg[rs2][i] : sreg[rs2]);
930
931 With associated predication, vector-length adjustments and so on,
932 and temporarily ignoring bitwidth (which makes the comparisons more
933 complex), this becomes:
934
935 s1 = reg_is_vectorised(src1);
936 s2 = reg_is_vectorised(src2);
937
938 if not s1 && not s2
939 if cmp(rs1, rs2) # scalar compare
940 goto branch
941 return
942
943 preg = int_pred_reg[rd]
944 reg = int_regfile
945
946 ps = get_pred_val(I/F==INT, rs1);
947 rd = get_pred_val(I/F==INT, rs2); # this may not exist
948
949 if not exists(rd) or zeroing:
950 result = 0
951 else
952 result = preg[rd]
953
954 for (int i = 0; i < VL; ++i)
955 if (zeroing)
956 if not (ps & (1<<i))
957 result &= ~(1<<i);
958 else if (ps & (1<<i))
959 if (cmp(s1 ? reg[src1+i]:reg[src1],
960 s2 ? reg[src2+i]:reg[src2])
961 result |= 1<<i;
962 else
963 result &= ~(1<<i);
964
965 if not exists(rd)
966 if result == ps
967 goto branch
968 else
969 preg[rd] = result # store in destination
970 if preg[rd] == ps
971 goto branch
972
973 Notes:
974
975 * Predicated SIMD comparisons would break src1 and src2 further down
976 into bitwidth-sized chunks (see Appendix "Bitwidth Virtual Register
977 Reordering") setting Vector-Length times (number of SIMD elements) bits
978 in Predicate Register rd, as opposed to just Vector-Length bits.
979 * The execution of "parallelised" instructions **must** be implemented
980 as "re-entrant" (to use a term from software). If an exception (trap)
981 occurs during the middle of a vectorised
982 Branch (now a SV predicated compare) operation, the partial results
983 of any comparisons must be written out to the destination
984 register before the trap is permitted to begin. If however there
985 is no predicate, the **entire** set of comparisons must be **restarted**,
986 with the offset loop indices set back to zero. This is because
987 there is no place to store the temporary result during the handling
988 of traps.
989
990 TODO: predication now taken from src2. also branch goes ahead
991 if all compares are successful.
992
993 Note also that where normally, predication requires that there must
994 also be a CSR register entry for the register being used in order
995 for the **predication** CSR register entry to also be active,
996 for branches this is **not** the case. src2 does **not** have
997 to have its CSR register entry marked as active in order for
998 predication on src2 to be active.
999
1000 Also note: SV Branch operations are **not** twin-predicated
1001 (see Twin Predication section). This would require three
1002 element offsets: one to track src1, one to track src2 and a third
1003 to track where to store the accumulation of the results. Given
1004 that the element offsets need to be exposed via CSRs so that
1005 the parallel hardware looping may be made re-entrant on traps
1006 and exceptions, the decision was made not to make SV Branches
1007 twin-predicated.
1008
1009 ### Floating-point Comparisons
1010
1011 There does not exist floating-point branch operations, only compare.
1012 Interestingly no change is needed to the instruction format because
1013 FP Compare already stores a 1 or a zero in its "rd" integer register
1014 target, i.e. it's not actually a Branch at all: it's a compare.
1015
1016 In RV (scalar) Base, a branch on a floating-point compare is
1017 done via the sequence "FEQ x1, f0, f5; BEQ x1, x0, #jumploc".
1018 This does extend to SV, as long as x1 (in the example sequence given)
1019 is vectorised. When that is the case, x1..x(1+VL-1) will also be
1020 set to 0 or 1 depending on whether f0==f5, f1==f6, f2==f7 and so on.
1021 The BEQ that follows will *also* compare x1==x0, x2==x0, x3==x0 and
1022 so on. Consequently, unlike integer-branch, FP Compare needs no
1023 modification in its behaviour.
1024
1025 In addition, it is noted that an entry "FNE" (the opposite of FEQ) is missing,
1026 and whilst in ordinary branch code this is fine because the standard
1027 RVF compare can always be followed up with an integer BEQ or a BNE (or
1028 a compressed comparison to zero or non-zero), in predication terms that
1029 becomes more of an impact. To deal with this, SV's predication has
1030 had "invert" added to it.
1031
1032 Also: note that FP Compare may be predicated, using the destination
1033 integer register (rd) to determine the predicate. FP Compare is **not**
1034 a twin-predication operation, as, again, just as with SV Branches,
1035 there are three registers involved: FP src1, FP src2 and INT rd.
1036
1037 ### Compressed Branch Instruction
1038
1039 Compressed Branch instructions are, just like standard Branch instructions,
1040 reinterpreted to be vectorised and predicated based on the source register
1041 (rs1s) CSR entries. As however there is only the one source register,
1042 given that c.beqz a10 is equivalent to beqz a10,x0, the optional target
1043 to store the results of the comparisions is taken from CSR predication
1044 table entries for **x0**.
1045
1046 The specific required use of x0 is, with a little thought, quite obvious,
1047 but is counterintuitive. Clearly it is **not** recommended to redirect
1048 x0 with a CSR register entry, however as a means to opaquely obtain
1049 a predication target it is the only sensible option that does not involve
1050 additional special CSRs (or, worse, additional special opcodes).
1051
1052 Note also that, just as with standard branches, the 2nd source
1053 (in this case x0 rather than src2) does **not** have to have its CSR
1054 register table marked as "active" in order for predication to work.
1055
1056 ## Vectorised Dual-operand instructions
1057
1058 There is a series of 2-operand instructions involving copying (and
1059 sometimes alteration):
1060
1061 * C.MV
1062 * FMV, FNEG, FABS, FCVT, FSGNJ, FSGNJN and FSGNJX
1063 * C.LWSP, C.SWSP, C.LDSP, C.FLWSP etc.
1064 * LOAD(-FP) and STORE(-FP)
1065
1066 All of these operations follow the same two-operand pattern, so it is
1067 *both* the source *and* destination predication masks that are taken into
1068 account. This is different from
1069 the three-operand arithmetic instructions, where the predication mask
1070 is taken from the *destination* register, and applied uniformly to the
1071 elements of the source register(s), element-for-element.
1072
1073 The pseudo-code pattern for twin-predicated operations is as
1074 follows:
1075
1076 function op(rd, rs):
1077  rd = int_csr[rd].active ? int_csr[rd].regidx : rd;
1078  rs = int_csr[rs].active ? int_csr[rs].regidx : rs;
1079  ps = get_pred_val(FALSE, rs); # predication on src
1080  pd = get_pred_val(FALSE, rd); # ... AND on dest
1081  for (int i = 0, int j = 0; i < VL && j < VL;):
1082 if (int_csr[rs].isvec) while (!(ps & 1<<i)) i++;
1083 if (int_csr[rd].isvec) while (!(pd & 1<<j)) j++;
1084 reg[rd+j] = SCALAR_OPERATION_ON(reg[rs+i])
1085 if (int_csr[rs].isvec) i++;
1086 if (int_csr[rd].isvec) j++; else break
1087
1088 This pattern covers scalar-scalar, scalar-vector, vector-scalar
1089 and vector-vector, and predicated variants of all of those.
1090 Zeroing is not presently included (TODO). As such, when compared
1091 to RVV, the twin-predicated variants of C.MV and FMV cover
1092 **all** standard vector operations: VINSERT, VSPLAT, VREDUCE,
1093 VEXTRACT, VSCATTER, VGATHER, VCOPY, and more.
1094
1095 Note that:
1096
1097 * elwidth (SIMD) is not covered in the pseudo-code above
1098 * ending the loop early in scalar cases (VINSERT, VEXTRACT) is also
1099 not covered
1100 * zero predication is also not shown (TODO).
1101
1102 ### C.MV Instruction <a name="c_mv"></a>
1103
1104 There is no MV instruction in RV however there is a C.MV instruction.
1105 It is used for copying integer-to-integer registers (vectorised FMV
1106 is used for copying floating-point).
1107
1108 If either the source or the destination register are marked as vectors
1109 C.MV is reinterpreted to be a vectorised (multi-register) predicated
1110 move operation. The actual instruction's format does not change:
1111
1112 [[!table data="""
1113 15 12 | 11 7 | 6 2 | 1 0 |
1114 funct4 | rd | rs | op |
1115 4 | 5 | 5 | 2 |
1116 C.MV | dest | src | C0 |
1117 """]]
1118
1119 A simplified version of the pseudocode for this operation is as follows:
1120
1121 function op_mv(rd, rs) # MV not VMV!
