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1 # REMAP <a name="remap" />
2
3 <!-- hide -->
4 * <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=143> matrix multiply
5 * <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=867> add svindex
6 * <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=885> svindex in simulator
7 * <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=911> offset svshape option
8 * <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=864> parallel reduction
9 * <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=930> DCT/FFT "strides"
10 * see [[sv/remap/appendix]] for examples and usage
11 * see [[sv/propagation]] for a future way to apply REMAP
12 * [[remap/discussion]]
13 <!-- show -->
14
15 REMAP is an advanced form of Vector "Structure Packing" that provides
16 hardware-level support for commonly-used *nested* loop patterns that would
17 otherwise require full inline loop unrolling. For more general reordering
18 an Indexed REMAP mode is available (an abstracted analog to `xxperm`).
19
20 REMAP allows the usual sequential vector loop `0..VL-1` to be "reshaped"
21 (re-mapped) from a linear form to a 2D or 3D transposed form, or "offset"
22 to permit arbitrary access to elements (when elwidth overrides are
23 used), independently on each Vector src or dest register. Aside from
24 Indexed REMAP this is entirely Hardware-accelerated reordering and
25 consequently not costly in terms of register access. It will however
26 place a burden on Multi-Issue systems but no more than if the equivalent
27 Scalar instructions were explicitly loop-unrolled without SVP64, and
28 some advanced implementations may even find the Deterministic nature of
29 the Scheduling to be easier on resources.
30
31 The initial primary motivation of REMAP was for Matrix Multiplication,
32 reordering of sequential data in-place: in-place DCT and FFT were
33 easily justified given the exceptionally high usage in Computer Science.
34 Four SPRs are provided which may be applied to any GPR, FPR or CR Field so
35 that for example a single FMAC may be used in a single hardware-controlled
36 100% Deterministic loop to perform 5x3 times 3x4 Matrix multiplication,
37 generating 60 FMACs *without needing explicit assembler unrolling*.
38 Additional uses include regular "Structure Packing" such as RGB pixel
39 data extraction and reforming (although less costly vec2/3/4 reshaping
40 is achievable with `PACK/UNPACK`).
41
42 Even once designed as an independent RISC-paradigm abstraction system
43 Matrix REMAP was realised could be applied to min/max instructions to
44 achieve Floyd-Warshall Graph computations, or to AND/OR Ternary
45 bitmanipulation to compute Warshall Transitive Closure, or
46 to perform Cryptographic Matrix operations with Galois Field
47 variants of Multiply-Accumulate. This *without
48 adding actual explicit Vector opcodes for any of the same*.
49
50 Thus it should be very clear:
51 REMAP, like all of SV, is abstracted out, meaning that unlike traditional
52 Vector ISAs which would typically only have a limited set of instructions
53 that can be structure-packed (LD/ST and Move operations
54 being the most common), REMAP may be applied to
55 literally any instruction: CRs, Arithmetic, Logical, LD/ST, even
56 Vectorised Branch-Conditional.
57
58 When SUBVL is greater than 1 a given group of Subvector
59 elements are kept together: effectively the group becomes the
60 element, and with REMAP applying to elements
61 (not sub-elements) each group is REMAPed together.
62 Swizzle *can* however be applied to the same
63 instruction as REMAP, providing re-sequencing of
64 Subvector elements which REMAP cannot. Also as explained in [[sv/mv.swizzle]], [[sv/mv.vec]] and the [[svp64/appendix]], Pack and Unpack Mode bits
65 can extend down into Sub-vector elements to influence vec2/vec3/vec4
66 sequential reordering, but even here, REMAP reordering is not *individually*
67 extended down to the actual sub-vector elements themselves.
68 This keeps the relevant Predicate Mask bit applicable to the Subvector
69 group, just as it does when REMAP is not active.
70
71 In its general form, REMAP is quite expensive to set up, and on some
72 implementations may introduce latency, so should realistically be used
73 only where it is worthwhile. Given that even with latency the fact
74 that up to 127 operations can be Deterministically issued (from a single
75 instruction) it should be clear that REMAP should not be dismissed
76 for *possible* latency alone. Commonly-used patterns such as Matrix
77 Multiply, DCT and FFT have helper instruction options which make REMAP
78 easier to use.
79
80 *Future specification note: future versions of the REMAP Management instructions
81 will extend to EXT1xx Prefixed variants. This will overcome some of the limitations
82 present in the 32-bit variants of the REMAP Management instructions that at
83 present require direct writing to SVSHAPE0-3 SPRs. Additional
84 REMAP Modes may also be introduced at that time.*
85
86 There are four types of REMAP:
87
88 * **Matrix**, also known as 2D and 3D reshaping, can perform in-place
89 Matrix transpose and rotate. The Shapes are set up for an "Outer Product"
90 Matrix Multiply.
91 * **FFT/DCT**, with full triple-loop in-place support: limited to
92 Power-2 RADIX
93 * **Indexing**, for any general-purpose reordering, also includes
94 limited 2D reshaping as well as Element "offsetting".
95 * **Parallel Reduction**, for scheduling a sequence of operations
96 in a Deterministic fashion, in a way that may be parallelised,
97 to reduce a Vector down to a single value.
98
99 Best implemented on top of a Multi-Issue Out-of-Order Micro-architecture,
100 REMAP Schedules are 100% Deterministic **including Indexing** and are
101 designed to be incorporated in between the Decode and Issue phases,
102 directly into Register Hazard Management.
103
104 As long as the SVSHAPE SPRs
105 are not written to directly, Hardware may treat REMAP as 100%
106 Deterministic: all REMAP Management instructions take static
107 operands (no dynamic register operands)
108 with the exception of Indexed Mode, and even then
109 Architectural State is permitted to assume that the Indices
110 are cacheable from the point at which the `svindex` instruction
111 is executed.
112
113 Parallel Reduction is unusual in that it requires a full vector array
114 of results (not a scalar) and uses the rest of the result Vector for
115 the purposes of storing intermediary calculations. As these intermediary
116 results are Deterministically computed they may be useful.
117 Additionally, because the intermediate results are always written out
118 it is possible to service Precise Interrupts without affecting latency
119 (a common limitation of Vector ISAs implementing explicit
120 Parallel Reduction instructions, because their Architectural State cannot
121 hold the partial results).
122
123 ## Basic principle
124
125 The following illustrates why REMAP was added.
126
127 * normal vector element read/write of operands would be sequential
128 (0 1 2 3 ....)
129 * this is not appropriate for (e.g.) Matrix multiply which requires
130 accessing elements in alternative sequences (0 3 6 1 4 7 ...)
