split out reg table format
[libreriscv.git] / simple_v_extension / specification.mdwn
1 # Simple-V (Parallelism Extension Proposal) Specification
2
3 * Copyright (C) 2017, 2018, 2019 Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
4 * Status: DRAFTv0.6
5 * Last edited: 21 jun 2019
6 * Ancillary resource: [[opcodes]]
7 * Ancillary resource: [[sv_prefix_proposal]]
8 * Ancillary resource: [[abridged_spec]]
9 * Ancillary resource: [[vblock_format]]
10 * Ancillary resource: [[appendix]]
11
12 With thanks to:
13
14 * Allen Baum
15 * Bruce Hoult
16 * comp.arch
17 * Jacob Bachmeyer
18 * Guy Lemurieux
19 * Jacob Lifshay
20 * Terje Mathisen
21 * The RISC-V Founders, without whom this all would not be possible.
22
23 [[!toc ]]
24
25 # Summary and Background: Rationale
26
27 Simple-V is a uniform parallelism API for RISC-V hardware that has several
28 unplanned side-effects including code-size reduction, expansion of
29 HINT space and more. The reason for
30 creating it is to provide a manageable way to turn a pre-existing design
31 into a parallel one, in a step-by-step incremental fashion, without adding any new opcodes, thus allowing
32 the implementor to focus on adding hardware where it is needed and necessary.
33 The primary target is for mobile-class 3D GPUs and VPUs, with secondary
34 goals being to reduce executable size (by extending the effectiveness of RV opcodes, RVC in particular) and reduce context-switch latency.
35
36 Critically: **No new instructions are added**. The parallelism (if any
37 is implemented) is implicitly added by tagging *standard* scalar registers
38 for redirection. When such a tagged register is used in any instruction,
39 it indicates that the PC shall **not** be incremented; instead a loop
40 is activated where *multiple* instructions are issued to the pipeline
41 (as determined by a length CSR), with contiguously incrementing register
42 numbers starting from the tagged register. When the last "element"
43 has been reached, only then is the PC permitted to move on. Thus
44 Simple-V effectively sits (slots) *in between* the instruction decode phase
45 and the ALU(s).
46
47 The barrier to entry with SV is therefore very low. The minimum
48 compliant implementation is software-emulation (traps), requiring
49 only the CSRs and CSR tables, and that an exception be thrown if an
50 instruction's registers are detected to have been tagged. The looping
51 that would otherwise be done in hardware is thus carried out in software,
52 instead. Whilst much slower, it is "compliant" with the SV specification,
53 and may be suited for implementation in RV32E and also in situations
54 where the implementor wishes to focus on certain aspects of SV, without
55 unnecessary time and resources into the silicon, whilst also conforming
56 strictly with the API. A good area to punt to software would be the
57 polymorphic element width capability for example.
58
59 Hardware Parallelism, if any, is therefore added at the implementor's
60 discretion to turn what would otherwise be a sequential loop into a
61 parallel one.
62
63 To emphasise that clearly: Simple-V (SV) is *not*:
64
65 * A SIMD system
66 * A SIMT system
67 * A Vectorisation Microarchitecture
68 * A microarchitecture of any specific kind
69 * A mandary parallel processor microarchitecture of any kind
70 * A supercomputer extension
71
72 SV does **not** tell implementors how or even if they should implement
73 parallelism: it is a hardware "API" (Application Programming Interface)
74 that, if implemented, presents a uniform and consistent way to *express*
75 parallelism, at the same time leaving the choice of if, how, how much,
76 when and whether to parallelise operations **entirely to the implementor**.
77
78 # Basic Operation
79
80 The principle of SV is as follows:
81
82 * Standard RV instructions are "prefixed" (extended) through a 48/64
83 bit format (single instruction option) or a variable
84 length VLIW-like prefix (multi or "grouped" option).
85 * The prefix(es) indicate which registers are "tagged" as
86 "vectorised". Predicates can also be added, and element widths
87 overridden on any src or dest register.
88 * A "Vector Length" CSR is set, indicating the span of any future
89 "parallel" operations.
90 * If any operation (a **scalar** standard RV opcode) uses a register
91 that has been so "marked" ("tagged"), a hardware "macro-unrolling loop"
92 is activated, of length VL, that effectively issues **multiple**
93 identical instructions using contiguous sequentially-incrementing
94 register numbers, based on the "tags".
95 * **Whether they be executed sequentially or in parallel or a
96 mixture of both or punted to software-emulation in a trap handler
97 is entirely up to the implementor**.
98
99 In this way an entire scalar algorithm may be vectorised with
100 the minimum of modification to the hardware and to compiler toolchains.
101
102 To reiterate: **There are *no* new opcodes**. The scheme works *entirely*
103 on hidden context that augments *scalar* RISCV instructions.
104
105 # CSRs <a name="csrs"></a>
106
107 * An optional "reshaping" CSR key-value table which remaps from a 1D
108 linear shape to 2D or 3D, including full transposition.
109
110 There are five additional CSRs, available in any privilege level:
111
112 * MVL (the Maximum Vector Length)
113 * VL (which has different characteristics from standard CSRs)
114 * SUBVL (effectively a kind of SIMD)
115 * STATE (containing copies of MVL, VL and SUBVL as well as context information)
116 * PCVBLK (the current operation being executed within a VBLOCK Group)
117
118 For User Mode there are the following CSRs:
119
120 * uePCVBLK (a copy of the sub-execution Program Counter, that is relative
121 to the start of the current VBLOCK Group, set on a trap).