1122  rd = int_csr[rd].active ? int_csr[rd].regidx : rd;
1123  rs = int_csr[rs].active ? int_csr[rs].regidx : rs;
1124  ps = get_pred_val(FALSE, rs); # predication on src
1125  pd = get_pred_val(FALSE, rd); # ... AND on dest
1126  for (int i = 0, int j = 0; i < VL && j < VL;):
1127 if (int_csr[rs].isvec) while (!(ps & 1<<i)) i++;
1128 if (int_csr[rd].isvec) while (!(pd & 1<<j)) j++;
1129 ireg[rd+j] <= ireg[rs+i];
1130 if (int_csr[rs].isvec) i++;
1131 if (int_csr[rd].isvec) j++; else break
1132
1133 There are several different instructions from RVV that are covered by
1134 this one opcode:
1135
1136 [[!table data="""
1137 src | dest | predication | op |
1138 scalar | vector | none | VSPLAT |
1139 scalar | vector | destination | sparse VSPLAT |
1140 scalar | vector | 1-bit dest | VINSERT |
1141 vector | scalar | 1-bit? src | VEXTRACT |
1142 vector | vector | none | VCOPY |
1143 vector | vector | src | Vector Gather |
1144 vector | vector | dest | Vector Scatter |
1145 vector | vector | src & dest | Gather/Scatter |
1146 vector | vector | src == dest | sparse VCOPY |
1147 """]]
1148
1149 Also, VMERGE may be implemented as back-to-back (macro-op fused) C.MV
1150 operations with inversion on the src and dest predication for one of the
1151 two C.MV operations.
1152
1153 Note that in the instance where the Compressed Extension is not implemented,
1154 MV may be used, but that is a pseudo-operation mapping to addi rd, x0, rs.
1155 Note that the behaviour is **different** from C.MV because with addi the
1156 predication mask to use is taken **only** from rd and is applied against
1157 all elements: rs[i] = rd[i].
1158
1159 ### FMV, FNEG and FABS Instructions
1160
1161 These are identical in form to C.MV, except covering floating-point
1162 register copying. The same double-predication rules also apply.
1163 However when elwidth is not set to default the instruction is implicitly
1164 and automatic converted to a (vectorised) floating-point type conversion
1165 operation of the appropriate size covering the source and destination
1166 register bitwidths.
1167
1168 (Note that FMV, FNEG and FABS are all actually pseudo-instructions)
1169
1170 ### FVCT Instructions
1171
1172 These are again identical in form to C.MV, except that they cover
1173 floating-point to integer and integer to floating-point. When element
1174 width in each vector is set to default, the instructions behave exactly
1175 as they are defined for standard RV (scalar) operations, except vectorised
1176 in exactly the same fashion as outlined in C.MV.
1177
1178 However when the source or destination element width is not set to default,
1179 the opcode's explicit element widths are *over-ridden* to new definitions,
1180 and the opcode's element width is taken as indicative of the SIMD width
1181 (if applicable i.e. if packed SIMD is requested) instead.
1182
1183 For example FCVT.S.L would normally be used to convert a 64-bit
1184 integer in register rs1 to a 64-bit floating-point number in rd.
1185 If however the source rs1 is set to be a vector, where elwidth is set to
1186 default/2 and "packed SIMD" is enabled, then the first 32 bits of
1187 rs1 are converted to a floating-point number to be stored in rd's
1188 first element and the higher 32-bits *also* converted to floating-point
1189 and stored in the second. The 32 bit size comes from the fact that
1190 FCVT.S.L's integer width is 64 bit, and with elwidth on rs1 set to
1191 divide that by two it means that rs1 element width is to be taken as 32.
1192
1193 Similar rules apply to the destination register.
1194
1195 ## LOAD / STORE Instructions and LOAD-FP/STORE-FP <a name="load_store"></a>
1196
1197 An earlier draft of SV modified the behaviour of LOAD/STORE (modified
1198 the interpretation of the instruction fields). This
1199 actually undermined the fundamental principle of SV, namely that there
1200 be no modifications to the scalar behaviour (except where absolutely
1201 necessary), in order to simplify an implementor's task if considering
1202 converting a pre-existing scalar design to support parallelism.
1203
1204 So the original RISC-V scalar LOAD/STORE and LOAD-FP/STORE-FP functionality
1205 do not change in SV, however just as with C.MV it is important to note
1206 that dual-predication is possible.
1207
1208 In vectorised architectures there are usually at least two different modes
1209 for LOAD/STORE:
1210
1211 * Read (or write for STORE) from sequential locations, where one
1212 register specifies the address, and the one address is incremented
1213 by a fixed amount. This is usually known as "Unit Stride" mode.
1214 * Read (or write) from multiple indirected addresses, where the
1215 vector elements each specify separate and distinct addresses.
1216
1217 To support these different addressing modes, the CSR Register "isvector"
1218 bit is used. So, for a LOAD, when the src register is set to
1219 scalar, the LOADs are sequentially incremented by the src register
1220 element width, and when the src register is set to "vector", the
1221 elements are treated as indirection addresses. Simplified
1222 pseudo-code would look like this:
1223
1224 function op_ld(rd, rs) # LD not VLD!
1225  rdv = int_csr[rd].active ? int_csr[rd].regidx : rd;
1226  rsv = int_csr[rs].active ? int_csr[rs].regidx : rs;
1227  ps = get_pred_val(FALSE, rs); # predication on src
1228  pd = get_pred_val(FALSE, rd); # ... AND on dest
1229  for (int i = 0, int j = 0; i < VL && j < VL;):
1230 if (int_csr[rs].isvec) while (!(ps & 1<<i)) i++;
1231 if (int_csr[rd].isvec) while (!(pd & 1<<j)) j++;
1232 if (int_csr[rd].isvec)
1233 # indirect mode (multi mode)
1234 srcbase = ireg[rsv+i];
1235 else
1236 # unit stride mode
1237 srcbase = ireg[rsv] + i * XLEN/8; # offset in bytes
1238 ireg[rdv+j] <= mem[srcbase + imm_offs];
1239 if (!int_csr[rs].isvec &&
1240 !int_csr[rd].isvec) break # scalar-scalar LD
1241 if (int_csr[rs].isvec) i++;
1242 if (int_csr[rd].isvec) j++;
1243
1244 Notes:
1245
1246 * For simplicity, zeroing and elwidth is not included in the above:
1247 the key focus here is the decision-making for srcbase; vectorised
1248 rs means use sequentially-numbered registers as the indirection
1249 address, and scalar rs is "offset" mode.
1250 * The test towards the end for whether both source and destination are
1251 scalar is what makes the above pseudo-code provide the "standard" RV
1252 Base behaviour for LD operations.
1253 * The offset in bytes (XLEN/8) changes depending on whether the
1254 operation is a LB (1 byte), LH (2 byes), LW (4 bytes) or LD
1255 (8 bytes), and also whether the element width is over-ridden
1256 (see special element width section).
1257
1258 ## Compressed Stack LOAD / STORE Instructions <a name="c_ld_st"></a>
1259
1260 C.LWSP / C.SWSP and floating-point etc. are also source-dest twin-predicated,
1261 where it is implicit in C.LWSP/FLWSP etc. that x2 is the source register.
1262 It is therefore possible to use predicated C.LWSP to efficiently
1263 pop registers off the stack (by predicating x2 as the source), cherry-picking
1264 which registers to store to (by predicating the destination). Likewise
1265 for C.SWSP. In this way, LOAD/STORE-Multiple is efficiently achieved.
1266
1267 The two modes ("unit stride" and multi-indirection) are still supported,
1268 as with standard LD/ST. Essentially, the only difference is that the
1269 use of x2 is hard-coded into the instruction.
1270
1271 **Note**: it is still possible to redirect x2 to an alternative target
1272 register. With care, this allows C.LWSP / C.SWSP (and C.FLWSP) to be used as
1273 general-purpose LOAD/STORE operations.
1274
1275 ## Compressed LOAD / STORE Instructions
1276
1277 Compressed LOAD and STORE are again exactly the same as scalar LOAD/STORE,
1278 where the same rules apply and the same pseudo-code apply as for
1279 non-compressed LOAD/STORE. Again: setting scalar or vector mode
1280 on the src for LOAD and dest for STORE switches mode from "Unit Stride"
1281 to "Multi-indirection", respectively.
1282
1283 # Element bitwidth polymorphism <a name="elwidth"></a>
1284
1285 Element bitwidth is best covered as its own special section, as it
1286 is quite involved and applies uniformly across-the-board. SV restricts
1287 bitwidth polymorphism to default, 8-bit, 16-bit and 32-bit.
1288
1289 The effect of setting an element bitwidth is to re-cast each entry
1290 in the register table, and for all memory operations involving
1291 load/stores of certain specific sizes, to a completely different width.
