requires registers to have extra hidden bits: register
x30 is now "x30:0+x30.1+x30.2+x30.3". have to discuss.
+See [[requirements_specification]]
+
# Conversation Notes
----
+http://lists.libre-riscv.org/pipermail/libre-riscv-dev/2019-January/000310.html
+
+> We will need fast f32 <-> i16 at least since that is used for 16-bit
+> z-buffers. Since we don't have indexed load/store and need to manually
+> construct pointer vectors we will need fast i32 -> i64. We will also need
+> fast i32 <-> f32.
+
+----
+
'm thinking about using tilelink (or something similar) internally as
having a cache-coherent protocol is required for implementing Vulkan
(unless you want to turn off the cache for the GPU memory, which I
----
-> however... we don't mind that, as the vectorisation engine will
+> however... we don't mind that, as the vectorisation engine will
> be, for the most part, generating sequentially-increasing index
> dest *and* src registers, so we kinda get away with it.
as you need in 4 cycles for the last operand, then write as much as you
can for the result. This simply requires flip-flops to capture the width
and then deliver operands in parallel (serial to parallel converter) and
-similarly for writing.
+similarly for writing.
+
+----
+
+* <https://groups.google.com/d/msg/comp.arch/gedwgWzCK4A/32aNXIzeDQAJ>
+
+discussion of how to do dest-latches rather than src-latches.
+
+also includes need for forwarding to achieve it (synonymous with
+Tomasulo CDB).
+
+also, assigning a result number at issue time allows multiple results
+to be stored-and-forwarded, meaning that multiplying up the FUs is
+not needed.
+
+also, discussion of how to have multiple instructions issued even with
+the same dest reg: drop the reg-store and effectively rename them
+to "R.FU#". exceptions under discussion.
+
+----
+
+Speculation
+
+<https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/comp.arch/mzXXTU2GUSo>
+
+There is a minimal partial order that is immune to Spetré amd friends,
+You have the dependence matrix that imposes a minimal partial order on
+executing instructions (at least in the architecture you have been
+discussing herein) You just have to prove that your matrix provides
+that minimal partial order for instructions.
+
+Then you have to prove that no cache/tlb state can be updated prior to the
+causing instruction being made retirable (not retired retirable).
+
+As to cache updates, all "reasonable" interfaces that service cache misses
+will have line buffers to deal with the inbound and outbound memory traffic.
+These buffers will provide the appropriate data to the execution stream,
+but not update the cache until the causing instruction becomes transitively
+retirable. This will put "a little" extra pressure on these buffers.
+
+As to the TLB it is easy enough on a TLB miss to fetch the mapping tables
+transitively and arrive at a PTE. This PTE cannot be installed until the
+causing instruction becomes retirable. The miss buffers are probably the
+right place, and if a second TLB miss occurs, you might just as well walk
+the tables again and if it hits the line in the buffer use the data from
+there. When we looked at this a long time ago, there was little benefit
+for being able to walk more than one TLB miss at a time.