122 * ueSTATE (useful for saving and restoring during context switch,
123 and for providing fast transitions)
124
125 There are also two additional CSRs for Supervisor-Mode:
126
127 * sePCVBLK
128 * seSTATE
129
130 And likewise for M-Mode:
131
132 * mePCVBLK
133 * meSTATE
134
135 The u/m/s CSRs are treated and handled exactly like their (x)epc
136 equivalents. On entry to or exit from a privilege level, the contents of its (x)eSTATE are swapped with STATE.
137
138 Thus for example, a User Mode trap will end up swapping STATE and ueSTATE
139 (on both entry and exit), allowing User Mode traps to have their own
140 Vectorisation Context set up, separated from and unaffected by normal
141 user applications. If an M Mode trap occurs in the middle of the U Mode trap, STATE is swapped with meSTATE, and restored on exit: the U Mode trap continues unaware that the M Mode trap even occurred.
142
143 Likewise, Supervisor Mode may perform context-switches, safe in the
144 knowledge that its Vectorisation State is unaffected by User Mode.
145
146 The access pattern for these groups of CSRs in each mode follows the
147 same pattern for other CSRs that have M-Mode and S-Mode "mirrors":
148
149 * In M-Mode, the S-Mode and U-Mode CSRs are separate and distinct.
150 * In S-Mode, accessing and changing of the M-Mode CSRs is transparently
151 identical
152 to changing the S-Mode CSRs. Accessing and changing the U-Mode
153 CSRs is permitted.
154 * In U-Mode, accessing and changing of the S-Mode and U-Mode CSRs
155 is prohibited.
156
157 An interesting side effect of SV STATE being
158 separate and distinct in S Mode
159 is that
160 Vectorised saving of an entire register file to the stack is a single
161 instruction (through accidental provision of LOAD-MULTI semantics). If the
162 SVPrefix P64-LD-type format is used, LOAD-MULTI may even be done with a
163 single standalone 64 bit opcode (P64 may set up SUBVL, VL and MVL from an
164 immediate field, to cover the full regfile). It can even be predicated, which opens up some very
165 interesting possibilities.
166
167 (x)EPCVBLK CSRs must be treated exactly like their corresponding (x)epc
168 equivalents. See VBLOCK section for details.
169
170 ## MAXVECTORLENGTH (MVL) <a name="mvl" />
171
172 MAXVECTORLENGTH is the same concept as MVL in RVV, except that it
173 is variable length and may be dynamically set. MVL is
174 however limited to the regfile bitwidth XLEN (1-32 for RV32,
175 1-64 for RV64 and so on).
176
177 The reason for setting this limit is so that predication registers, when
178 marked as such, may fit into a single register as opposed to fanning
179 out over several registers. This keeps the hardware implementation a
180 little simpler.
181
182 The other important factor to note is that the actual MVL is internally
183 stored **offset by one**, so that it can fit into only 6 bits (for RV64)
184 and still cover a range up to XLEN bits. Attempts to set MVL to zero will
185 return an exception. This is expressed more clearly in the "pseudocode"
186 section, where there are subtle differences between CSRRW and CSRRWI.
187
188 ## Vector Length (VL) <a name="vl" />
189
190 VSETVL is slightly different from RVV. Similar to RVV, VL is set to be within
191 the range 1 <= VL <= MVL (where MVL in turn is limited to 1 <= MVL <= XLEN)
192
193 VL = rd = MIN(vlen, MVL)
194
195 where 1 <= MVL <= XLEN
196
197 However just like MVL it is important to note that the range for VL has
198 subtle design implications, covered in the "CSR pseudocode" section
199
200 The fixed (specific) setting of VL allows vector LOAD/STORE to be used
201 to switch the entire bank of registers using a single instruction (see
202 Appendix, "Context Switch Example"). The reason for limiting VL to XLEN
203 is down to the fact that predication bits fit into a single register of
204 length XLEN bits.
205
206 The second and most important change is that, within the limits set by
207 MVL, the value passed in **must** be set in VL (and in the
208 destination register).
209
210 This has implication for the microarchitecture, as VL is required to be
211 set (limits from MVL notwithstanding) to the actual value
212 requested. RVV has the option to set VL to an arbitrary value that suits
213 the conditions and the micro-architecture: SV does *not* permit this.
214
215 The reason is so that if SV is to be used for a context-switch or as a
216 substitute for LOAD/STORE-Multiple, the operation can be done with only
217 2-3 instructions (setup of the CSRs, VSETVL x0, x0, #{regfilelen-1},
218 single LD/ST operation). If VL does *not* get set to the register file
219 length when VSETVL is called, then a software-loop would be needed.
220 To avoid this need, VL *must* be set to exactly what is requested
221 (limits notwithstanding).
222
223 Therefore, in turn, unlike RVV, implementors *must* provide
224 pseudo-parallelism (using sequential loops in hardware) if actual
225 hardware-parallelism in the ALUs is not deployed. A hybrid is also
226 permitted (as used in Broadcom's VideoCore-IV) however this must be
227 *entirely* transparent to the ISA.
228
229 The third change is that VSETVL is implemented as a CSR, where the
230 behaviour of CSRRW (and CSRRWI) must be changed to specifically store
231 the *new* value in the destination register, **not** the old value.
232 Where context-load/save is to be implemented in the usual fashion
233 by using a single CSRRW instruction to obtain the old value, the
234 *secondary* CSR must be used (STATE). This CSR by contrast behaves
235 exactly as standard CSRs, and contains more than just VL.