1292 Thus In c-style terms, on an RV64 architecture, effectively each register
1293 now looks like this:
1294
1295 typedef union {
1296 uint8_t b[8];
1297 uint16_t s[4];
1298 uint32_t i[2];
1299 uint64_t l[1];
1300 } reg_t;
1301
1302 // integer table: assume maximum SV 7-bit regfile size
1303 reg_t int_regfile[128];
1304
1305 where the CSR Register table entry (not the instruction alone) determines
1306 which of those union entries is to be used on each operation, and the
1307 VL element offset in the hardware-loop specifies the index into each array.
1308
1309 However a naive interpretation of the data structure above masks the
1310 fact that setting VL greater than 8, for example, when the bitwidth is 8,
1311 accessing one specific register "spills over" to the following parts of
1312 the register file in a sequential fashion. So a much more accurate way
1313 to reflect this would be:
1314
1315 typedef union {
1316 uint8_t actual_bytes[8]; // 8 for RV64, 4 for RV32, 16 for RV128
1317 uint8_t b[0]; // array of type uint8_t
1318 uint16_t s[0];
1319 uint32_t i[0];
1320 uint64_t l[0];
1321 uint128_t d[0];
1322 } reg_t;
1323
1324 reg_t int_regfile[128];
1325
1326 where when accessing any individual regfile[n].b entry it is permitted
1327 (in c) to arbitrarily over-run the *declared* length of the array (zero),
1328 and thus "overspill" to consecutive register file entries in a fashion
1329 that is completely transparent to a greatly-simplified software / pseudo-code
1330 representation.
1331 It is however critical to note that it is clearly the responsibility of
1332 the implementor to ensure that, towards the end of the register file,
1333 an exception is thrown if attempts to access beyond the "real" register
1334 bytes is ever attempted.
1335
1336 Now we may modify pseudo-code an operation where all element bitwidths have
1337 been set to the same size, where this pseudo-code is otherwise identical
1338 to its "non" polymorphic versions (above):
1339
1340 function op_add(rd, rs1, rs2) # add not VADD!
1341 ...
1342 ...
1343  for (i = 0; i < VL; i++)
1344 ...
1345 ...
1346 // TODO, calculate if over-run occurs, for each elwidth
1347 if (elwidth == 8) {
1348    int_regfile[rd].b[id] <= int_regfile[rs1].i[irs1] +
1349     int_regfile[rs2].i[irs2];
1350 } else if elwidth == 16 {
1351    int_regfile[rd].s[id] <= int_regfile[rs1].s[irs1] +
1352     int_regfile[rs2].s[irs2];
1353 } else if elwidth == 32 {
1354    int_regfile[rd].i[id] <= int_regfile[rs1].i[irs1] +
1355     int_regfile[rs2].i[irs2];
1356 } else { // elwidth == 64
1357    int_regfile[rd].l[id] <= int_regfile[rs1].l[irs1] +
1358     int_regfile[rs2].l[irs2];
1359 }
1360 ...
1361 ...
1362
1363 So here we can see clearly: for 8-bit entries rd, rs1 and rs2 (and registers
1364 following sequentially on respectively from the same) are "type-cast"
1365 to 8-bit; for 16-bit entries likewise and so on.
1366
1367 However that only covers the case where the element widths are the same.
1368 Where the element widths are different, the following algorithm applies:
1369
1370 * Analyse the bitwidth of all source operands and work out the
1371 maximum. Record this as "maxsrcbitwidth"
1372 * If any given source operand requires sign-extension or zero-extension
1373 (ldb, div, rem, mul, sll, srl, sra etc.), instead of mandatory 32-bit
1374 sign-extension / zero-extension or whatever is specified in the standard
1375 RV specification, **change** that to sign-extending from the respective
1376 individual source operand's bitwidth from the CSR table out to
1377 "maxsrcbitwidth" (previously calculated), instead.
1378 * Following separate and distinct (optional) sign/zero-extension of all
1379 source operands as specifically required for that operation, carry out the
1380 operation at "maxsrcbitwidth". (Note that in the case of LOAD/STORE or MV
1381 this may be a "null" (copy) operation, and that with FCVT, the changes
1382 to the source and destination bitwidths may also turn FVCT effectively
1383 into a copy).
1384 * If the destination operand requires sign-extension or zero-extension,
1385 instead of a mandatory fixed size (typically 32-bit for arithmetic,
1386 for subw for example, and otherwise various: 8-bit for sb, 16-bit for sw
1387 etc.), overload the RV specification with the bitwidth from the
1388 destination register's elwidth entry.
1389 * Finally, store the (optionally) sign/zero-extended value into its
1390 destination: memory for sb/sw etc., or an offset section of the register
1391 file for an arithmetic operation.
1392
1393 In this way, polymorphic bitwidths are achieved without requiring a
1394 massive 64-way permutation of calculations **per opcode**, for example
1395 (4 possible rs1 bitwidths times 4 possible rs2 bitwidths times 4 possible
1396 rd bitwidths). The pseudo-code is therefore as follows:
1397
1398 typedef union {
1399 uint8_t b;
1400 uint16_t s;
1401 uint32_t i;
1402 uint64_t l;
1403 } el_reg_t;
1404
1405 bw(elwidth):
1406 if elwidth == 0:
1407 return xlen
1408 if elwidth == 1:
1409 return xlen / 2
1410 if elwidth == 2:
1411 return xlen * 2
1412 // elwidth == 3:
1413 return 8
1414
1415 get_max_elwidth(rs1, rs2):
1416 return max(bw(int_csr[rs1].elwidth), # default (XLEN) if not set
1417 bw(int_csr[rs2].elwidth)) # again XLEN if no entry
1418
1419 get_polymorphed_reg(reg, bitwidth, offset):
1420 el_reg_t res;
1421 res.l = 0; // TODO: going to need sign-extending / zero-extending
1422 if bitwidth == 8:
1423 reg.b = int_regfile[reg].b[offset]
1424 elif bitwidth == 16:
1425 reg.s = int_regfile[reg].s[offset]
1426 elif bitwidth == 32:
1427 reg.i = int_regfile[reg].i[offset]
1428 elif bitwidth == 64:
1429 reg.l = int_regfile[reg].l[offset]
1430 return res
1431
1432 set_polymorphed_reg(reg, bitwidth, offset, val):
1433 if (!int_csr[reg].isvec):
1434 # sign/zero-extend depending on opcode requirements, from
1435 # the reg's bitwidth out to the full bitwidth of the regfile
1436 val = sign_or_zero_extend(val, bitwidth, xlen)
1437 int_regfile[reg].l[0] = val
1438 elif bitwidth == 8:
1439 int_regfile[reg].b[offset] = val
1440 elif bitwidth == 16:
1441 int_regfile[reg].s[offset] = val
1442 elif bitwidth == 32:
1443 int_regfile[reg].i[offset] = val
1444 elif bitwidth == 64:
1445 int_regfile[reg].l[offset] = val
1446
1447 maxsrcwid = get_max_elwidth(rs1, rs2) # source element width(s)
1448 destwid = int_csr[rs1].elwidth # destination element width
1449  for (i = 0; i < VL; i++)
1450 if (predval & 1<<i) # predication uses intregs
1451 // TODO, calculate if over-run occurs, for each elwidth
1452 src1 = get_polymorphed_reg(rs1, maxsrcwid, irs1)
1453 // TODO, sign/zero-extend src1 and src2 as operation requires
1454 if (op_requires_sign_extend_src1)
1455 src1 = sign_extend(src1, maxsrcwid)
1456 src2 = get_polymorphed_reg(rs2, maxsrcwid, irs2)
1457 result = src1 + src2 # actual add here
1458 // TODO, sign/zero-extend result, as operation requires
1459 if (op_requires_sign_extend_dest)
1460 result = sign_extend(result, maxsrcwid)
1461 set_polymorphed_reg(rd, destwid, ird, result)
1462 if (!int_vec[rd].isvector) break
1463 if (int_vec[rd ].isvector)  { id += 1; }
1464 if (int_vec[rs1].isvector)  { irs1 += 1; }
1465 if (int_vec[rs2].isvector)  { irs2 += 1; }
1466
1467 Whilst specific sign-extension and zero-extension pseudocode call
1468 details are left out, due to each operation being different, the above
1469 should be clear that;
1470
1471 * the source operands are extended out to the maximum bitwidth of all
1472 source operands
1473 * the operation takes place at that maximum source bitwidth (the
1474 destination bitwidth is not involved at this point, at all)
1475 * the result is extended (or potentially even, truncated) before being
1476 stored in the destination. i.e. truncation (if required) to the
1477 destination width occurs **after** the operation **not** before.
1478 * when the destination is not marked as "vectorised", the **full**
1479 (standard, scalar) register file entry is taken up, i.e. the
1480 element is either sign-extended or zero-extended to cover the
1481 full register bitwidth (XLEN) if it is not already XLEN bits long.
1482
1483 Implementors are entirely free to optimise the above, particularly
1484 if it is specifically known that any given operation will complete
1485 accurately in less bits, as long as the results produced are
1486 directly equivalent and equal, for all inputs and all outputs,
1487 to those produced by the above algorithm.
1488
1489 ## Polymorphic floating-point operation exceptions and error-handling
1490
1491 For floating-point operations, conversion takes place without
1492 raising any kind of exception. Exactly as specified in the standard
1493 RV specification, NAN (or appropriate) is stored if the result
1494 is beyond the range of the destination, and, again, exactly as
1495 with the standard RV specification just as with scalar
1496 operations, the floating-point flag is raised (FCSR). And, again, just as
1497 with scalar operations, it is software's responsibility to check this flag.