131 * normal Vector ISAs use either Indexed-MV or Indexed-LD/ST to "cope"
132 with this. both are expensive (copy large vectors, spill through memory)
133 and very few Packed SIMD ISAs cope with non-Power-2
134 (Duplicate-data inline-loop-unrolling is the costly solution)
135 * REMAP **redefines** the order of access according to set
136 (Deterministic) "Schedules".
137 * Matrix Schedules are not at all restricted to power-of-two boundaries
138 making it unnecessary to have for example specialised 3x4 transpose
139 instructions of other Vector ISAs.
140 * DCT and FFT REMAP are RADIX-2 limited but this is the case in existing Packed/Predicated
141 SIMD ISAs anyway (and Bluestein Convolution is typically deployed to
142 solve that).
143
144 Only the most commonly-used algorithms in computer science have REMAP
145 support, due to the high cost in both the ISA and in hardware. For
146 arbitrary remapping the `Indexed` REMAP may be used.
147
148 ## Example Usage
149
150 * `svshape` to set the type of reordering to be applied to an
151 otherwise usual `0..VL-1` hardware for-loop
152 * `svremap` to set which registers a given reordering is to apply to
153 (RA, RT etc)
154 * `sv.{instruction}` where any Vectorised register marked by `svremap`
155 will have its ordering REMAPPED according to the schedule set
156 by `svshape`.
157
158 The following illustrative example multiplies a 3x4 and a 5x3
159 matrix to create
160 a 5x4 result:
161
162 ```
163 svshape 5,4,3,0,0 # Outer Product 5x4 by 4x3
164 svremap 15,1,2,3,0,0,0,0 # link Schedule to registers
165 sv.fmadds *0,*32,*64,*0 # 60 FMACs get executed here
166 ```
167
168 * svshape sets up the four SVSHAPE SPRS for a Matrix Schedule
169 * svremap activates four out of five registers RA RB RC RT RS (15)
170 * svremap requests:
171 - RA to use SVSHAPE1
172 - RB to use SVSHAPE2
173 - RC to use SVSHAPE3
174 - RT to use SVSHAPE0
175 - RS Remapping to not be activated
176 * sv.fmadds has vectors RT=0, RA=32, RB=64, RC=0
177 * With REMAP being active each register's element index is
178 *independently* transformed using the specified SHAPEs.
179
180 Thus the Vector Loop is arranged such that the use of
181 the multiply-and-accumulate instruction executes precisely the required
182 Schedule to perform an in-place in-registers Outer Product
183 Matrix Multiply with no
184 need to perform additional Transpose or register copy instructions.
185 The example above may be executed as a unit test and demo,
186 [here](https://git.libre-soc.org/?p=openpower-isa.git;a=blob;f=src/openpower/decoder/isa/test_caller_svp64_matrix.py;h=c15479db9a36055166b6b023c7495f9ca3637333;hb=a17a252e474d5d5bf34026c25a19682e3f2015c3#l94)
187
188 *Hardware Architectural note: with the Scheduling applying as a Phase between
189 Decode and Issue in a Deterministic fashion the Register Hazards may be
190 easily computed and a standard Out-of-Order Micro-Architecture exploited to good
191 effect. Even an In-Order system may observe that for large Outer Product
192 Schedules there will be no stalls, but if the Matrices are particularly
193 small size an In-Order system would have to stall, just as it would if
194 the operations were loop-unrolled without Simple-V*.
195
196 ## REMAP types
197
198 This section summarises the motivation for each REMAP Schedule
199 and briefly goes over their characteristics and limitations.
200 Further details on the Deterministic Precise-Interruptible algorithms
201 used in these Schedules is found in the [[sv/remap/appendix]].
202
203 ### Matrix (1D/2D/3D shaping)
204
205 Matrix Multiplication is a huge part of High-Performance Compute,
206 and 3D.
207 In many PackedSIMD as well as Scalable Vector ISAs, non-power-of-two
208 Matrix sizes are a serious challenge. PackedSIMD ISAs, in order to
209 cope with for example 3x4 Matrices, recommend rolling data-repetition and loop-unrolling.
210 Aside from the cost of the load on the L1 I-Cache, the trick only
211 works if one of the dimensions X or Y are power-two. Prime Numbers
212 (5x7, 3x5) become deeply problematic to unroll.
213
214 Even traditional Scalable Vector ISAs have issues with Matrices, often
215 having to perform data Transpose by pushing out through Memory and back,
216 or computing Transposition Indices (costly) then copying to another
217 Vector (costly).
218
219 Matrix REMAP was thus designed to solve these issues by providing Hardware
220 Assisted
221 "Schedules" that can view what would otherwise be limited to a strictly
222 linear Vector as instead being 2D (even 3D) *in-place* reordered.
223 With both Transposition and non-power-two being supported the issues
224 faced by other ISAs are mitigated.
225
226 Limitations of Matrix REMAP are that the Vector Length (VL) is currently
227 restricted to 127: up to 127 FMAs (or other operation)
228 may be performed in total.
229 Also given that it is in-registers only at present some care has to be
230 taken on regfile resource utilisation. However it is perfectly possible
231 to utilise Matrix REMAP to perform the three inner-most "kernel"
232 ("Tiling") loops of
233 the usual 6-level large Matrix Multiply, without the usual difficulties
234 associated with SIMD.
235
236 Also the `svshape` instruction only provides access to part of the
237 Matrix REMAP capability. Rotation and mirroring need to be done by
238 programming the SVSHAPE SPRs directly, which can take a lot more
239 instructions. Future versions of SVP64 will include EXT1xx prefixed
240 variants (`psvshape`) which provide more comprehensive capacity and
241 mitigate the need to write direct to the SVSHAPE SPRs.
242
243 ### FFT/DCT Triple Loop
244
245 DCT and FFT are some of the most astonishingly used algorithms in
246 Computer Science. Radar, Audio, Video, R.F. Baseband and dozens more. At least
247 two DSPs, TMS320 and Hexagon, have VLIW instructions specially tailored
248 to FFT.
249
250 An in-depth analysis showed that it is possible to do in-place in-register
251 DCT and FFT as long as twin-result "butterfly" instructions are provided.
252 These can be found in the [[openpower/isa/svfparith]] page if performing
253 IEEE754 FP transforms. *(For fixed-point transforms, equivalent 3-in 2-out
254 integer operations would be required)*. These "butterfly" instructions
255 avoid the need for a temporary register because the two array positions
256 being overwritten will be "in-flight" in any In-Order or Out-of-Order
257 micro-architecture.