+
+----
+
+Register Prefixes <a name="prefixes" />
+
+<pre>
+| 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
+| ---------------- | ---------------- | ---------------- | ---------------- |
+| | xxxxxxxxxxxxxxaa | xxxxxxxxxxxxxxaa | XXXXXXXXXX011111 |
+| | xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx | xxxxxxxxxxxbbb11 | XXXXXXXXXX011111 |
+| | xxxxxxxxxxxxxxaa | XXXXXXXXXX011111 | XXXXXXXXXX011111 |
+| xxxxxxxxxxxxxxaa | xxxxxxxxxxxxxxaa | XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX | XXXXXXXXX0111111 |
+| xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx | xxxxxxxxxxxbbb11 | XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX | XXXXXXXXX0111111 |
+</pre>
+
+<pre>
+2x16-bit / 32-bit:
+
+| 9 8 | 7 6 5 | 4 3 | 2 1 | 0 |
+| ----- | ----- | ------- | ------- | - |
+| elwid | VL | rs[6:5] | rd[6:5] | 0 |
+
+| 9 8 7 6 5 | 4 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
+| --------- | -------- | --- | --- | - |
+| predicate | predtarg | end | inv | 1 |
+
+
+| | xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx | xxxxxxxxxxxbbb11 | XXXXXXXXXX011111 |
+| | xxxxxxxxxxxxxxaa | XXXXXXXXXX011111 | XXXXXXXXXX011111 |
+| xxxxxxxxxxxxxxaa | xxxxxxxxxxxxxxaa | XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX | XXXXXXXXX0111111 |
+| xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx | xxxxxxxxxxxbbb11 | XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX | XXXXXXXXX0111111 |
+</pre>
+
+# MVX and other reg-shuffling
+
+<pre>
+> Crucial strategic op missing is MVX:
+> regs[rd]= regs[regs[rs1]]
+>
+we could modify the definition slightly:
+for i in 0..VL {
+ let offset = regs[rs1 + i];
+ // we could also limit on out-of-range
+ assert!(offset < VL); // trap on fail
+ regs[rd + i] = regs[rs2 + offset];
+}
+
+The dependency matrix would have the instruction depend on everything from
+rs2 to rs2 + VL and we let the execution unit figure it out. for
+simplicity, we could extend the dependencies to a power of 2 or something.
+
+We should add some constrained swizzle instructions for the more
+pipeline-friendly cases. One that will be important is:
+for i in (0..VL) {
+ let i = i * 4;
+ let s1: [0; 4];
+ for j in 0..4 {
+ s1[j] = regs[rs1 + i + j];
+ }
+ for j in 0..4 {
+ regs[rd + i + j] = s1[(imm >> j * 2) & 0x3];
+ }
+}
+Another is matrix transpose for (2-4)x(2-4) matrices which we can implement
+as similar to a strided ld/st except for registers.
+</pre>
+
+# TLBs / Virtual Memory <a name="tlb" />
+
+----
+
+We were specifically looking for ways to not need large CAMs since they are
+power-hungry when designing the instruction scheduling logic, so it may be
+a good idea to have a smaller L1 TLB and a larger, slower, more
+power-efficient, L2 TLB. I would have the L1 be 4-32 entries and the L2 can
+be 32-128 as long as the L2 cam isn't being activated every clock cycle. We
+can also share the L2 between the instruction and data caches.
+
+# Register File having same-cycle "forwarding"
+
+discussion about CDC 6600 Register File: it was capable of forwarding
+operands being written out to "reads", *in the same cycle*. this
+effectively turns the Reg File *into* a "Forwarding Bus".
+
+we aim to only have (4 banks of) 2R1W ported register files,
+with *additional* Forwarding Multiplexers (which look exactly
+like multi-port regfile gate logic).
+
+suggestion by Mitch is to have a "demon" on the front of the regfile,
+<https://groups.google.com/d/msg/comp.arch/gedwgWzCK4A/qY2SYjd2DgAJ>,
+which:
+
+ basically, you are going to end up with a "demon" at the RF and when
+ all read reservations have been satisfied the demon determines if the
+ result needs to be written to the RF or discarded. The demon sees
+ the instruction issue process, the branch resolutions, and the FU
+ exceptions, and keeps track of whether the result needs to be written.
+ It then forwards the result from the FU and clears the slot, then writes
+ the result to the RF if needed.
+
# Design Layout
ok,so continuing some thoughts-in-order notes:
This is a lower expense than building another read port into the RF, in
both area and power, and uses the pipeline efficiently.
+# Explicit Vector Length (EVL) extension to LLVM <a name="llvm_evl" />
+
+* <https://reviews.llvm.org/D57504>
+* <http://lists.libre-riscv.org/pipermail/libre-riscv-dev/2019-January/000433.html>
+* <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-January/129822.html>
+
# References
* <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomasulo_algorithm>