236
237 One interesting side-effect of using CSRRWI to set VL is that this
238 may be done with a single instruction, useful particularly for a
239 context-load/save. There are however limitations: CSRWI's immediate
240 is limited to 0-31 (representing VL=1-32).
241
242 Note that when VL is set to 1, vector operations cease (but not subvector
243 operations: that requires setting SUBVL=1) the hardware loop is reduced
244 to a single element: scalar operations. This is in effect the default,
245 normal operating mode. However it is important to appreciate that this
246 does **not** result in the Register table or SUBVL being disabled. Only
247 when the Register table is empty (P48/64 prefix fields notwithstanding)
248 would SV have no effect.
249
250 ## SUBVL - Sub Vector Length
251
252 This is a "group by quantity" that effectively asks each iteration
253 of the hardware loop to load SUBVL elements of width elwidth at a
254 time. Effectively, SUBVL is like a SIMD multiplier: instead of just 1
255 operation issued, SUBVL operations are issued.
256
257 Another way to view SUBVL is that each element in the VL length vector is
258 now SUBVL times elwidth bits in length and now comprises SUBVL discrete
259 sub operations. An inner SUBVL for-loop within a VL for-loop in effect,
260 with the sub-element increased every time in the innermost loop. This
261 is best illustrated in the (simplified) pseudocode example, in the
262 [[appendix]].
263
264 The primary use case for SUBVL is for 3D FP Vectors. A Vector of 3D
265 coordinates X,Y,Z for example may be loaded and multiplied then stored, per
266 VL element iteration, rather than having to set VL to three times larger.
267
268 Setting this CSR to 0 must raise an exception. Setting it to a value
269 greater than 4 likewise. To see the relationship with STATE, see below.
270
271 The main effect of SUBVL is that predication bits are applied per
272 **group**, rather than by individual element.
273
274 This saves a not insignificant number of instructions when handling 3D
275 vectors, as otherwise a much longer predicate mask would have to be set
276 up with regularly-repeated bit patterns.
277
278 See SUBVL Pseudocode illustration in the [[appendix]], for details.
279
280 ## STATE
281
282 This is a standard CSR that contains sufficient information for a
283 full context save/restore. It contains (and permits setting of):
284
285 * MVL
286 * VL
287 * destoffs - the destination element offset of the current parallel
288 instruction being executed
289 * srcoffs - for twin-predication, the source element offset as well.
290 * SUBVL
291 * svdestoffs - the subvector destination element offset of the current
292 parallel instruction being executed
293 * svsrcoffs - for twin-predication, the subvector source element offset
294 as well.
295
296 Interestingly STATE may hypothetically also be modified to make the
297 immediately-following instruction to skip a certain number of elements,
298 by playing with destoffs and srcoffs (and the subvector offsets as well)
299
300 Setting destoffs and srcoffs is realistically intended for saving state
301 so that exceptions (page faults in particular) may be serviced and the
302 hardware-loop that was being executed at the time of the trap, from
303 user-mode (or Supervisor-mode), may be returned to and continued from
304 exactly where it left off. The reason why this works is because setting
305 User-Mode STATE will not change (not be used) in M-Mode or S-Mode (and
306 is entirely why M-Mode and S-Mode have their own STATE CSRs, meSTATE
307 and seSTATE).
308
309 The format of the STATE CSR is as follows:
310
311 | (29..28 | (27..26) | (25..24) | (23..18) | (17..12) | (11..6) | (5...0) |
312 | ------- | -------- | -------- | -------- | -------- | ------- | ------- |
313 | dsvoffs | ssvoffs | subvl | destoffs | srcoffs | vl | maxvl |
314
315 The relationship between SUBVL and the subvl field is:
316
317 | SUBVL | (25..24) |
318 | ----- | -------- |
319 | 1 | 0b00 |
320 | 2 | 0b01 |
321 | 3 | 0b10 |
322 | 4 | 0b11 |
323
324 When setting this CSR, the following characteristics will be enforced:
325
326 * **MAXVL** will be truncated (after offset) to be within the range 1 to XLEN
327 * **VL** will be truncated (after offset) to be within the range 1 to MAXVL
328 * **SUBVL** which sets a SIMD-like quantity, has only 4 values so there
329 are no changes needed
330 * **srcoffs** will be truncated to be within the range 0 to VL-1
331 * **destoffs** will be truncated to be within the range 0 to VL-1
332 * **ssvoffs** will be truncated to be within the range 0 to SUBVL-1
333 * **dsvoffs** will be truncated to be within the range 0 to SUBVL-1
334
335 NOTE: if the following instruction is not a twin predicated instruction,
336 and destoffs or dsvoffs has been set to non-zero, subsequent execution
337 behaviour is undefined. **USE WITH CARE**.
338
339 ### Hardware rules for when to increment STATE offsets
340
341 The offsets inside STATE are like the indices in a loop, except
342 in hardware. They are also partially (conceptually) similar to a
343 "sub-execution Program Counter". As such, and to allow proper context
344 switching and to define correct exception behaviour, the following rules
345 must be observed:
346
347 * When the VL CSR is set, srcoffs and destoffs are reset to zero.
348 * Each instruction that contains a "tagged" register shall start
349 execution at the *current* value of srcoffs (and destoffs in the case
350 of twin predication)
351 * Unpredicated bits (in nonzeroing mode) shall cause the element operation
352 to skip, incrementing the srcoffs (or destoffs)
353 * On execution of an element operation, Exceptions shall **NOT** cause
354 srcoffs or destoffs to increment.