258
259 DCT and FFT Schedules are currently limited to RADIX2 sizes and do not
260 accept predicate masks. Given that it is common to perform recursive
261 convolutions combining smaller Power-2 DCT/FFT to create larger DCT/FFTs
262 in practice the RADIX2 limit is not a problem. A Bluestein convolution
263 to compute arbitrary length is demonstrated by
264 [Project Nayuki](https://www.nayuki.io/res/free-small-fft-in-multiple-languages/fft.py)
265
266 ### Indexed
267
268 The purpose of Indexing is to provide a generalised version of
269 Vector ISA "Permute" instructions, such as VSX `vperm`. The
270 Indexing is abstracted out and may be applied to much more
271 than an element move/copy, and is not limited for example
272 to the number of bytes that can fit into a VSX register.
273 Indexing may be applied to LD/ST (even on Indexed LD/ST
274 instructions such as `sv.lbzx`), arithmetic operations,
275 extsw: there is no artificial limit.
276
277 The only major caveat is that the registers to be used as
278 Indices must not be modified by any instruction after Indexed Mode
279 is established, and neither must MAXVL be altered. Additionally,
280 no register used as an Index may exceed MAXVL-1.
281
282 Failure to observe
283 these conditions results in `UNDEFINED` behaviour.
284 These conditions allow a Read-After-Write (RAW) Hazard to be created on
285 the entire range of Indices to be subsequently used, but a corresponding
286 Write-After-Read Hazard by any instruction that modifies the Indices
287 **does not have to be created**. Given the large number of registers
288 involved in Indexing this is a huge resource saving and reduction
289 in micro-architectural complexity. MAXVL is likewise
290 included in the RAW Hazards because it is involved in calculating
291 how many registers are to be considered Indices.
292
293 With these Hazard Mitigations in place, high-performance implementations
294 may read-cache the Indices at the point where a given `svindex` instruction
295 is called (or SVSHAPE SPRs - and MAXVL - directly altered) by issuing
296 background GPR register file reads whilst other instructions are being
297 issued and executed.
298
299 The original motivation for Indexed REMAP was to mitigate the need to add
300 an expensive `mv.x` to the Scalar ISA, which was likely to be rejected as
301 a stand-alone instruction
302 (`GPR(RT) <- GPR(GPR(RA))`). Usually a Vector ISA would add a non-conflicting
303 variant (as in VSX `vperm`) but it is common to need to permute by source,
304 with the risk of conflict, that has to be resolved, for example, in AVX-512
305 with `conflictd`.
306
307 Indexed REMAP on the other hand **does not prevent conflicts** (overlapping
308 destinations), which on a superficial analysis may be perceived to be a
309 problem, until it is recalled that, firstly, Simple-V is designed specifically
310 to require Program Order to be respected, and that Matrix, DCT and FFT
311 all *already* critically depend on overlapping Reads/Writes: Matrix
312 uses overlapping registers as accumulators. Thus the Register Hazard
313 Management needed by Indexed REMAP *has* to be in place anyway.
314
315 The cost compared to Matrix and other REMAPs (and Pack/Unpack) is
316 clearly that of the additional reading of the GPRs to be used as Indices,
317 plus the setup cost associated with creating those same Indices.
318 If any Deterministic REMAP can cover the required task, clearly it
319 is adviseable to use it instead.
320
321 *Programmer's note: some algorithms may require skipping of Indices exceeding
322 VL-1, not MAXVL-1. This may be achieved programmatically by performing
323 an `sv.cmp *BF,*RA,RB` where RA is the same GPRs used in the Indexed REMAP,
324 and RB contains the value of VL returned from `setvl`. The resultant
325 CR Fields may then be used as Predicate Masks to exclude those operations
326 with an Index exceeding VL-1.*
327
328 ### Parallel Reduction
329
330 Vector Reduce Mode issues a deterministic tree-reduction schedule to the underlying micro-architecture. Like Scalar reduction, the "Scalar Base"
331 (Power ISA v3.0B) operation is leveraged, unmodified, to give the
332 *appearance* and *effect* of Reduction.
333
334 In Horizontal-First Mode, Vector-result reduction **requires**
335 the destination to be a Vector, which will be used to store
336 intermediary results.
337
338 Given that the tree-reduction schedule is deterministic,
339 Interrupts and exceptions
340 can therefore also be precise. The final result will be in the first
341 non-predicate-masked-out destination element, but due again to
342 the deterministic schedule programmers may find uses for the intermediate
343 results.
344
345 When Rc=1 a corresponding Vector of co-resultant CRs is also
346 created. No special action is taken: the result *and its CR Field*
347 are stored "as usual" exactly as all other SVP64 Rc=1 operations.
348
349 Note that the Schedule only makes sense on top of certain instructions:
350 X-Form with a Register Profile of `RT,RA,RB` is fine because two sources
351 and the destination are all the same type. Like Scalar
352 Reduction, nothing is prohibited:
353 the results of execution on an unsuitable instruction may simply
354 not make sense. With care, even 3-input instructions (madd, fmadd, ternlogi)
355 may be used, and whilst it is down to the Programmer to walk through the
356 process the Programmer can be confident that the Parallel-Reduction is
357 guaranteed 100% Deterministic.
358
359 Critical to note regarding use of Parallel-Reduction REMAP is that,
360 exactly as with all REMAP Modes, the `svshape` instruction *requests*
361 a certain Vector Length (number of elements to reduce) and then
362 sets VL and MAXVL at the number of **operations** needed to be
363 carried out. Thus, equally as importantly, like Matrix REMAP
364 the total number of operations
365 is restricted to 127. Any Parallel-Reduction requiring more operations
366 will need to be done manually in batches (hierarchical
367 recursive Reduction).
368
369 Also important to note is that the Deterministic Schedule is arranged
370 so that some implementations *may* parallelise it (as long as doing so
371 respects Program Order and Register Hazards). Performance (speed)
372 of any given
373 implementation is neither strictly defined or guaranteed. As with
374 the Vulkan(tm) Specification, strict compliance is paramount whilst
375 performance is at the discretion of Implementors.
376
377 **Parallel-Reduction with Predication**
378
379 To avoid breaking the strict RISC-paradigm, keeping the Issue-Schedule
380 completely separate from the actual element-level (scalar) operations,
381 Move operations are **not** included in the Schedule. This means that
382 the Schedule leaves the final (scalar) result in the first-non-masked
383 element of the Vector used. With the predicate mask being dynamic
384 (but deterministic) this result could be anywhere.
