# Alternative (SVPrefix) format This VBLOCK mode effectively extends [[sv_prefix_proposal]] to cover multiple registers. The basic principle: the "prefix" specifies which of source and destination registers are to be considered "vectors" (or scalars), however where in SVPrefix that applies to only one instruction, the "vector" tag designations *continue to cascade* into subsequent instructions within the VBLOCK. Its advantage over the main format is that the main format requires explicit naming of the registers to be tagged (taking up 5 bits each time). | 15 | 14:12 | 11:10 | 9 | 8:7 | 6:0 | | - | ----- | ----- | ----- | --------| ------- | | rsvd | 16xil | rsvd | rsvd | SVPMode | 1111111 | | SVPMode | 1:0 | | ------- | --- | | non-SVP | 0b00 | | P48 Mode | 0b01 | | P64 Mode | 0b10 | | Twin-SVP | 0b11 | non-SVP mode uses the extended format (see main VBLOCK spec [[vblock_format]]) When P48 Mode is enabled (0b01), the P48 prefix follows the VBLOCK header | 15:11 | 10:0 | | - | ---------- | | rsvd | P48-Prefix | When P64 Mode is enabled (0b10), the P64 prefix also follows: | 31:16 | 15:11 | 10:0 | | ---------- | - | ---------- | | P64-prefix | rsvd | P48-Prefix | When Twin-SVP Mode is enabled (0b11), a *second* P48-P64 prefix pair follows in the VBLOCK, which applies vector-context from the *second* instruction's registers. # Rules * SVP-VBLOCK is read (48/64), and indicates that certain registers are to be "tagged". Element widths and predication are also specified * The very first instruction (RVC, OP32) within the VBLOCk says **which** registers those tags are to be associated with * Those registers **remain** tagged with that context *for the entire duration of the VBLOCK*. * At the end of the VBLOCK the context terminates and the tags are discarded. * There is rule in SVP about vs#/vd# fields, if they are not present in a given P48/P64 prefix, an "implicit" field is created for that src or dest register in the form of a bitwise "OR" of all present vs#/vd# fields. *This rule continues to apply* to the instructions following the first (and second, if applicable) in the VBLOCK, however the ORing rule *stops* i.e does not cascade via rd in the following instructions. * If an instruction is used where registers are implicitly determined to be scalars, they *remain* scalars when used in subsequent instructions. Example (contrived): * VBLOCK, P48 prefix only (SVPMode=0b01), vs1=1, vs2=0 * 1st instruction in VBLOCK: ADD x3, x5, x12 * 2nd instruction in VBLOCK: ADD x7, x5, x3 * 3rd instruction in VBLOCK: ADD x9, x4, x4 * 4th instruction in VBLOCK: ADD x7, x5, x4 * vs1=1 indicates that the source register rs1 is to be considered a vector, whilst rs2 is to be a "scalar". * The first instruction has "x5" as rs1. It is therefore "marked" as a vector * However with there being no "specifier" for vd in the P48 prefix, vd is calculated as "vd = vs1 | vs2" and is therefore set to "1". * The "full" specification for the 1st add is therefore "ADD vector-x3, vector-x5, scalar-x12". * The second instruction also uses x5, however x3 is also now considered a "vector", and, consequently, so is x7. * The "full" specification for the 2nd add is therefore "ADD vector-x7, vector-x5, vector-x3". * The 3rd instruction has no context applied to any of its registers, therefore x9 and x4 are determined to be "scalar" * The specification for the 3rd add is therefore "ADD scalar-x9, scalar-x4, scalar-x4" * The 4th instruction. **despite** using x7 as vector in instruction 2, x7 is **not** listed in the 1st instruction's operands. Likewise for x4. Therefore the "OR" rule applies to them. * x5 on the other hand *is* in the 1st instruction's operands, and, given that x4 abd x7 have the "OR" rule applied, are also marked as "vector" *despite x4 being fornerly scalar in the 3rd instruction*. * Therefore, the "full" specification for the 4th add is: "ADD vector-x7, vector-x5, vector-x4" Writing those out separately, for clarity: ADD vector-x3, vector-x5, scalar-x12 # from vs1=1, vs2=0, vd=vs1|vs2 ADD vector-x7, vector-x5, vector-x3 # x7: v-x5 | v-x3 ADD scalar-x9, scalar-x4, scalar-x4 # x9, x4 not prefixed, therefore scalar ADD vector-x7, vector-x5, vector-x4 # x4, x7, x5 vector Twin-SVP mode allows certain registers to be explicitly marked as "scalar", where some of the rules might otherwise start to cascade through and cause registers to be come undesirably marked as "vectors". The reason why the OR rule cannot cascade onwards is because if a trap occurs and the context has to be reestablished, it may be reestablished purely with the VBLOCK header and by decoding the first (and second) instruction. If the cascade of what was marked "vector" was allowed to continue, it would require re-reading of every opcode up to the point where execution of the VBLOCK left off, on order to reestablish the full cascade context. # Discussion * *