355 * On completion of the full Vector Loop (srcoffs = VL-1 or destoffs =
356 VL-1 after the last element is executed), both srcoffs and destoffs
357 shall be reset to zero.
358
359 This latter is why srcoffs and destoffs may be stored as values from
360 0 to XLEN-1 in the STATE CSR, because as loop indices they refer to
361 elements. srcoffs and destoffs never need to be set to VL: their maximum
362 operating values are limited to 0 to VL-1.
363
364 The same corresponding rules apply to SUBVL, svsrcoffs and svdestoffs.
365
366 ## MVL and VL Pseudocode
367
368 The pseudo-code for get and set of VL and MVL use the following internal
369 functions as follows:
370
371 set_mvl_csr(value, rd):
372 regs[rd] = STATE.MVL
373 STATE.MVL = MIN(value, STATE.MVL)
374
375 get_mvl_csr(rd):
376 regs[rd] = STATE.VL
377
378 set_vl_csr(value, rd):
379 STATE.VL = MIN(value, STATE.MVL)
380 regs[rd] = STATE.VL # yes returning the new value NOT the old CSR
381 return STATE.VL
382
383 get_vl_csr(rd):
384 regs[rd] = STATE.VL
385 return STATE.VL
386
387 Note that where setting MVL behaves as a normal CSR (returns the old
388 value), unlike standard CSR behaviour, setting VL will return the **new**
389 value of VL **not** the old one.
390
391 For CSRRWI, the range of the immediate is restricted to 5 bits. In order to
392 maximise the effectiveness, an immediate of 0 is used to set VL=1,
393 an immediate of 1 is used to set VL=2 and so on:
394
395 CSRRWI_Set_MVL(value):
396 set_mvl_csr(value+1, x0)
397
398 CSRRWI_Set_VL(value):
399 set_vl_csr(value+1, x0)
400
401 However for CSRRW the following pseudocode is used for MVL and VL,
402 where setting the value to zero will cause an exception to be raised.
403 The reason is that if VL or MVL are set to zero, the STATE CSR is
404 not capable of storing that value.
405
406 CSRRW_Set_MVL(rs1, rd):
407 value = regs[rs1]
408 if value == 0 or value > XLEN:
409 raise Exception
410 set_mvl_csr(value, rd)
411
412 CSRRW_Set_VL(rs1, rd):
413 value = regs[rs1]
414 if value == 0 or value > XLEN:
415 raise Exception
416 set_vl_csr(value, rd)
417
418 In this way, when CSRRW is utilised with a loop variable, the value
419 that goes into VL (and into the destination register) may be used
420 in an instruction-minimal fashion:
421
422 CSRvect1 = {type: F, key: a3, val: a3, elwidth: dflt}
423 CSRvect2 = {type: F, key: a7, val: a7, elwidth: dflt}
424 CSRRWI MVL, 3 # sets MVL == **4** (not 3)
425 j zerotest # in case loop counter a0 already 0
426 loop:
427 CSRRW VL, t0, a0 # vl = t0 = min(mvl, a0)
428 ld a3, a1 # load 4 registers a3-6 from x
429 slli t1, t0, 3 # t1 = vl * 8 (in bytes)
430 ld a7, a2 # load 4 registers a7-10 from y
431 add a1, a1, t1 # increment pointer to x by vl*8
432 fmadd a7, a3, fa0, a7 # v1 += v0 * fa0 (y = a * x + y)
433 sub a0, a0, t0 # n -= vl (t0)
434 st a7, a2 # store 4 registers a7-10 to y
435 add a2, a2, t1 # increment pointer to y by vl*8
436 zerotest:
437 bnez a0, loop # repeat if n != 0
438
439 With the STATE CSR, just like with CSRRWI, in order to maximise the
440 utilisation of the limited bitspace, "000000" in binary represents
441 VL==1, "00001" represents VL==2 and so on (likewise for MVL):
442
443 CSRRW_Set_SV_STATE(rs1, rd):
444 value = regs[rs1]
445 get_state_csr(rd)
446 STATE.MVL = set_mvl_csr(value[11:6]+1)
447 STATE.VL = set_vl_csr(value[5:0]+1)
448 STATE.destoffs = value[23:18]>>18
449 STATE.srcoffs = value[23:18]>>12
450
451 get_state_csr(rd):
452 regs[rd] = (STATE.MVL-1) | (STATE.VL-1)<<6 | (STATE.srcoffs)<<12 |
453 (STATE.destoffs)<<18
454 return regs[rd]
455
456 In both cases, whilst CSR read of VL and MVL return the exact values
457 of VL and MVL respectively, reading and writing the STATE CSR returns
458 those values **minus one**. This is absolutely critical to implement
459 if the STATE CSR is to be used for fast context-switching.
460
461 ## VL, MVL and SUBVL instruction aliases
462
463 This table contains pseudo-assembly instruction aliases. Note the
464 subtraction of 1 from the CSRRWI pseudo variants, to compensate for the
465 reduced range of the 5 bit immediate.