385
386 If that result is needed to be moved to a (single) scalar register
387 then a follow-up `sv.mv/sm=predicate rt, *ra` instruction will be
388 needed to get it, where the predicate is the exact same predicate used
389 in the prior Parallel-Reduction instruction.
390
391 * If there was only a single
392 bit in the predicate then the result will not have moved or been altered
393 from the source vector prior to the Reduction
394 * If there was more than one bit the result will be in the
395 first element with a predicate bit set.
396
397 In either case the result is in the element with the first bit set in
398 the predicate mask. Thus, no move/copy *within the Reduction itself* was needed.
399
400 Programmer's Note: For *some* hardware implementations
401 the vector-to-scalar copy may be a slow operation, as may the Predicated
402 Parallel Reduction itself.
403 It may be better to perform a pre-copy
404 of the values, compressing them (VREDUCE-style) into a contiguous block,
405 which will guarantee that the result goes into the very first element
406 of the destination vector, in which case clearly no follow-up
407 predicated vector-to-scalar MV operation is needed.
408
409 **Usage conditions**
410
411 The simplest usage is to perform an overwrite, specifying all three
412 register operands the same.
413
414 ```
415 svshape parallelreduce, 6
416 sv.add *8, *8, *8
417 ```
418
419 The Reduction Schedule will issue the Parallel Tree Reduction spanning
420 registers 8 through 13, by adjusting the offsets to RT, RA and RB as
421 necessary (see "Parallel Reduction algorithm" in a later section).
422
423 A non-overwrite is possible as well but just as with the overwrite
424 version, only those destination elements necessary for storing
425 intermediary computations will be written to: the remaining elements
426 will **not** be overwritten and will **not** be zero'd.
427
428 ```
429 svshape parallelreduce, 6
430 sv.add *0, *8, *8
431 ```
432
433 However it is critical to note that if the source and destination are
434 not the same then the trick of using a follow-up vector-scalar MV will
435 not work.
436
437 ### Sub-Vector Horizontal Reduction
438
439 To achieve Sub-Vector Horizontal Reduction, Pack/Unpack should be enabled,
440 which will turn the Schedule around such that issuing of the Scalar
441 Defined Words is done with SUBVL looping as the inner loop not the
442 outer loop. Rc=1 with Sub-Vectors (SUBVL=2,3,4) is `UNDEFINED` behaviour.
443
444 ## Determining Register Hazards
445
446 For high-performance (Multi-Issue, Out-of-Order) systems it is critical
447 to be able to statically determine the extent of Vectors in order to
448 allocate pre-emptive Hazard protection. The next task is to eliminate
449 masked-out elements using predicate bits, freeing up the associated
450 Hazards.
451
452 For non-REMAP situations `VL` is sufficient to ascertain early
453 Hazard coverage, and with SVSTATE being a high priority cached
454 quantity at the same level of MSR and PC this is not a problem.
455
456 The problems come when REMAP is enabled. Indexed REMAP must instead
457 use `MAXVL` as the earliest (simplest)
458 batch-level Hazard Reservation indicator (after taking element-width
459 overriding on the Index source into consideration),
460 but Matrix, FFT and Parallel Reduction must all use completely different
461 schemes. The reason is that VL is used to step through the total
462 number of *operations*, not the number of registers.
463 The "Saving Grace" is that all of the REMAP Schedules are 100% Deterministic.
464
465 Advance-notice Parallel computation and subsequent cacheing
466 of all of these complex Deterministic REMAP Schedules is
467 *strongly recommended*, thus allowing clear and precise multi-issue
468 batched Hazard coverage to be deployed, *even for Indexed Mode*.
469 This is only possible for Indexed due to the strict guidelines
470 given to Programmers.
471
472 In short, there exists solutions to the problem of Hazard Management,
473 with varying degrees of refinement possible at correspondingly
474 increasing levels of complexity in hardware.
475
476 A reminder: when Rc=1 each result register (element) has an associated
477 co-result CR Field (one per result element). Thus above when determining
478 the Write-Hazards for result registers the corresponding Write-Hazards for the
479 corresponding associated co-result CR Field must not be forgotten, *including* when
480 Predication is used.
481
482 ## REMAP area of SVSTATE SPR
483
484 The following bits of the SVSTATE SPR are used for REMAP:
485
486 |32.33|34.35|36.37|38.39|40.41| 42.46 | 62 |
487 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | ----- | ------ |
488 |mi0 |mi1 |mi2 |mo0 |mo1 | SVme | RMpst |
489
490 mi0-2 and mo0-1 each select SVSHAPE0-3 to apply to a given register.
491 mi0-2 apply to RA, RB, RC respectively, as input registers, and
492 likewise mo0-1 apply to output registers (RT/FRT, RS/FRS) respectively.
493 SVme is 5 bits (one for each of mi0-2/mo0-1) and indicates whether the
494 SVSHAPE is actively applied or not.
495
496 * bit 0 of SVme indicates if mi0 is applied to RA / FRA / BA / BFA
497 * bit 1 of SVme indicates if mi1 is applied to RB / FRB / BB
498 * bit 2 of SVme indicates if mi2 is applied to RC / FRC / BC
499 * bit 3 of SVme indicates if mo0 is applied to RT / FRT / BT / BF
500 * bit 4 of SVme indicates if mo1 is applied to Effective Address / FRS / RS
501 (LD/ST-with-update has an implicit 2nd write register, RA)
502
503 The "persistence" bit if set will result in all Active REMAPs being applied
504 indefinitely.
505
506 ----------------
507
508 \newpage{}
509
510 # svremap instruction <a name="svremap"> </a>
511
512 SVRM-Form:
513
514 svremap SVme,mi0,mi1,mi2,mo0,mo2,pst
515
516 |0 |6 |11 |13 |15 |17 |19 |21 | 22:25 |26:31 |
517 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | ---- | ----- |
518 | PO | SVme |mi0 | mi1 | mi2 | mo0 | mo1 | pst | rsvd | XO |
519
520 SVRM-Form
521
522 * svremap SVme,mi0,mi1,mi2,mo0,mo1,pst
523
524 Pseudo-code:
525
526 ```
527 # registers RA RB RC RT EA/FRS SVSHAPE0-3 indices
528 SVSTATE[32:33] <- mi0
529 SVSTATE[34:35] <- mi1
530 SVSTATE[36:37] <- mi2
531 SVSTATE[38:39] <- mo0
532 SVSTATE[40:41] <- mo1
533 # enable bit for RA RB RC RT EA/FRS
534 SVSTATE[42:46] <- SVme
535 # persistence bit (applies to more than one instruction)
536 SVSTATE[62] <- pst
537 ```
538
539 Special Registers Altered:
540
541 ```
542 SVSTATE
543 ```
544
545 `svremap` determines the relationship between registers and SVSHAPE SPRs.