1498 Given that the FCSR flags are "accrued", the fact that multiple element
1499 operations could have occurred is not a problem.
1500
1501 Note that it is perfectly legitimate for floating-point bitwidths of
1502 only 8 to be specified. However whilst it is possible to apply IEEE 754
1503 principles, no actual standard yet exists. Implementors wishing to
1504 provide hardware-level 8-bit support rather than throw a trap to emulate
1505 in software should contact the author of this specification before
1506 proceeding.
1507
1508 ## Polymorphic shift operators
1509
1510 A special note is needed for changing the element width of left and right
1511 shift operators, particularly right-shift. Even for standard RV base,
1512 in order for correct results to be returned, the second operand RS2 must
1513 be truncated to be within the range of RS1's bitwidth. spike's implementation
1514 of sll for example is as follows:
1515
1516 WRITE_RD(sext_xlen(zext_xlen(RS1) << (RS2 & (xlen-1))));
1517
1518 which means: where XLEN is 32 (for RV32), restrict RS2 to cover the
1519 range 0..31 so that RS1 will only be left-shifted by the amount that
1520 is possible to fit into a 32-bit register. Whilst this appears not
1521 to matter for hardware, it matters greatly in software implementations,
1522 and it also matters where an RV64 system is set to "RV32" mode, such
1523 that the underlying registers RS1 and RS2 comprise 64 hardware bits
1524 each.
1525
1526 For SV, where each operand's element bitwidth may be over-ridden, the
1527 rule about determining the operation's bitwidth *still applies*, being
1528 defined as the maximum bitwidth of RS1 and RS2. *However*, this rule
1529 **also applies to the truncation of RS2**. In other words, *after*
1530 determining the maximum bitwidth, RS2's range must **also be truncated**
1531 to ensure a correct answer. Example:
1532
1533 * RS1 is over-ridden to a 16-bit width
1534 * RS2 is over-ridden to an 8-bit width
1535 * RD is over-ridden to a 64-bit width
1536 * the maximum bitwidth is thus determined to be 16-bit - max(8,16)
1537 * RS2 is **truncated to a range of values from 0 to 15**: RS2 & (16-1)
1538
1539 Pseudocode (in spike) for this example would therefore be:
1540
1541 WRITE_RD(sext_xlen(zext_16bit(RS1) << (RS2 & (16-1))));
1542
1543 This example illustrates that considerable care therefore needs to be
1544 taken to ensure that left and right shift operations are implemented
1545 correctly. The key is that
1546
1547 * The operation bitwidth is determined by the maximum bitwidth
1548 of the *source registers*, **not** the destination register bitwidth
1549 * The result is then sign-extend (or truncated) as appropriate.
1550
1551 ## Polymorphic MULH/MULHU/MULHSU
1552
1553 MULH is designed to take the top half MSBs of a multiply that
1554 does not fit within the range of the source operands, such that
1555 smaller width operations may produce a full double-width multiply
1556 in two cycles. The issue is: SV allows the source operands to
1557 have variable bitwidth.
1558
1559 Here again special attention has to be paid to the rules regarding
1560 bitwidth, which, again, are that the operation is performed at
1561 the maximum bitwidth of the **source** registers. Therefore:
1562
1563 * An 8-bit x 8-bit multiply will create a 16-bit result that must
1564 be shifted down by 8 bits
1565 * A 16-bit x 8-bit multiply will create a 24-bit result that must
1566 be shifted down by 16 bits (top 8 bits being zero)
1567 * A 16-bit x 16-bit multiply will create a 32-bit result that must
1568 be shifted down by 16 bits
1569 * A 32-bit x 16-bit multiply will create a 48-bit result that must
1570 be shifted down by 32 bits
1571 * A 32-bit x 8-bit multiply will create a 40-bit result that must
1572 be shifted down by 32 bits
1573
1574 So again, just as with shift-left and shift-right, the result
1575 is shifted down by the maximum of the two source register bitwidths.
1576 And, exactly again, truncation or sign-extension is performed on the
1577 result. If sign-extension is to be carried out, it is performed
1578 from the same maximum of the two source register bitwidths out
1579 to the result element's bitwidth.
1580
1581 If truncation occurs, i.e. the top MSBs of the result are lost,
1582 this is "Officially Not Our Problem", i.e. it is assumed that the
1583 programmer actually desires the result to be truncated. i.e. if the
1584 programmer wanted all of the bits, they would have set the destination
1585 elwidth to accommodate them.
1586
1587 ## Polymorphic elwidth on LOAD/STORE <a name="elwidth_loadstore"></a>
1588
1589 Polymorphic element widths in vectorised form means that the data
1590 being loaded (or stored) across multiple registers needs to be treated
1591 (reinterpreted) as a contiguous stream of elwidth-wide items, where
1592 the source register's element width is **independent** from the destination's.
1593
1594 This makes for a slightly more complex algorithm when using indirection
1595 on the "addressed" register (source for LOAD and destination for STORE),
1596 particularly given that the LOAD/STORE instruction provides important
1597 information about the width of the data to be reinterpreted.
1598
1599 Let's illustrate the "load" part, where the pseudo-code for elwidth=default
1600 was as follows, and i is the loop from 0 to VL-1:
1601
1602 srcbase = ireg[rs+i];
1603 return mem[srcbase + imm]; // returns XLEN bits
1604
1605 Instead, when elwidth != default, for a LW (32-bit LOAD), elwidth-wide
1606 chunks are taken from the source memory location addressed by the current
1607 indexed source address register, and only when a full 32-bits-worth
1608 are taken will the index be moved on to the next contiguous source
1609 address register:
1610
1611 bitwidth = bw(elwidth); // source elwidth from CSR reg entry
1612 elsperblock = 32 / bitwidth // 1 if bw=32, 2 if bw=16, 4 if bw=8
1613 srcbase = ireg[rs+i/(elsperblock)]; // integer divide
1614 offs = i % elsperblock; // modulo
1615 return &mem[srcbase + imm + offs]; // re-cast to uint8_t*, uint16_t* etc.
1616
1617 Note that the constant "32" above is replaced by 8 for LB, 16 for LH, 64 for LD
1618 and 128 for LQ.
1619
1620 The principle is basically exactly the same as if the srcbase were pointing
1621 at the memory of the *register* file: memory is re-interpreted as containing
1622 groups of elwidth-wide discrete elements.
1623
1624 When storing the result from a load, it's important to respect the fact
1625 that the destination register has its *own separate element width*. Thus,
1626 when each element is loaded (at the source element width), any sign-extension
1627 or zero-extension (or truncation) needs to be done to the *destination*
1628 bitwidth. Also, the storing has the exact same analogous algorithm as
1629 above, where in fact it is just the set\_polymorphed\_reg pseudocode
1630 (completely unchanged) used above.
1631
1632 One issue remains: when the source element width is **greater** than
1633 the width of the operation, it is obvious that a single LB for example
1634 cannot possibly obtain 16-bit-wide data. This condition may be detected
1635 where, when using integer divide, elsperblock (the width of the LOAD
1636 divided by the bitwidth of the element) is zero.
1637
1638 The issue is "fixed" by ensuring that elsperblock is a minimum of 1:
1639
1640 elsperblock = min(1, LD_OP_BITWIDTH / element_bitwidth)
1641
1642 The elements, if the element bitwidth is larger than the LD operation's
1643 size, will then be sign/zero-extended to the full LD operation size, as
1644 specified by the LOAD (LDU instead of LD, LBU instead of LB), before
1645 being passed on to the second phase.
1646
1647 As LOAD/STORE may be twin-predicated, it is important to note that
1648 the rules on twin predication still apply, except where in previous
1649 pseudo-code (elwidth=default for both source and target) it was
1650 the *registers* that the predication was applied to, it is now the
1651 **elements** that the predication is applied to.
1652
1653 Thus the full pseudocode for all LD operations may be written out
1654 as follows:
1655
1656 function LBU(rd, rs):
1657 load_elwidthed(rd, rs, 8, true)
1658 function LB(rd, rs):
1659 load_elwidthed(rd, rs, 8, false)
1660 function LH(rd, rs):
1661 load_elwidthed(rd, rs, 16, false)
1662 ...
1663 ...
1664 function LQ(rd, rs):
1665 load_elwidthed(rd, rs, 128, false)
1666
1667 # returns 1 byte of data when opwidth=8, 2 bytes when opwidth=16..