466
467 | alias | CSR |
468 | - | - |
469 | SETVL rd, rs | CSRRW VL, rd, rs |
470 | SETVLi rd, #n | CSRRWI VL, rd, #n-1 |
471 | GETVL rd | CSRRW VL, rd, x0 |
472 | SETMVL rd, rs | CSRRW MVL, rd, rs |
473 | SETMVLi rd, #n | CSRRWI MVL,rd, #n-1 |
474 | GETMVL rd | CSRRW MVL, rd, x0 |
475
476 Note: CSRRC and other bitsetting may still be used, they are however not particularly useful (very obscure).
477
478 ## Register key-value (CAM) table <a name="regcsrtable" />
479
480 *NOTE: in prior versions of SV, this table used to be writable and
481 accessible via CSRs. It is now stored in the VBLOCK instruction format. Note
482 that this table does *not* get applied to the SVPrefix P48/64 format,
483 only to scalar opcodes*
484
485 The purpose of the Register table is three-fold:
486
487 * To mark integer and floating-point registers as requiring "redirection"
488 if it is ever used as a source or destination in any given operation.
489 This involves a level of indirection through a 5-to-7-bit lookup table,
490 such that **unmodified** operands with 5 bits (3 for some RVC ops) may
491 access up to **128** registers.
492 * To indicate whether, after redirection through the lookup table, the
493 register is a vector (or remains a scalar).
494 * To over-ride the implicit or explicit bitwidth that the operation would
495 normally give the register.
496
497 Note: clearly, if an RVC operation uses a 3 bit spec'd register (x8-x15)
498 and the Register table contains entried that only refer to registerd
499 x1-x14 or x16-x31, such operations will *never* activate the VL hardware
500 loop!
501
502 If however the (16 bit) Register table does contain such an entry (x8-x15
503 or x2 in the case of LWSP), that src or dest reg may be redirected
504 anywhere to the *full* 128 register range. Thus, RVC becomes far more
505 powerful and has many more opportunities to reduce code size that in
506 Standard RV32/RV64 executables.
507
508 [[!inline raw="yes" pages="simple_v_extension/reg_table_format" ]]
509
510 i/f is set to "1" to indicate that the redirection/tag entry is to
511 be applied to integer registers; 0 indicates that it is relevant to
512 floating-point registers.
513
514 The 8 bit format is used for a much more compact expression. "isvec"
515 is implicit and, similar to [[sv-prefix-proposal]], the target vector
516 is "regnum<<2", implicitly. Contrast this with the 16-bit format where
517 the target vector is *explicitly* named in bits 8 to 14, and bit 15 may
518 optionally set "scalar" mode.
519
520 Note that whilst SVPrefix adds one extra bit to each of rd, rs1 etc.,
521 and thus the "vector" mode need only shift the (6 bit) regnum by 1 to
522 get the actual (7 bit) register number to use, there is not enough space
523 in the 8 bit format (only 5 bits for regnum) so "regnum<<2" is required.
524
525 vew has the following meanings, indicating that the instruction's
526 operand size is "over-ridden" in a polymorphic fashion:
527
528 | vew | bitwidth |
529 | --- | ------------------- |
530 | 00 | default (XLEN/FLEN) |
531 | 01 | 8 bit |
532 | 10 | 16 bit |
533 | 11 | 32 bit |
534
535 As the above table is a CAM (key-value store) it may be appropriate
536 (faster, implementation-wise) to expand it as follows:
537
538 [[!inline raw="yes" pages="simple_v_extension/reg_table" ]]
539
540 ## Predication Table <a name="predication_csr_table"></a>
541
542 *NOTE: in prior versions of SV, this table used to be writable and
543 accessible via CSRs. It is now stored in the VBLOCK instruction format.
544 The table does **not** apply to SVPrefix opcodes*
545
546 The Predication Table is a key-value store indicating whether, if a
547 given destination register (integer or floating-point) is referred to
548 in an instruction, it is to be predicated. Like the Register table, it
549 is an indirect lookup that allows the RV opcodes to not need modification.
550
551 It is particularly important to note
552 that the *actual* register used can be *different* from the one that is
553 in the instruction, due to the redirection through the lookup table.
554
555 * regidx is the register that in combination with the
556 i/f flag, if that integer or floating-point register is referred to in a
557 (standard RV) instruction results in the lookup table being referenced
558 to find the predication mask to use for this operation.
559 * predidx is the *actual* (full, 7 bit) register to be used for the
560 predication mask.
561 * inv indicates that the predication mask bits are to be inverted
562 prior to use *without* actually modifying the contents of the
563 register from which those bits originated.
564 * zeroing is either 1 or 0, and if set to 1, the operation must
565 place zeros in any element position where the predication mask is
566 set to zero. If zeroing is set to 0, unpredicated elements *must*
567 be left alone. Some microarchitectures may choose to interpret
568 this as skipping the operation entirely. Others which wish to
569 stick more closely to a SIMD architecture may choose instead to
570 interpret unpredicated elements as an internal "copy element"
571 operation (which would be necessary in SIMD microarchitectures
572 that perform register-renaming)
573 * ffirst is a special mode that stops sequential element processing when
574 a data-dependent condition occurs, whether a trap or a conditional test.
575 The handling of each (trap or conditional test) is slightly different:
576 see Instruction sections for further details
577
578 [[!inline raw="yes" pages="simple_v_extension/pred_table_format" ]]
579
580 The 8 bit format is a compact and less expressive variant of the full
581 16 bit format. Using the 8 bit formatis very different: the predicate
582 register to use is implicit, and numbering begins inplicitly from x9. The
583 regnum is still used to "activate" predication, in the same fashion as
584 described above.