546 The bitmask `SVme` determines which registers have a REMAP applied, and mi0-mo1
547 determine which shape is applied to an activated register. the `pst` bit if
548 cleared indicated that the REMAP operation shall only apply to the immediately-following
549 instruction. If set then REMAP remains permanently enabled until such time as it is
550 explicitly disabled, either by `setvl` setting a new MAXVL, or with another
551 `svremap` instruction. `svindex` and `svshape2` are also capable of setting or
552 clearing persistence, as well as partially covering a subset of the capability of
553 `svremap` to set register-to-SVSHAPE relationships.
554
555 Programmer's Note: applying non-persistent `svremap` to an instruction that has
556 no REMAP enabled or is a Scalar operation will obviously have no effect but
557 the bits 32 to 46 will at least have been set in SVSTATE. This may prove useful
558 when using `svindex` or `svshape2`.
559
560 Hardware Architectural Note: when persistence is not set it is critically important
561 to treat the `svremap` and the following SVP64 instruction as an indivisible fused operation.
562 *No state* is stored in the SVSTATE SPR in order to allow continuation should an
563 Interrupt occur between the two instructions. Thus, Interrupts must be prohibited
564 from occurring or other workaround deployed. When persistence is set this issue
565 is moot.
566
567 It is critical to note that if persistence is clear then `svremap` is the *only* way
568 to activate REMAP on any given (following) instruction. If persistence is set however then
569 **all** SVP64 instructions go through REMAP as long as `SVme` is non-zero.
570
571 -------------
572
573 \newpage{}
574
575 # SHAPE Remapping SPRs
576
577 There are four "shape" SPRs, SHAPE0-3, 32-bits in each,
578 which have the same format.
579
580 Shape is 32-bits. When SHAPE is set entirely to zeros, remapping is
581 disabled: the register's elements are a linear (1D) vector.
582
583 |31.30|29..28 |27..24| 23..21 | 20..18 | 17..12 |11..6 |5..0 | Mode |
584 |---- |------ |------| ------ | ------- | ------- |----- |----- | ----- |
585 |mode |skip |offset| invxyz | permute | zdimsz |ydimsz|xdimsz|Matrix |
586 |0b00 |elwidth|offset|sk1/invxy|0b110/0b111|SVGPR|ydimsz|xdimsz|Indexed|
587 |0b01 |submode|offset| invxyz | submode2| zdimsz |mode |xdimsz|DCT/FFT|
588 |0b10 |submode|offset| invxyz | rsvd | rsvd |rsvd |xdimsz|Preduce|
589 |0b11 | | | | | | | |rsvd |
590
591 mode sets different behaviours (straight matrix multiply, FFT, DCT).
592
593 * **mode=0b00** sets straight Matrix Mode
594 * **mode=0b00** with permute=0b110 or 0b111 sets Indexed Mode
595 * **mode=0b01** sets "FFT/DCT" mode and activates submodes
596 * **mode=0b10** sets "Parallel Reduction" Schedules.
597
598 ## Parallel Reduction Mode
599
600 Creates the Schedules for Parallel Tree Reduction.
601
602 * **submode=0b00** selects the left operand index
603 * **submode=0b01** selects the right operand index
604
605 * When bit 0 of `invxyz` is set, the order of the indices
606 in the inner for-loop are reversed. This has the side-effect
607 of placing the final reduced result in the last-predicated element.
608 It also has the indirect side-effect of swapping the source
609 registers: Left-operand index numbers will always exceed
610 Right-operand indices.
611 When clear, the reduced result will be in the first-predicated
612 element, and Left-operand indices will always be *less* than
613 Right-operand ones.
614 * When bit 1 of `invxyz` is set, the order of the outer loop
615 step is inverted: stepping begins at the nearest power-of two
616 to half of the vector length and reduces by half each time.
617 When clear the step will begin at 2 and double on each
618 inner loop.
619
620 ## FFT/DCT mode
621
622 submode2=0 is for FFT. For FFT submode the following schedules may be
623 selected:
624
625 * **submode=0b00** selects the ``j`` offset of the innermost for-loop
626 of Tukey-Cooley
627 * **submode=0b10** selects the ``j+halfsize`` offset of the innermost for-loop
628 of Tukey-Cooley
629 * **submode=0b11** selects the ``k`` of exptable (which coefficient)
630
631 When submode2 is 1 or 2, for DCT inner butterfly submode the following
632 schedules may be selected. When submode2 is 1, additional bit-reversing
633 is also performed.
634
635 * **submode=0b00** selects the ``j`` offset of the innermost for-loop,
636 in-place
637 * **submode=0b010** selects the ``j+halfsize`` offset of the innermost for-loop,
638 in reverse-order, in-place
639 * **submode=0b10** selects the ``ci`` count of the innermost for-loop,
640 useful for calculating the cosine coefficient
641 * **submode=0b11** selects the ``size`` offset of the outermost for-loop,
642 useful for the cosine coefficient ``cos(ci + 0.5) * pi / size``
643
644 When submode2 is 3 or 4, for DCT outer butterfly submode the following
645 schedules may be selected. When submode is 3, additional bit-reversing
646 is also performed.
647
648 * **submode=0b00** selects the ``j`` offset of the innermost for-loop,
649 * **submode=0b01** selects the ``j+1`` offset of the innermost for-loop,
650
651 `zdimsz` is used as an in-place "Stride", particularly useful for
652 column-based in-place DCT/FFT.
653
654 ## Matrix Mode
655
656 In Matrix Mode, skip allows dimensions to be skipped from being included
657 in the resultant output index. this allows sequences to be repeated:
658 ```0 0 0 1 1 1 2 2 2 ...``` or in the case of skip=0b11 this results in
659 modulo ```0 1 2 0 1 2 ...```
660
661 * **skip=0b00** indicates no dimensions to be skipped
662 * **skip=0b01** sets "skip 1st dimension"
663 * **skip=0b10** sets "skip 2nd dimension"
664 * **skip=0b11** sets "skip 3rd dimension"
665
666 invxyz will invert the start index of each of x, y or z. If invxyz[0] is
667 zero then x-dimensional counting begins from 0 and increments, otherwise
668 it begins from xdimsz-1 and iterates down to zero. Likewise for y and z.