1668 function load_memory(rs, imm, i, opwidth):
1669 elwidth = int_csr[rs].elwidth
1670 bitwidth = bw(elwidth);
1671 elsperblock = min(1, opwidth / bitwidth)
1672 srcbase = ireg[rs+i/(elsperblock)];
1673 offs = i % elsperblock;
1674 return mem[srcbase + imm + offs]; # 1/2/4/8/16 bytes
1675
1676 function load_elwidthed(rd, rs, opwidth, unsigned):
1677 destwid = int_csr[rd].elwidth # destination element width
1678  rd = int_csr[rd].active ? int_csr[rd].regidx : rd;
1679  rs = int_csr[rs].active ? int_csr[rs].regidx : rs;
1680  ps = get_pred_val(FALSE, rs); # predication on src
1681  pd = get_pred_val(FALSE, rd); # ... AND on dest
1682  for (int i = 0, int j = 0; i < VL && j < VL;):
1683 if (int_csr[rs].isvec) while (!(ps & 1<<i)) i++;
1684 if (int_csr[rd].isvec) while (!(pd & 1<<j)) j++;
1685 val = load_memory(rs, imm, i, opwidth)
1686 if unsigned:
1687 val = zero_extend(val, min(opwidth, bitwidth))
1688 else:
1689 val = sign_extend(val, min(opwidth, bitwidth))
1690 set_polymorphed_reg(rd, bitwidth, j, val)
1691 if (int_csr[rs].isvec) i++;
1692 if (int_csr[rd].isvec) j++; else break;
1693
1694 Note:
1695
1696 * when comparing against for example the twin-predicated c.mv
1697 pseudo-code, the pattern of independent incrementing of rd and rs
1698 is preserved unchanged.
1699 * just as with the c.mv pseudocode, zeroing is not included and must be
1700 taken into account (TODO).
1701 * that due to the use of a twin-predication algorithm, LOAD/STORE also
1702 take on the same VSPLAT, VINSERT, VREDUCE, VEXTRACT, VGATHER and
1703 VSCATTER characteristics.
1704 * that due to the use of the same set\_polymorphed\_reg pseudocode,
1705 a destination that is not vectorised (marked as scalar) will
1706 result in the element being fully sign-extended or zero-extended
1707 out to the full register file bitwidth (XLEN). When the source
1708 is also marked as scalar, this is how the compatibility with
1709 standard RV LOAD/STORE is preserved by this algorithm.
1710
1711 ### Example Tables showing LOAD elements
1712
1713 This section contains examples of vectorised LOAD operations, showing
1714 how the two stage process works (three if zero/sign-extension is included).
1715
1716
1717 #### Example: LD x8, x5(0), x8 CSR-elwidth=32, x5 CSR-elwidth=16, VL=7
1718
1719 This is:
1720
1721 * a 64-bit load, with an offset of zero
1722 * with a source-address elwidth of 16-bit
1723 * into a destination-register with an elwidth of 32-bit
1724 * where VL=7
1725 * from register x5 (actually x5-x6) to x8 (actually x8 to half of x11)
1726 * RV64, where XLEN=64 is assumed.
1727
1728 First, the memory table, which, due to the
1729 element width being 16 and the operation being LD (64), the 64-bits
1730 loaded from memory are subdivided into groups of **four** elements.
1731 And, with VL being 7 (deliberately to illustrate that this is reasonable
1732 and possible), the first four are sourced from the offset addresses pointed
1733 to by x5, and the next three from the ofset addresses pointed to by
1734 the next contiguous register, x6:
1735
1736 [[!table data="""
1737 addr | byte 0 | byte 1 | byte 2 | byte 3 | byte 4 | byte 5 | byte 6 | byte 7 |
1738 @x5 | elem 0 || elem 1 || elem 2 || elem 3 ||
1739 @x6 | elem 4 || elem 5 || elem 6 || not loaded ||
1740 """]]
1741
1742 Next, the elements are zero-extended from 16-bit to 32-bit, as whilst
1743 the elwidth CSR entry for x5 is 16-bit, the destination elwidth on x8 is 32.
1744
1745 [[!table data="""
1746 byte 3 | byte 2 | byte 1 | byte 0 |
1747 0x0 | 0x0 | elem0 ||
1748 0x0 | 0x0 | elem1 ||
1749 0x0 | 0x0 | elem2 ||
1750 0x0 | 0x0 | elem3 ||
1751 0x0 | 0x0 | elem4 ||
1752 0x0 | 0x0 | elem5 ||
1753 0x0 | 0x0 | elem6 ||
1754 0x0 | 0x0 | elem7 ||
1755 """]]
1756
1757 Lastly, the elements are stored in contiguous blocks, as if x8 was also
1758 byte-addressable "memory". That "memory" happens to cover registers
1759 x8, x9, x10 and x11, with the last 32 "bits" of x11 being **UNMODIFIED**:
1760
1761 [[!table data="""
1762 reg# | byte 7 | byte 6 | byte 5 | byte 4 | byte 3 | byte 2 | byte 1 | byte 0 |
1763 x8 | 0x0 | 0x0 | elem 1 || 0x0 | 0x0 | elem 0 ||
1764 x9 | 0x0 | 0x0 | elem 3 || 0x0 | 0x0 | elem 2 ||
1765 x10 | 0x0 | 0x0 | elem 5 || 0x0 | 0x0 | elem 4 ||
1766 x11 | **UNMODIFIED** |||| 0x0 | 0x0 | elem 6 ||
1767 """]]
1768
1769 Thus we have data that is loaded from the **addresses** pointed to by
1770 x5 and x6, zero-extended from 16-bit to 32-bit, stored in the **registers**
1771 x8 through to half of x11.
1772 The end result is that elements 0 and 1 end up in x8, with element 8 being
1773 shifted up 32 bits, and so on, until finally element 6 is in the
1774 LSBs of x11.
1775
1776 Note that whilst the memory addressing table is shown left-to-right byte order,
1777 the registers are shown in right-to-left (MSB) order. This does **not**
1778 imply that bit or byte-reversal is carried out: it's just easier to visualise
1779 memory as being contiguous bytes, and emphasises that registers are not
1780 really actually "memory" as such.
1781
1782 ## Why SV bitwidth specification is restricted to 4 entries
1783
1784 The four entries for SV element bitwidths only allows three over-rides:
1785
1786 * 8 bit
1787 * 16 hit
1788 * 32 bit
1789
1790 This would seem inadequate, surely it would be better to have 3 bits or
1791 more and allow 64, 128 and some other options besides. The answer here
1792 is, it gets too complex, no RV128 implementation yet exists, and so RV64's
1793 default is 64 bit, so the 4 major element widths are covered anyway.
1794
1795 There is an absolutely crucial aspect oF SV here that explicitly
1796 needs spelling out, and it's whether the "vectorised" bit is set in
1797 the Register's CSR entry.
1798
1799 If "vectorised" is clear (not set), this indicates that the operation
1800 is "scalar". Under these circumstances, when set on a destination (RD),
1801 then sign-extension and zero-extension, whilst changed to match the
1802 override bitwidth (if set), will erase the **full** register entry
1803 (64-bit if RV64).
1804
1805 When vectorised is *set*, this indicates that the operation now treats
1806 **elements** as if they were independent registers, so regardless of
1807 the length, any parts of a given actual register that are not involved
1808 in the operation are **NOT** modified, but are **PRESERVED**.
1809
1810 For example:
1811
1812 * when the vector bit is clear and elwidth set to 16 on the destination
1813 register, operations are truncated to 16 bit and then sign or zero
1814 extended to the *FULL* XLEN register width.
1815 * when the vector bit is set, elwidth is 16 and VL=1 (or other value where
1816 groups of elwidth sized elements do not fill an entire XLEN register),
1817 the "top" bits of the destination register do *NOT* get modified, zero'd
1818 or otherwise overwritten.
1819
1820 SIMD micro-architectures may implement this by using predication on
1821 any elements in a given actual register that are beyond the end of
1822 multi-element operation.
1823
1824 Other microarchitectures may choose to provide byte-level write-enable
1825 lines on the register file, such that each 64 bit register in an RV64
1826 system requires 8 WE lines. Scalar RV64 operations would require
1827 activation of all 8 lines, where SV elwidth based operations would
1828 activate the required subset of those byte-level write lines.
1829
1830 Example:
1831
1832 * rs1, rs2 and rd are all set to 8-bit
1833 * VL is set to 3
1834 * RV64 architecture is set (UXL=64)
1835 * add operation is carried out
1836 * bits 0-23 of RD are modified to be rs1[23..16] + rs2[23..16]
1837 concatenated with similar add operations on bits 15..8 and 7..0
1838 * bits 24 through 63 **remain as they originally were**.
1839
1840 Example SIMD micro-architectural implementation:
1841
1842 * SIMD architecture works out the nearest round number of elements
1843 that would fit into a full RV64 register (in this case: 8)
1844 * SIMD architecture creates a hidden predicate, binary 0b00000111
1845 i.e. the bottom 3 bits set (VL=3) and the top 5 bits clear
1846 * SIMD architecture goes ahead with the add operation as if it
1847 was a full 8-wide batch of 8 adds
1848 * SIMD architecture passes top 5 elements through the adders
1849 (which are "disabled" due to zero-bit predication)
1850 * SIMD architecture gets the 5 unmodified top 8-bits back unmodified
1851 and stores them in rd.