585
586 The 16 bit Predication CSR Table is a key-value store, so
587 implementation-wise it will be faster to turn the table around (maintain
588 topologically equivalent state):
589
590 [[!inline raw="yes" pages="simple_v_extension/pred_table" ]]
591
592 So when an operation is to be predicated, it is the internal state that
593 is used. In Section 6.4.2 of Hwacha's Manual (EECS-2015-262) the following
594 pseudo-code for operations is given, where p is the explicit (direct)
595 reference to the predication register to be used:
596
597 for (int i=0; i<vl; ++i)
598 if ([!]preg[p][i])
599 (d ? vreg[rd][i] : sreg[rd]) =
600 iop(s1 ? vreg[rs1][i] : sreg[rs1],
601 s2 ? vreg[rs2][i] : sreg[rs2]); // for insts with 2 inputs
602
603 This instead becomes an *indirect* reference using the *internal* state
604 table generated from the Predication CSR key-value store, which is used
605 as follows.
606
607 if type(iop) == INT:
608 preg = int_pred_reg[rd]
609 else:
610 preg = fp_pred_reg[rd]
611
612 for (int i=0; i<vl; ++i)
613 predicate, zeroing = get_pred_val(type(iop) == INT, rd):
614 if (predicate && (1<<i))
615 result = iop(s1 ? regfile[rs1+i] : regfile[rs1],
616 s2 ? regfile[rs2+i] : regfile[rs2]);
617 (d ? regfile[rd+i] : regfile[rd]) = result
618 if preg.ffirst and result == 0:
619 VL = i # result was zero, end loop early, return VL
620 return
621 else if (zeroing)
622 (d ? regfile[rd+i] : regfile[rd]) = 0
623
624 Note:
625
626 * d, s1 and s2 are booleans indicating whether destination,
627 source1 and source2 are vector or scalar
628 * key-value CSR-redirection of rd, rs1 and rs2 have NOT been included
629 above, for clarity. rd, rs1 and rs2 all also must ALSO go through
630 register-level redirection (from the Register table) if they are
631 vectors.
632 * fail-on-first mode stops execution early whenever an operation
633 returns a zero value. floating-point results count both
634 positive-zero as well as negative-zero as "fail".
635
636 If written as a function, obtaining the predication mask (and whether
637 zeroing takes place) may be done as follows:
638
639 [[!inline raw="yes" pages="simple_v_extension/get_pred_value" ]]
640
641 Note here, critically, that **only** if the register is marked
642 in its **register** table entry as being "active" does the testing
643 proceed further to check if the **predicate** table entry is
644 also active.
645
646 Note also that this is in direct contrast to branch operations
647 for the storage of comparisions: in these specific circumstances
648 the requirement for there to be an active *register* entry
649 is removed.
650
651 ## Fail-on-First Mode <a name="ffirst-mode"></a>
652
653 ffirst is a special data-dependent predicate mode. There are two
654 variants: one is for faults: typically for LOAD/STORE operations,
655 which may encounter end of page faults during a series of operations.
656 The other variant is comparisons such as FEQ (or the augmented behaviour
657 of Branch), and any operation that returns a result of zero (whether
658 integer or floating-point). In the FP case, this includes negative-zero.
659
660 Note that the execution order must "appear" to be sequential for ffirst
661 mode to work correctly. An in-order architecture must execute the element
662 operations in sequence, whilst an out-of-order architecture must *commit*
663 the element operations in sequence (giving the appearance of in-order
664 execution).
665
666 Note also, that if ffirst mode is needed without predication, a special
667 "always-on" Predicate Table Entry may be constructed by setting
668 inverse-on and using x0 as the predicate register. This
669 will have the effect of creating a mask of all ones, allowing ffirst
670 to be set.
671
672 See [[appendix]] for more details on fail-on-first modes, as well as
673 pseudo-code, below.
674
675 ## REMAP CSR <a name="remap" />
676
677 (Note: both the REMAP and SHAPE sections are best read after the
678 rest of the document has been read)
679
680 There is one 32-bit CSR which may be used to indicate which registers,
681 if used in any operation, must be "reshaped" (re-mapped) from a linear
682 form to a 2D or 3D transposed form, or "offset" to permit arbitrary
683 access to elements within a register.
684
685 The 32-bit REMAP CSR may reshape up to 3 registers:
686
687 | 29..28 | 27..26 | 25..24 | 23 | 22..16 | 15 | 14..8 | 7 | 6..0 |
688 | ------ | ------ | ------ | -- | ------- | -- | ------- | -- | ------- |
689 | shape2 | shape1 | shape0 | 0 | regidx2 | 0 | regidx1 | 0 | regidx0 |
690
691 regidx0-2 refer not to the Register CSR CAM entry but to the underlying
692 *real* register (see regidx, the value) and consequently is 7-bits wide.
693 When set to zero (referring to x0), clearly reshaping x0 is pointless,
694 so is used to indicate "disabled".
695 shape0-2 refers to one of three SHAPE CSRs. A value of 0x3 is reserved.
696 Bits 7, 15, 23, 30 and 31 are also reserved, and must be set to zero.
697
698 It is anticipated that these specialist CSRs not be very often used.
699 Unlike the CSR Register and Predication tables, the REMAP CSRs use
700 the full 7-bit regidx so that they can be set once and left alone,
701 whilst the CSR Register entries pointing to them are disabled, instead.
702
703 ## SHAPE 1D/2D/3D vector-matrix remapping CSRs
704
705 (Note: both the REMAP and SHAPE sections are best read after the
706 rest of the document has been read)
707
708 There are three "shape" CSRs, SHAPE0, SHAPE1, SHAPE2, 32-bits in each,
709 which have the same format. When each SHAPE CSR is set entirely to zeros,
710 remapping is disabled: the register's elements are a linear (1D) vector.