669
670 offset will have the effect of offsetting the result by ```offset``` elements:
671
672 ```
673 for i in 0..VL-1:
674 GPR(RT + remap(i) + SVSHAPE.offset) = ....
675 ```
676
677 this appears redundant because the register RT could simply be changed by a compiler, until element width overrides are introduced. also
678 bear in mind that unlike a static compiler SVSHAPE.offset may
679 be set dynamically at runtime.
680
681 xdimsz, ydimsz and zdimsz are offset by 1, such that a value of 0 indicates
682 that the array dimensionality for that dimension is 1. any dimension
683 not intended to be used must have its value set to 0 (dimensionality
684 of 1). A value of xdimsz=2 would indicate that in the first dimension
685 there are 3 elements in the array. For example, to create a 2D array
686 X,Y of dimensionality X=3 and Y=2, set xdimsz=2, ydimsz=1 and zdimsz=0
687
688 The format of the array is therefore as follows:
689
690 ```
691 array[xdimsz+1][ydimsz+1][zdimsz+1]
692 ```
693
694 However whilst illustrative of the dimensionality, that does not take the
695 "permute" setting into account. "permute" may be any one of six values
696 (0-5, with values of 6 and 7 indicating "Indexed" Mode). The table
697 below shows how the permutation dimensionality order works:
698
699 | permute | order | array format |
700 | ------- | ----- | ------------------------ |
701 | 000 | 0,1,2 | (xdim+1)(ydim+1)(zdim+1) |
702 | 001 | 0,2,1 | (xdim+1)(zdim+1)(ydim+1) |
703 | 010 | 1,0,2 | (ydim+1)(xdim+1)(zdim+1) |
704 | 011 | 1,2,0 | (ydim+1)(zdim+1)(xdim+1) |
705 | 100 | 2,0,1 | (zdim+1)(xdim+1)(ydim+1) |
706 | 101 | 2,1,0 | (zdim+1)(ydim+1)(xdim+1) |
707 | 110 | 0,1 | Indexed (xdim+1)(ydim+1) |
708 | 111 | 1,0 | Indexed (ydim+1)(xdim+1) |
709
710 In other words, the "permute" option changes the order in which
711 nested for-loops over the array would be done. See executable
712 python reference code for further details.
713
714 *Note: permute=0b110 and permute=0b111 enable Indexed REMAP Mode,
715 described below*
716
717 With all these options it is possible to support in-place transpose,
718 in-place rotate, Matrix Multiply and Convolutions, without being
719 limited to Power-of-Two dimension sizes.
720
721 ## Indexed Mode
722
723 Indexed Mode activates reading of the element indices from the GPR
724 and includes optional limited 2D reordering.
725 In its simplest form (without elwidth overrides or other modes):
726
727 ```
728 def index_remap(i):
729 return GPR((SVSHAPE.SVGPR<<1)+i) + SVSHAPE.offset
730
731 for i in 0..VL-1:
732 element_result = ....
733 GPR(RT + indexed_remap(i)) = element_result
734 ```
735
736 With element-width overrides included, and using the pseudocode
737 from the SVP64 [[sv/svp64/appendix#elwidth]] elwidth section
738 this becomes:
739
740 ```
741 def index_remap(i):
742 svreg = SVSHAPE.SVGPR << 1
743 srcwid = elwid_to_bitwidth(SVSHAPE.elwid)
744 offs = SVSHAPE.offset
745 return get_polymorphed_reg(svreg, srcwid, i) + offs
746
747 for i in 0..VL-1:
748 element_result = ....
749 rt_idx = indexed_remap(i)
750 set_polymorphed_reg(RT, destwid, rt_idx, element_result)
751 ```
752
753 Matrix-style reordering still applies to the indices, except limited
754 to up to 2 Dimensions (X,Y). Ordering is therefore limited to (X,Y) or
755 (Y,X) for in-place Transposition.
756 Only one dimension may optionally be skipped. Inversion of either
757 X or Y or both is possible (2D mirroring). Pseudocode for Indexed Mode (including elwidth
758 overrides) may be written in terms of Matrix Mode, specifically
759 purposed to ensure that the 3rd dimension (Z) has no effect:
760
761 ```
762 def index_remap(ISHAPE, i):
763 MSHAPE.skip = 0b0 || ISHAPE.sk1
764 MSHAPE.invxyz = 0b0 || ISHAPE.invxy
765 MSHAPE.xdimsz = ISHAPE.xdimsz
766 MSHAPE.ydimsz = ISHAPE.ydimsz
767 MSHAPE.zdimsz = 0 # disabled
768 if ISHAPE.permute = 0b110 # 0,1
769 MSHAPE.permute = 0b000 # 0,1,2
770 if ISHAPE.permute = 0b111 # 1,0
771 MSHAPE.permute = 0b010 # 1,0,2
772 el_idx = remap_matrix(MSHAPE, i)
773 svreg = ISHAPE.SVGPR << 1
774 srcwid = elwid_to_bitwidth(ISHAPE.elwid)
775 offs = ISHAPE.offset
776 return get_polymorphed_reg(svreg, srcwid, el_idx) + offs
777 ```
778
779 The most important observation above is that the Matrix-style
780 remapping occurs first and the Index lookup second. Thus it
781 becomes possible to perform in-place Transpose of Indices which
782 may have been costly to set up or costly to duplicate
783 (waste register file space).