1852
1853 This requires a read on rd, however this is required anyway in order
1854 to support non-zeroing mode.
1855
1856 ## Polymorphic floating-point
1857
1858 Standard scalar RV integer operations base the register width on XLEN,
1859 which may be changed (UXL in USTATUS, and the corresponding MXL and
1860 SXL in MSTATUS and SSTATUS respectively). Integer LOAD, STORE and
1861 arithmetic operations are therefore restricted to an active XLEN bits,
1862 with sign or zero extension to pad out the upper bits when XLEN has
1863 been dynamically set to less than the actual register size.
1864
1865 For scalar floating-point, the active (used / changed) bits are
1866 specified exclusively by the operation: ADD.S specifies an active
1867 32-bits, with the upper bits of the source registers needing to
1868 be all 1s ("NaN-boxed"), and the destination upper bits being
1869 *set* to all 1s (including on LOAD/STOREs).
1870
1871 Where elwidth is set to default (on any source or the destination)
1872 it is obvious that this NaN-boxing behaviour can and should be
1873 preserved. When elwidth is non-default things are less obvious,
1874 so need to be thought through. Here is a normal (scalar) sequence,
1875 assuming an RV64 which supports Quad (128-bit) FLEN:
1876
1877 * FLD loads 64-bit wide from memory. Top 64 MSBs are set to all 1s
1878 * ADD.D performs a 64-bit-wide add. Top 64 MSBs of destination set to 1s.
1879 * FSD stores lowest 64-bits from the 128-bit-wide register to memory:
1880 top 64 MSBs ignored.
1881
1882 Therefore it makes sense to mirror this behaviour when, for example,
1883 elwidth is set to 32. Assume elwidth set to 32 on all source and
1884 destination registers:
1885
1886 * FLD loads 64-bit wide from memory as **two** 32-bit single-precision
1887 floating-point numbers.
1888 * ADD.D performs **two** 32-bit-wide adds, storing one of the adds
1889 in bits 0-31 and the second in bits 32-63.
1890 * FSD stores lowest 64-bits from the 128-bit-wide register to memory
1891
1892 Here's the thing: it does not make sense to overwrite the top 64 MSBs
1893 of the registers either during the FLD **or** the ADD.D. The reason
1894 is that, effectively, the top 64 MSBs actually represent a completely
1895 independent 64-bit register, so overwriting it is not only gratuitous
1896 but may actually be harmful for a future extension to SV which may
1897 have a way to directly access those top 64 bits.
1898
1899 The decision is therefore **not** to touch the upper parts of floating-point
1900 registers whereever elwidth is set to non-default values, including
1901 when "isvec" is false in a given register's CSR entry. Only when the
1902 elwidth is set to default **and** isvec is false will the standard
1903 RV behaviour be followed, namely that the upper bits be modified.
1904
1905 Ultimately if elwidth is default and isvec false on *all* source
1906 and destination registers, a SimpleV instruction defaults completely
1907 to standard RV scalar behaviour (this holds true for **all** operations,
1908 right across the board).
1909
1910 The nice thing here is that ADD.S, ADD.D and ADD.Q when elwidth are
1911 non-default values are effectively all the same: they all still perform
1912 multiple ADD operations, just at different widths. A future extension
1913 to SimpleV may actually allow ADD.S to access the upper bits of the
1914 register, effectively breaking down a 128-bit register into a bank
1915 of 4 independently-accesible 32-bit registers.
1916
1917 In the meantime, although when e.g. setting VL to 8 it would technically
1918 make no difference to the ALU whether ADD.S, ADD.D or ADD.Q is used,
1919 using ADD.Q may be an easy way to signal to the microarchitecture that
1920 it is to receive a higher VL value. On a superscalar OoO architecture
1921 there may be absolutely no difference, however on simpler SIMD-style
1922 microarchitectures they may not necessarily have the infrastructure in
1923 place to know the difference, such that when VL=8 and an ADD.D instruction
1924 is issued, it completes in 2 cycles (or more) rather than one, where
1925 if an ADD.Q had been issued instead on such simpler microarchitectures
1926 it would complete in one.
1927
1928 ## Specific instruction walk-throughs
1929
1930 This section covers walk-throughs of the above-outlined procedure
1931 for converting standard RISC-V scalar arithmetic operations to
1932 polymorphic widths, to ensure that it is correct.
1933
1934 ### add
1935
1936 Standard Scalar RV32/RV64 (xlen):
1937
1938 * RS1 @ xlen bits
1939 * RS2 @ xlen bits
1940 * add @ xlen bits
1941 * RD @ xlen bits
1942
1943 Polymorphic variant:
1944
1945 * RS1 @ rs1 bits, zero-extended to max(rs1, rs2) bits
1946 * RS2 @ rs2 bits, zero-extended to max(rs1, rs2) bits
1947 * add @ max(rs1, rs2) bits
1948 * RD @ rd bits. zero-extend to rd if rd > max(rs1, rs2) otherwise truncate
1949
1950 Note here that polymorphic add zero-extends its source operands,
1951 where addw sign-extends.
1952
1953 ### addw
1954
1955 The RV Specification specifically states that "W" variants of arithmetic
1956 operations always produce 32-bit signed values. In a polymorphic
1957 environment it is reasonable to assume that the signed aspect is
1958 preserved, where it is the length of the operands and the result
1959 that may be changed.
1960
1961 Standard Scalar RV64 (xlen):
1962
1963 * RS1 @ xlen bits
1964 * RS2 @ xlen bits
1965 * add @ xlen bits
1966 * RD @ xlen bits, truncate add to 32-bit and sign-extend to xlen.
1967
1968 Polymorphic variant:
1969
1970 * RS1 @ rs1 bits, sign-extended to max(rs1, rs2) bits
1971 * RS2 @ rs2 bits, sign-extended to max(rs1, rs2) bits
1972 * add @ max(rs1, rs2) bits
1973 * RD @ rd bits. sign-extend to rd if rd > max(rs1, rs2) otherwise truncate
1974
1975 Note here that polymorphic addw sign-extends its source operands,
1976 where add zero-extends.
1977
1978 This requires a little more in-depth analysis. Where the bitwidth of
1979 rs1 equals the bitwidth of rs2, no sign-extending will occur. It is
1980 only where the bitwidth of either rs1 or rs2 are different, will the
1981 lesser-width operand be sign-extended.
1982
1983 Effectively however, both rs1 and rs2 are being sign-extended (or truncated),
1984 where for add they are both zero-extended. This holds true for all arithmetic
1985 operations ending with "W".
1986
1987 ### addiw
1988
1989 Standard Scalar RV64I:
1990
1991 * RS1 @ xlen bits, truncated to 32-bit
1992 * immed @ 12 bits, sign-extended to 32-bit
1993 * add @ 32 bits
1994 * RD @ rd bits. sign-extend to rd if rd > 32, otherwise truncate.
1995
1996 Polymorphic variant:
1997
1998 * RS1 @ rs1 bits
1999 * immed @ 12 bits, sign-extend to max(rs1, 12) bits
2000 * add @ max(rs1, 12) bits
2001 * RD @ rd bits. sign-extend to rd if rd > max(rs1, 12) otherwise truncate
2002
2003 # Predication Element Zeroing
2004
2005 The introduction of zeroing on traditional vector predication is usually
2006 intended as an optimisation for lane-based microarchitectures with register
2007 renaming to be able to save power by avoiding a register read on elements
2008 that are passed through en-masse through the ALU. Simpler microarchitectures
2009 do not have this issue: they simply do not pass the element through to
2010 the ALU at all, and therefore do not store it back in the destination.
2011 More complex non-lane-based micro-architectures can, when zeroing is
2012 not set, use the predication bits to simply avoid sending element-based
2013 operations to the ALUs, entirely: thus, over the long term, potentially
2014 keeping all ALUs 100% occupied even when elements are predicated out.
2015
2016 SimpleV's design principle is not based on or influenced by
2017 microarchitectural design factors: it is a hardware-level API.
2018 Therefore, looking purely at whether zeroing is *useful* or not,
2019 (whether less instructions are needed for certain scenarios),
2020 given that a case can be made for zeroing *and* non-zeroing, the
2021 decision was taken to add support for both.
2022
2023 ## Single-predication (based on destination register)
2024
2025 Zeroing on predication for arithmetic operations is taken from
2026 the destination register's predicate. i.e. the predication *and*
2027 zeroing settings to be applied to the whole operation come from the
2028 CSR Predication table entry for the destination register.
2029 Thus when zeroing is set on predication of a destination element,
2030 if the predication bit is clear, then the destination element is *set*
2031 to zero (twin-predication is slightly different, and will be covered
2032 next).
2033
2034 Thus the pseudo-code loop for a predicated arithmetic operation
2035 is modified to as follows:
2036
2037  for (i = 0; i < VL; i++)
2038 if not zeroing: # an optimisation
2039 while (!(predval & 1<<i) && i < VL)
2040 if (int_vec[rd ].isvector)  { id += 1; }
2041 if (int_vec[rs1].isvector)  { irs1 += 1; }
2042 if (int_vec[rs2].isvector)  { irs2 += 1; }
2043 if i == VL:
2044 break
2045 if (predval & 1<<i)
2046 src1 = ....