711
712 | 26..24 | 23 | 22..16 | 15 | 14..8 | 7 | 6..0 |
713 | ------- | -- | ------- | -- | ------- | -- | ------- |
714 | permute | offs[2] | zdimsz | offs[1] | ydimsz | offs[0] | xdimsz |
715
716 offs is a 3-bit field, spread out across bits 7, 15 and 23, which
717 is added to the element index during the loop calculation.
718
719 xdimsz, ydimsz and zdimsz are offset by 1, such that a value of 0 indicates
720 that the array dimensionality for that dimension is 1. A value of xdimsz=2
721 would indicate that in the first dimension there are 3 elements in the
722 array. The format of the array is therefore as follows:
723
724 array[xdim+1][ydim+1][zdim+1]
725
726 However whilst illustrative of the dimensionality, that does not take the
727 "permute" setting into account. "permute" may be any one of six values
728 (0-5, with values of 6 and 7 being reserved, and not legal). The table
729 below shows how the permutation dimensionality order works:
730
731 | permute | order | array format |
732 | ------- | ----- | ------------------------ |
733 | 000 | 0,1,2 | (xdim+1)(ydim+1)(zdim+1) |
734 | 001 | 0,2,1 | (xdim+1)(zdim+1)(ydim+1) |
735 | 010 | 1,0,2 | (ydim+1)(xdim+1)(zdim+1) |
736 | 011 | 1,2,0 | (ydim+1)(zdim+1)(xdim+1) |
737 | 100 | 2,0,1 | (zdim+1)(xdim+1)(ydim+1) |
738 | 101 | 2,1,0 | (zdim+1)(ydim+1)(xdim+1) |
739
740 In other words, the "permute" option changes the order in which
741 nested for-loops over the array would be done. The algorithm below
742 shows this more clearly, and may be executed as a python program:
743
744 # mapidx = REMAP.shape2
745 xdim = 3 # SHAPE[mapidx].xdim_sz+1
746 ydim = 4 # SHAPE[mapidx].ydim_sz+1
747 zdim = 5 # SHAPE[mapidx].zdim_sz+1
748
749 lims = [xdim, ydim, zdim]
750 idxs = [0,0,0] # starting indices
751 order = [1,0,2] # experiment with different permutations, here
752 offs = 0 # experiment with different offsets, here
753
754 for idx in range(xdim * ydim * zdim):
755 new_idx = offs + idxs[0] + idxs[1] * xdim + idxs[2] * xdim * ydim
756 print new_idx,
757 for i in range(3):
758 idxs[order[i]] = idxs[order[i]] + 1
759 if (idxs[order[i]] != lims[order[i]]):
760 break
761 print
762 idxs[order[i]] = 0
763
764 Here, it is assumed that this algorithm be run within all pseudo-code
765 throughout this document where a (parallelism) for-loop would normally
766 run from 0 to VL-1 to refer to contiguous register
767 elements; instead, where REMAP indicates to do so, the element index
768 is run through the above algorithm to work out the **actual** element
769 index, instead. Given that there are three possible SHAPE entries, up to
770 three separate registers in any given operation may be simultaneously
771 remapped:
772
773 function op_add(rd, rs1, rs2) # add not VADD!
774 ...
775 ...
776  for (i = 0; i < VL; i++)
777 xSTATE.srcoffs = i # save context
778 if (predval & 1<<i) # predication uses intregs
779    ireg[rd+remap(id)] <= ireg[rs1+remap(irs1)] +
780 ireg[rs2+remap(irs2)];
781 if (!int_vec[rd ].isvector) break;
782 if (int_vec[rd ].isvector)  { id += 1; }
783 if (int_vec[rs1].isvector)  { irs1 += 1; }
784 if (int_vec[rs2].isvector)  { irs2 += 1; }
785
786 By changing remappings, 2D matrices may be transposed "in-place" for one
787 operation, followed by setting a different permutation order without
788 having to move the values in the registers to or from memory. Also,
789 the reason for having REMAP separate from the three SHAPE CSRs is so
790 that in a chain of matrix multiplications and additions, for example,
791 the SHAPE CSRs need only be set up once; only the REMAP CSR need be
792 changed to target different registers.
793
794 Note that:
795
796 * Over-running the register file clearly has to be detected and
797 an illegal instruction exception thrown
798 * When non-default elwidths are set, the exact same algorithm still
799 applies (i.e. it offsets elements *within* registers rather than
800 entire registers).
801 * If permute option 000 is utilised, the actual order of the
802 reindexing does not change!
803 * If two or more dimensions are set to zero, the actual order does not change!
804 * The above algorithm is pseudo-code **only**. Actual implementations
805 will need to take into account the fact that the element for-looping
806 must be **re-entrant**, due to the possibility of exceptions occurring.
807 See MSTATE CSR, which records the current element index.
808 * Twin-predicated operations require **two** separate and distinct
809 element offsets. The above pseudo-code algorithm will be applied
810 separately and independently to each, should each of the two
811 operands be remapped. *This even includes C.LDSP* and other operations
812 in that category, where in that case it will be the **offset** that is
813 remapped (see Compressed Stack LOAD/STORE section).
814 * Offset is especially useful, on its own, for accessing elements
815 within the middle of a register. Without offsets, it is necessary
816 to either use a predicated MV, skipping the first elements, or
817 performing a LOAD/STORE cycle to memory.