784
785 -------------
786
787 \newpage{}
788
789 # svshape instruction <a name="svshape"> </a>
790
791 SVM-Form
792
793 svshape SVxd,SVyd,SVzd,SVRM,vf
794
795 | 0:5|6:10 |11:15 |16:20 | 21:24 | 25 | 26:31 | name |
796 | -- | -- | --- | ----- | ------ | -- | ------| -------- |
797 |PO | SVxd | SVyd | SVzd | SVRM | vf | XO | svshape |
798
799 ```
800 # for convenience, VL to be calculated and stored in SVSTATE
801 vlen <- [0] * 7
802 mscale[0:5] <- 0b000001 # for scaling MAXVL
803 itercount[0:6] <- [0] * 7
804 SVSTATE[0:31] <- [0] * 32
805 # only overwrite REMAP if "persistence" is zero
806 if (SVSTATE[62] = 0b0) then
807 SVSTATE[32:33] <- 0b00
808 SVSTATE[34:35] <- 0b00
809 SVSTATE[36:37] <- 0b00
810 SVSTATE[38:39] <- 0b00
811 SVSTATE[40:41] <- 0b00
812 SVSTATE[42:46] <- 0b00000
813 SVSTATE[62] <- 0b0
814 SVSTATE[63] <- 0b0
815 # clear out all SVSHAPEs
816 SVSHAPE0[0:31] <- [0] * 32
817 SVSHAPE1[0:31] <- [0] * 32
818 SVSHAPE2[0:31] <- [0] * 32
819 SVSHAPE3[0:31] <- [0] * 32
820
821 # set schedule up for multiply
822 if (SVrm = 0b0000) then
823 # VL in Matrix Multiply is xd*yd*zd
824 xd <- (0b00 || SVxd) + 1
825 yd <- (0b00 || SVyd) + 1
826 zd <- (0b00 || SVzd) + 1
827 n <- xd * yd * zd
828 vlen[0:6] <- n[14:20]
829 # set up template in SVSHAPE0, then copy to 1-3
830 SVSHAPE0[0:5] <- (0b0 || SVxd) # xdim
831 SVSHAPE0[6:11] <- (0b0 || SVyd) # ydim
832 SVSHAPE0[12:17] <- (0b0 || SVzd) # zdim
833 SVSHAPE0[28:29] <- 0b11 # skip z
834 # copy
835 SVSHAPE1[0:31] <- SVSHAPE0[0:31]
836 SVSHAPE2[0:31] <- SVSHAPE0[0:31]
837 SVSHAPE3[0:31] <- SVSHAPE0[0:31]
838 # set up FRA
839 SVSHAPE1[18:20] <- 0b001 # permute x,z,y
840 SVSHAPE1[28:29] <- 0b01 # skip z
841 # FRC
842 SVSHAPE2[18:20] <- 0b001 # permute x,z,y
843 SVSHAPE2[28:29] <- 0b11 # skip y
844
845 # set schedule up for FFT butterfly
846 if (SVrm = 0b0001) then
847 # calculate O(N log2 N)
848 n <- [0] * 3
849 do while n < 5
850 if SVxd[4-n] = 0 then
851 leave
852 n <- n + 1
853 n <- ((0b0 || SVxd) + 1) * n
854 vlen[0:6] <- n[1:7]
855 # set up template in SVSHAPE0, then copy to 1-3
856 # for FRA and FRT
857 SVSHAPE0[0:5] <- (0b0 || SVxd) # xdim
858 SVSHAPE0[12:17] <- (0b0 || SVzd) # zdim - "striding" (2D FFT)
859 mscale <- (0b0 || SVzd) + 1
860 SVSHAPE0[30:31] <- 0b01 # Butterfly mode
861 # copy
862 SVSHAPE1[0:31] <- SVSHAPE0[0:31]
863 SVSHAPE2[0:31] <- SVSHAPE0[0:31]
864 # set up FRB and FRS
865 SVSHAPE1[28:29] <- 0b01 # j+halfstep schedule
866 # FRC (coefficients)
867 SVSHAPE2[28:29] <- 0b10 # k schedule
868
869 # set schedule up for (i)DCT Inner butterfly
870 # SVrm Mode 4 (Mode 12 for iDCT) is for on-the-fly (Vertical-First Mode)
871 if ((SVrm = 0b0100) |
872 (SVrm = 0b1100)) then
873 # calculate O(N log2 N)
874 n <- [0] * 3
875 do while n < 5
876 if SVxd[4-n] = 0 then
877 leave
878 n <- n + 1
879 n <- ((0b0 || SVxd) + 1) * n
880 vlen[0:6] <- n[1:7]
881 # set up template in SVSHAPE0, then copy to 1-3
882 # set up FRB and FRS
883 SVSHAPE0[0:5] <- (0b0 || SVxd) # xdim
884 SVSHAPE0[12:17] <- (0b0 || SVzd) # zdim - "striding" (2D DCT)
885 mscale <- (0b0 || SVzd) + 1
886 if (SVrm = 0b1100) then
887 SVSHAPE0[30:31] <- 0b11 # iDCT mode
888 SVSHAPE0[18:20] <- 0b011 # iDCT Inner Butterfly sub-mode
889 else
890 SVSHAPE0[30:31] <- 0b01 # DCT mode
891 SVSHAPE0[18:20] <- 0b001 # DCT Inner Butterfly sub-mode
892 SVSHAPE0[21:23] <- 0b001 # "inverse" on outer loop
893 SVSHAPE0[6:11] <- 0b000011 # (i)DCT Inner Butterfly mode 4
894 # copy
895 SVSHAPE1[0:31] <- SVSHAPE0[0:31]
896 SVSHAPE2[0:31] <- SVSHAPE0[0:31]
897 if (SVrm != 0b0100) & (SVrm != 0b1100) then
898 SVSHAPE3[0:31] <- SVSHAPE0[0:31]
899 # for FRA and FRT
900 SVSHAPE0[28:29] <- 0b01 # j+halfstep schedule
901 # for cos coefficient
902 SVSHAPE2[28:29] <- 0b10 # ci (k for mode 4) schedule
903 SVSHAPE2[12:17] <- 0b000000 # reset costable "striding" to 1
904 if (SVrm != 0b0100) & (SVrm != 0b1100) then
905 SVSHAPE3[28:29] <- 0b11 # size schedule
906
907 # set schedule up for (i)DCT Outer butterfly
908 if (SVrm = 0b0011) | (SVrm = 0b1011) then
909 # calculate O(N log2 N) number of outer butterfly overlapping adds
910 vlen[0:6] <- [0] * 7
911 n <- 0b000
912 size <- 0b0000001
913 itercount[0:6] <- (0b00 || SVxd) + 0b0000001
914 itercount[0:6] <- (0b0 || itercount[0:5])
915 do while n < 5
916 if SVxd[4-n] = 0 then
917 leave
918 n <- n + 1
919 count <- (itercount - 0b0000001) * size
920 vlen[0:6] <- vlen + count[7:13]
921 size[0:6] <- (size[1:6] || 0b0)
922 itercount[0:6] <- (0b0 || itercount[0:5])
923 # set up template in SVSHAPE0, then copy to 1-3
924 # set up FRB and FRS
925 SVSHAPE0[0:5] <- (0b0 || SVxd) # xdim
926 SVSHAPE0[12:17] <- (0b0 || SVzd) # zdim - "striding" (2D DCT)
927 mscale <- (0b0 || SVzd) + 1
928 if (SVrm = 0b1011) then