2047 src2 = ...
2048 else:
2049 result = src1 + src2 # actual add (or other op) here
2050 set_polymorphed_reg(rd, destwid, ird, result)
2051 if (!int_vec[rd].isvector) break
2052 else if zeroing:
2053 result = 0
2054 set_polymorphed_reg(rd, destwid, ird, result)
2055 if (int_vec[rd ].isvector)  { id += 1; }
2056 else if (predval & 1<<i) break;
2057 if (int_vec[rs1].isvector)  { irs1 += 1; }
2058 if (int_vec[rs2].isvector)  { irs2 += 1; }
2059
2060 The optimisation to skip elements entirely is only possible for certain
2061 micro-architectures when zeroing is not set. However for lane-based
2062 micro-architectures this optimisation may not be practical, as it
2063 implies that elements end up in different "lanes". Under these
2064 circumstances it is perfectly fine to simply have the lanes
2065 "inactive" for predicated elements, even though it results in
2066 less than 100% ALU utilisation.
2067
2068 ## Twin-predication (based on source and destination register)
2069
2070 Twin-predication is not that much different, except that that
2071 the source is independently zero-predicated from the destination.
2072 This means that the source may be zero-predicated *or* the
2073 destination zero-predicated *or both*, or neither.
2074
2075 When with twin-predication, zeroing is set on the source and not
2076 the destination, if a predicate bit is set it indicates that a zero
2077 data element is passed through the operation (the exception being:
2078 if the source data element is to be treated as an address - a LOAD -
2079 then the data returned *from* the LOAD is zero, rather than looking up an
2080 *address* of zero.
2081
2082 When zeroing is set on the destination and not the source, then just
2083 as with single-predicated operations, a zero is stored into the destination
2084 element (or target memory address for a STORE).
2085
2086 Zeroing on both source and destination effectively result in a bitwise
2087 NOR operation of the source and destination predicate: the result is that
2088 where either source predicate OR destination predicate is set to 0,
2089 a zero element will ultimately end up in the destination register.
2090
2091 However: this may not necessarily be the case for all operations;
2092 implementors, particularly of custom instructions, clearly need to
2093 think through the implications in each and every case.
2094
2095 Here is pseudo-code for a twin zero-predicated operation:
2096
2097 function op_mv(rd, rs) # MV not VMV!
2098  rd = int_csr[rd].active ? int_csr[rd].regidx : rd;
2099  rs = int_csr[rs].active ? int_csr[rs].regidx : rs;
2100  ps, zerosrc = get_pred_val(FALSE, rs); # predication on src
2101  pd, zerodst = get_pred_val(FALSE, rd); # ... AND on dest
2102  for (int i = 0, int j = 0; i < VL && j < VL):
2103 if (int_csr[rs].isvec && !zerosrc) while (!(ps & 1<<i)) i++;
2104 if (int_csr[rd].isvec && !zerodst) while (!(pd & 1<<j)) j++;
2105 if ((pd & 1<<j))
2106 if ((pd & 1<<j))
2107 sourcedata = ireg[rs+i];
2108 else
2109 sourcedata = 0
2110 ireg[rd+j] <= sourcedata
2111 else if (zerodst)
2112 ireg[rd+j] <= 0
2113 if (int_csr[rs].isvec)
2114 i++;
2115 if (int_csr[rd].isvec)
2116 j++;
2117 else
2118 if ((pd & 1<<j))
2119 break;
2120
2121 Note that in the instance where the destination is a scalar, the hardware
2122 loop is ended the moment a value *or a zero* is placed into the destination
2123 register/element. Also note that, for clarity, variable element widths
2124 have been left out of the above.
2125
2126 # Exceptions
2127
2128 TODO: expand. Exceptions may occur at any time, in any given underlying
2129 scalar operation. This implies that context-switching (traps) may
2130 occur, and operation must be returned to where it left off. That in
2131 turn implies that the full state - including the current parallel
2132 element being processed - has to be saved and restored. This is
2133 what the **STATE** CSR is for.
2134
2135 The implications are that all underlying individual scalar operations
2136 "issued" by the parallelisation have to appear to be executed sequentially.
2137 The further implications are that if two or more individual element
2138 operations are underway, and one with an earlier index causes an exception,
2139 it may be necessary for the microarchitecture to **discard** or terminate
2140 operations with higher indices.
2141
2142 This being somewhat dissatisfactory, an "opaque predication" variant
2143 of the STATE CSR is being considered.
2144
2145 # Hints
2146
2147 A "HINT" is an operation that has no effect on architectural state,
2148 where its use may, by agreed convention, give advance notification
2149 to the microarchitecture: branch prediction notification would be
2150 a good example. Usually HINTs are where rd=x0.
2151
2152 With Simple-V being capable of issuing *parallel* instructions where
2153 rd=x0, the space for possible HINTs is expanded considerably. VL
2154 could be used to indicate different hints. In addition, if predication
2155 is set, the predication register itself could hypothetically be passed
2156 in as a *parameter* to the HINT operation.
2157
2158 No specific hints are yet defined in Simple-V
2159
2160 # VLIW Format <a name="vliw-format"></a>
2161
2162 One issue with SV is the setup and teardown time of the CSRs. The cost
2163 of the use of a full CSRRW (requiring LI) is quite high. A VLIW format
2164 therefore makes sense.
2165
2166 A suitable prefix, which fits the Expanded Instruction-Length encoding
2167 for "(80 + 16 times instruction_length)", as defined in Section 1.5
2168 of the RISC-V ISA, is as follows:
2169
2170 | 15 | 14:12 | 11:10 | 9:8 | 7 | 6:0 |
2171 | - | ----- | ----- | ----- | --- | ------- |
2172 | vlset | 16xil | pplen | rplen | mode | 1111111 |
2173
2174 An optional VL Block, optional predicate entries, optional register
2175 entries and finally some 16/32/48 bit standard RV or SVPrefix opcodes
2176 follow.
2177
2178 The variable-length format from Section 1.5 of the RISC-V ISA:
2179
2180 | base+4 ... base+2 | base | number of bits |
2181 | ------ ----------------- | ---------------- | -------------------------- |
2182 | ..xxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx | xnnnxxxxx1111111 | (80+16\*nnn)-bit, nnn!=111 |
2183 | {ops}{Pred}{Reg}{VL Block} | SV Prefix | |
2184
2185 VL/MAXVL/SubVL Block:
2186
2187 | 31-30 | 29:28 | 27:22 | 21:17 - 16 |
2188 | - | ----- | ------ | ------ - - |
2189 | 0 | SubVL | VLdest | VLEN vlt |
2190 | 1 | SubVL | VLdest | VLEN |
2191
2192 Note: this format is very similar to that used in [[sv_prefix_proposal]]
2193
2194 If vlt is 0, VLEN is a 5 bit immediate value, offset by one (i.e
2195 a bit sequence of 0b00000 represents VL=1 and so on). If vlt is 1,
2196 it specifies the scalar register from which VL is set by this VLIW
2197 instruction group. VL, whether set from the register or the immediate,
2198 is then modified (truncated) to be MIN(VL, MAXVL), and the result stored
2199 in the scalar register specified in VLdest. If VLdest is zero, no store
2200 in the regfile occurs (however VL is still set).
2201
2202 This option will typically be used to start vectorised loops, where
2203 the VLIW instruction effectively embeds an optional "SETSUBVL, SETVL"
2204 sequence (in compact form).
2205
2206 When bit 15 is set to 1, MAXVL and VL are both set to the immediate,
2207 VLEN (again, offset by one), which is 6 bits in length, and the same
2208 value stored in scalar register VLdest (if that register is nonzero).
2209 A value of 0b000000 will set MAXVL=VL=1, a value of 0b000001 will
2210 set MAXVL=VL= 2 and so on.
2211
2212 This option will typically not be used so much for loops as it will be
2213 for one-off instructions such as saving the entire register file to the
2214 stack with a single one-off Vectorised and predicated LD/ST, or as a way
2215 to save or restore registers in a function call with a single instruction.
2216
2217 CSRs needed:
2218
2219 * mepcvliw
2220 * sepcvliw
2221 * uepcvliw
2222 * hepcvliw
2223
2224 Notes:
2225
2226 * Bit 7 specifies if the prefix block format is the full 16 bit format
2227 (1) or the compact less expressive format (0). In the 8 bit format,
2228 pplen is multiplied by 2.
2229 * 8 bit format predicate numbering is implicit and begins from x9. Thus
2230 it is critical to put blocks in the correct order as required.
2231 * Bit 7 also specifies if the register block format is 16 bit (1) or 8 bit
2232 (0). In the 8 bit format, rplen is multiplied by 2. If only an odd number
2233 of entries are needed the last may be set to 0x00, indicating "unused".