818 With offsets, the data does not have to be moved.
819 * Setting the total elements (xdim+1) times (ydim+1) times (zdim+1) to
820 less than MVL is **perfectly legal**, albeit very obscure. It permits
821 entries to be regularly presented to operands **more than once**, thus
822 allowing the same underlying registers to act as an accumulator of
823 multiple vector or matrix operations, for example.
824
825 Clearly here some considerable care needs to be taken as the remapping
826 could hypothetically create arithmetic operations that target the
827 exact same underlying registers, resulting in data corruption due to
828 pipeline overlaps. Out-of-order / Superscalar micro-architectures with
829 register-renaming will have an easier time dealing with this than
830 DSP-style SIMD micro-architectures.
831
832 # Instruction Execution Order
833
834 Simple-V behaves as if it is a hardware-level "macro expansion system",
835 substituting and expanding a single instruction into multiple sequential
836 instructions with contiguous and sequentially-incrementing registers.
837 As such, it does **not** modify - or specify - the behaviour and semantics of
838 the execution order: that may be deduced from the **existing** RV
839 specification in each and every case.
840
841 So for example if a particular micro-architecture permits out-of-order
842 execution, and it is augmented with Simple-V, then wherever instructions
843 may be out-of-order then so may the "post-expansion" SV ones.
844
845 If on the other hand there are memory guarantees which specifically
846 prevent and prohibit certain instructions from being re-ordered
847 (such as the Atomicity Axiom, or FENCE constraints), then clearly
848 those constraints **MUST** also be obeyed "post-expansion".
849
850 It should be absolutely clear that SV is **not** about providing new
851 functionality or changing the existing behaviour of a micro-architetural
852 design, or about changing the RISC-V Specification.
853 It is **purely** about compacting what would otherwise be contiguous
854 instructions that use sequentially-increasing register numbers down
855 to the **one** instruction.
856
857 # Instructions <a name="instructions" />
858
859 See [[appendix]]
860
861 # Exceptions
862
863 TODO: expand. Exceptions may occur at any time, in any given underlying
864 scalar operation. This implies that context-switching (traps) may
865 occur, and operation must be returned to where it left off. That in
866 turn implies that the full state - including the current parallel
867 element being processed - has to be saved and restored. This is
868 what the **STATE** CSR is for.
869
870 The implications are that all underlying individual scalar operations
871 "issued" by the parallelisation have to appear to be executed sequentially.
872 The further implications are that if two or more individual element
873 operations are underway, and one with an earlier index causes an exception,
874 it may be necessary for the microarchitecture to **discard** or terminate
875 operations with higher indices.
876
877 This being somewhat dissatisfactory, an "opaque predication" variant
878 of the STATE CSR is being considered.
879
880 # Hints
881
882 A "HINT" is an operation that has no effect on architectural state,
883 where its use may, by agreed convention, give advance notification
884 to the microarchitecture: branch prediction notification would be
885 a good example. Usually HINTs are where rd=x0.
886
887 With Simple-V being capable of issuing *parallel* instructions where
888 rd=x0, the space for possible HINTs is expanded considerably. VL
889 could be used to indicate different hints. In addition, if predication
890 is set, the predication register itself could hypothetically be passed
891 in as a *parameter* to the HINT operation.
892
893 No specific hints are yet defined in Simple-V
894
895 # Vector Block Format <a name="vliw-format"></a>
896
897 See ancillary resource: [[vblock_format]]
898
899 # Under consideration <a name="issues"></a>
900
901 for element-grouping, if there is unused space within a register
902 (3 16-bit elements in a 64-bit register for example), recommend:
903
904 * For the unused elements in an integer register, the used element
905 closest to the MSB is sign-extended on write and the unused elements
906 are ignored on read.
907 * The unused elements in a floating-point register are treated as-if
908 they are set to all ones on write and are ignored on read, matching the
909 existing standard for storing smaller FP values in larger registers.
910
911 ---
912
913 info register,
914
915 > One solution is to just not support LR/SC wider than a fixed
916 > implementation-dependent size, which must be at least 
917 >1 XLEN word, which can be read from a read-only CSR
918 > that can also be used for info like the kind and width of 
919 > hw parallelism supported (128-bit SIMD, minimal virtual 
920 > parallelism, etc.) and other things (like maybe the number 
921 > of registers supported). 
922
923 > That CSR would have to have a flag to make a read trap so
924 > a hypervisor can simulate different values.
925
926 ----
927
928 > And what about instructions like JALR? 
929
930 answer: they're not vectorised, so not a problem
931
932 ----
933
934 * if opcode is in the RV32 group, rd, rs1 and rs2 bitwidth are
935 XLEN if elwidth==default
936 * if opcode is in the RV32I group, rd, rs1 and rs2 bitwidth are
937 *32* if elwidth == default
938
939 ---
940
941 TODO: document different lengths for INT / FP regfiles, and provide
942 as part of info register. 00=32, 01=64, 10=128, 11=reserved.
943
944 ---
945
946 TODO, update to remove RegCam and PredCam CSRs, just use SVprefix and
947 VBLOCK format
948
949 ---
950
951 Could the 8 bit Register VBLOCK format use regnum<<1 instead, only accessing regs 0 to 64?
952
953 --
954
955 Expand the range of SUBVL and its associated svsrcoffs and svdestoffs by
956 adding a 2nd STATE CSR (or extending STATE to 64 bits). Future version?
957