2234 * Bit 15 specifies if the VL Block is present. If set to 1, the VL Block
2235 immediately follows the VLIW instruction Prefix
2236 * Bits 8 and 9 define how many RegCam entries (0 to 3 if bit 15 is 1,
2237 otherwise 0 to 6) follow the (optional) VL Block.
2238 * Bits 10 and 11 define how many PredCam entries (0 to 3 if bit 7 is 1,
2239 otherwise 0 to 6) follow the (optional) RegCam entries
2240 * Bits 14 to 12 (IL) define the actual length of the instruction: total
2241 number of bits is 80 + 16 times IL. Standard RV32, RVC and also
2242 SVPrefix (P48/64-\*-Type) instructions fit into this space, after the
2243 (optional) VL / RegCam / PredCam entries
2244 * Anything - any registers - within the VLIW-prefixed format *MUST* have the
2245 RegCam and PredCam entries applied to it.
2246 * At the end of the VLIW Group, the RegCam and PredCam entries
2247 *no longer apply*. VL, MAXVL and SUBVL on the other hand remain at
2248 the values set by the last instruction (whether a CSRRW or the VL
2249 Block header).
2250 * Although an inefficient use of resources, it is fine to set the MAXVL,
2251 VL and SUBVL CSRs with standard CSRRW instructions, within a VLIW block.
2252
2253 All this would greatly reduce the amount of space utilised by Vectorised
2254 instructions, given that 64-bit CSRRW requires 3, even 4 32-bit opcodes: the
2255 CSR itself, a LI, and the setting up of the value into the RS register
2256 of the CSR, which, again, requires a LI / LUI to get the 32 bit
2257 data into the CSR. To get 64-bit data into the register in order to put
2258 it into the CSR(s), LOAD operations from memory are needed!
2259
2260 Given that each 64-bit CSR can hold only 4x PredCAM entries (or 4 RegCAM
2261 entries), that's potentially 6 to eight 32-bit instructions, just to
2262 establish the Vector State!
2263
2264 Not only that: even CSRRW on VL and MAXVL requires 64-bits (even more bits if
2265 VL needs to be set to greater than 32). Bear in mind that in SV, both MAXVL
2266 and VL need to be set.
2267
2268 By contrast, the VLIW prefix is only 16 bits, the VL/MAX/SubVL block is
2269 only 16 bits, and as long as not too many predicates and register vector
2270 qualifiers are specified, several 32-bit and 16-bit opcodes can fit into
2271 the format. If the full flexibility of the 16 bit block formats are not
2272 needed, more space is saved by using the 8 bit formats.
2273
2274 In this light, embedding the VL/MAXVL, PredCam and RegCam CSR entries into
2275 a VLIW format makes a lot of sense.
2276
2277 Open Questions:
2278
2279 * Is it necessary to stick to the RISC-V 1.5 format? Why not go with
2280 using the 15th bit to allow 80 + 16\*0bnnnn bits? Perhaps to be sane,
2281 limit to 256 bits (16 times 0-11).
2282 * Could a "hint" be used to set which operations are parallel and which
2283 are sequential?
2284 * Could a new sub-instruction opcode format be used, one that does not
2285 conform precisely to RISC-V rules, but *unpacks* to RISC-V opcodes?
2286 no need for byte or bit-alignment
2287 * Could a hardware compression algorithm be deployed? Quite likely,
2288 because of the sub-execution context (sub-VLIW PC)
2289
2290 ## Limitations on instructions.
2291
2292 To greatly simplify implementations, it is required to treat the VLIW
2293 group as a separate sub-program with its own separate PC. The sub-pc
2294 advances separately whilst the main PC remains pointing at the beginning
2295 of the VLIW instruction (not to be confused with how VL works, which
2296 is exactly the same principle, except it is VStart in the STATE CSR
2297 that increments).
2298
2299 This has implications, namely that a new set of CSRs identical to xepc
2300 (mepc, srpc, hepc and uepc) must be created and managed and respected
2301 as being a sub extension of the xepc set of CSRs. Thus, xepcvliw CSRs
2302 must be context switched and saved / restored in traps.
2303
2304 The VStart indices in the STATE CSR may be similarly regarded as another
2305 sub-execution context, giving in effect two sets of nested sub-levels
2306 of the RISCV Program Counter.
2307
2308 In addition, as xepcvliw CSRs are relative to the beginning of the VLIW
2309 block, branches MUST be restricted to within the block, i.e. addressing
2310 is now restricted to the start (and very short) length of the block.
2311
2312 Also: calling subroutines is inadviseable, unless they can be entirely
2313 accomplished within a block.
2314
2315 A normal jump and a normal function call may only be taken by letting
2316 the VLIW end, returning to "normal" standard RV mode, using RVC, 32 bit
2317 or P48/64-\*-type opcodes.
2318
2319 ## Links
2320
2321 * <https://groups.google.com/d/msg/comp.arch/yIFmee-Cx-c/jRcf0evSAAAJ>
2322
2323 # Subsets of RV functionality
2324
2325 This section describes the differences when SV is implemented on top of
2326 different subsets of RV.
2327
2328 ## Common options
2329
2330 It is permitted to limit the size of either (or both) the register files
2331 down to the original size of the standard RV architecture. However, below
2332 the mandatory limits set in the RV standard will result in non-compliance
2333 with the SV Specification.
2334
2335 ## RV32 / RV32F
2336
2337 When RV32 or RV32F is implemented, XLEN is set to 32, and thus the
2338 maximum limit for predication is also restricted to 32 bits. Whilst not
2339 actually specifically an "option" it is worth noting.
2340
2341 ## RV32G
2342
2343 Normally in standard RV32 it does not make much sense to have
2344 RV32G, The critical instructions that are missing in standard RV32
2345 are those for moving data to and from the double-width floating-point
2346 registers into the integer ones, as well as the FCVT routines.
2347
2348 In an earlier draft of SV, it was possible to specify an elwidth
2349 of double the standard register size: this had to be dropped,
2350 and may be reintroduced in future revisions.
2351
2352 ## RV32 (not RV32F / RV32G) and RV64 (not RV64F / RV64G)
2353
2354 When floating-point is not implemented, the size of the User Register and
2355 Predication CSR tables may be halved, to only 4 2x16-bit CSRs (8 entries
2356 per table).
2357
2358 ## RV32E
2359
2360 In embedded scenarios the User Register and Predication CSRs may be
2361 dropped entirely, or optionally limited to 1 CSR, such that the combined
2362 number of entries from the M-Mode CSR Register table plus U-Mode
2363 CSR Register table is either 4 16-bit entries or (if the U-Mode is
2364 zero) only 2 16-bit entries (M-Mode CSR table only). Likewise for
2365 the Predication CSR tables.
2366
2367 RV32E is the most likely candidate for simply detecting that registers
2368 are marked as "vectorised", and generating an appropriate exception
2369 for the VL loop to be implemented in software.
2370
2371 ## RV128
2372
2373 RV128 has not been especially considered, here, however it has some
2374 extremely large possibilities: double the element width implies
2375 256-bit operands, spanning 2 128-bit registers each, and predication
2376 of total length 128 bit given that XLEN is now 128.
2377
2378 # Under consideration <a name="issues"></a>
2379
2380 for element-grouping, if there is unused space within a register
2381 (3 16-bit elements in a 64-bit register for example), recommend:
2382
2383 * For the unused elements in an integer register, the used element
2384 closest to the MSB is sign-extended on write and the unused elements
2385 are ignored on read.
2386 * The unused elements in a floating-point register are treated as-if
2387 they are set to all ones on write and are ignored on read, matching the
2388 existing standard for storing smaller FP values in larger registers.
2389
2390 ---
2391
2392 info register,
2393
2394 > One solution is to just not support LR/SC wider than a fixed
2395 > implementation-dependent size, which must be at least 
2396 >1 XLEN word, which can be read from a read-only CSR
2397 > that can also be used for info like the kind and width of 
2398 > hw parallelism supported (128-bit SIMD, minimal virtual 
2399 > parallelism, etc.) and other things (like maybe the number 
2400 > of registers supported). 
2401
2402 > That CSR would have to have a flag to make a read trap so
2403 > a hypervisor can simulate different values.
2404
2405 ----
2406
2407 > And what about instructions like JALR? 
2408
2409 answer: they're not vectorised, so not a problem
2410
2411 ----
2412
2413 * if opcode is in the RV32 group, rd, rs1 and rs2 bitwidth are
2414 XLEN if elwidth==default
2415 * if opcode is in the RV32I group, rd, rs1 and rs2 bitwidth are
2416 *32* if elwidth == default
2417
2418 ---
2419
2420 TODO: document different lengths for INT / FP regfiles, and provide
2421 as part of info register. 00=32, 01=64, 10=128, 11=reserved.
2422
2423 ---
2424
2425 TODO, update to remove RegCam and PredCam CSRs, just use SVprefix and
2426 VLIW format