929 SVSHAPE0[30:31] <- 0b11 # iDCT mode
930 SVSHAPE0[18:20] <- 0b011 # iDCT Outer Butterfly sub-mode
931 SVSHAPE0[21:23] <- 0b101 # "inverse" on outer and inner loop
932 else
933 SVSHAPE0[30:31] <- 0b01 # DCT mode
934 SVSHAPE0[18:20] <- 0b100 # DCT Outer Butterfly sub-mode
935 SVSHAPE0[6:11] <- 0b000010 # DCT Butterfly mode
936 # copy
937 SVSHAPE1[0:31] <- SVSHAPE0[0:31] # j+halfstep schedule
938 SVSHAPE2[0:31] <- SVSHAPE0[0:31] # costable coefficients
939 # for FRA and FRT
940 SVSHAPE1[28:29] <- 0b01 # j+halfstep schedule
941 # reset costable "striding" to 1
942 SVSHAPE2[12:17] <- 0b000000
943
944 # set schedule up for DCT COS table generation
945 if (SVrm = 0b0101) | (SVrm = 0b1101) then
946 # calculate O(N log2 N)
947 vlen[0:6] <- [0] * 7
948 itercount[0:6] <- (0b00 || SVxd) + 0b0000001
949 itercount[0:6] <- (0b0 || itercount[0:5])
950 n <- [0] * 3
951 do while n < 5
952 if SVxd[4-n] = 0 then
953 leave
954 n <- n + 1
955 vlen[0:6] <- vlen + itercount
956 itercount[0:6] <- (0b0 || itercount[0:5])
957 # set up template in SVSHAPE0, then copy to 1-3
958 # set up FRB and FRS
959 SVSHAPE0[0:5] <- (0b0 || SVxd) # xdim
960 SVSHAPE0[12:17] <- (0b0 || SVzd) # zdim - "striding" (2D DCT)
961 mscale <- (0b0 || SVzd) + 1
962 SVSHAPE0[30:31] <- 0b01 # DCT/FFT mode
963 SVSHAPE0[6:11] <- 0b000100 # DCT Inner Butterfly COS-gen mode
964 if (SVrm = 0b0101) then
965 SVSHAPE0[21:23] <- 0b001 # "inverse" on outer loop for DCT
966 # copy
967 SVSHAPE1[0:31] <- SVSHAPE0[0:31]
968 SVSHAPE2[0:31] <- SVSHAPE0[0:31]
969 # for cos coefficient
970 SVSHAPE1[28:29] <- 0b10 # ci schedule
971 SVSHAPE2[28:29] <- 0b11 # size schedule
972
973 # set schedule up for iDCT / DCT inverse of half-swapped ordering
974 if (SVrm = 0b0110) | (SVrm = 0b1110) | (SVrm = 0b1111) then
975 vlen[0:6] <- (0b00 || SVxd) + 0b0000001
976 # set up template in SVSHAPE0
977 SVSHAPE0[0:5] <- (0b0 || SVxd) # xdim
978 SVSHAPE0[12:17] <- (0b0 || SVzd) # zdim - "striding" (2D DCT)
979 mscale <- (0b0 || SVzd) + 1
980 if (SVrm = 0b1110) then
981 SVSHAPE0[18:20] <- 0b001 # DCT opposite half-swap
982 if (SVrm = 0b1111) then
983 SVSHAPE0[30:31] <- 0b01 # FFT mode
984 else
985 SVSHAPE0[30:31] <- 0b11 # DCT mode
986 SVSHAPE0[6:11] <- 0b000101 # DCT "half-swap" mode
987
988 # set schedule up for parallel reduction
989 if (SVrm = 0b0111) then
990 # calculate the total number of operations (brute-force)
991 vlen[0:6] <- [0] * 7
992 itercount[0:6] <- (0b00 || SVxd) + 0b0000001
993 step[0:6] <- 0b0000001
994 i[0:6] <- 0b0000000
995 do while step <u itercount
996 newstep <- step[1:6] || 0b0
997 j[0:6] <- 0b0000000
998 do while (j+step <u itercount)
999 j <- j + newstep
1000 i <- i + 1
1001 step <- newstep
1002 # VL in Parallel-Reduce is the number of operations
1003 vlen[0:6] <- i
1004 # set up template in SVSHAPE0, then copy to 1. only 2 needed
1005 SVSHAPE0[0:5] <- (0b0 || SVxd) # xdim
1006 SVSHAPE0[12:17] <- (0b0 || SVzd) # zdim - "striding" (2D DCT)
1007 mscale <- (0b0 || SVzd) + 1
1008 SVSHAPE0[30:31] <- 0b10 # parallel reduce submode
1009 # copy
1010 SVSHAPE1[0:31] <- SVSHAPE0[0:31]
1011 # set up right operand (left operand 28:29 is zero)
1012 SVSHAPE1[28:29] <- 0b01 # right operand
1013
1014 # set VL, MVL and Vertical-First
1015 m[0:12] <- vlen * mscale
1016 maxvl[0:6] <- m[6:12]
1017 SVSTATE[0:6] <- maxvl # MAVXL
1018 SVSTATE[7:13] <- vlen # VL
1019 SVSTATE[63] <- vf
1020 ```
1021
1022 Special Registers Altered:
1023
1024 ```
1025 SVSTATE, SVSHAPE0-3
1026 ```
1027
1028 `svshape` is a convenience instruction that reduces instruction
1029 count for common usage patterns, particularly Matrix, DCT and FFT. It sets up
1030 (overwrites) all required SVSHAPE SPRs and also modifies SVSTATE
1031 including VL and MAXVL. Using `svshape` therefore does not also
1032 require `setvl`.
1033
1034 Fields:
1035
1036 * **SVxd** - SV REMAP "xdim"
1037 * **SVyd** - SV REMAP "ydim"
1038 * **SVzd** - SV REMAP "zdim"
1039 * **SVRM** - SV REMAP Mode (0b00000 for Matrix, 0b00001 for FFT etc.)
1040 * **vf** - sets "Vertical-First" mode
1041 * **XO** - standard 6-bit XO field
1042
1043 *Note: SVxd, SVyz and SVzd are all stored "off-by-one". In the assembler
1044 mnemonic the values `1-32` are stored in binary as `0b00000..0b11111`*
1045
1046 There are 12 REMAP Modes (2 Modes are RESERVED for `svshape2`, 2 Modes
1047 are RESERVED)
1048
1049 | SVRM | Remap Mode description |
1050 | -- | -- |
1051 | 0b0000 | Matrix 1/2/3D |
1052 | 0b0001 | FFT Butterfly |
1053 | 0b0010 | reserved |
1054 | 0b0011 | DCT Outer butterfly |
1055 | 0b0100 | DCT Inner butterfly, on-the-fly (Vertical-First Mode) |
1056 | 0b0101 | DCT COS table index generation |
1057 | 0b0110 | DCT half-swap |
1058 | 0b0111 | Parallel Reduction |
1059 | 0b1000 | reserved for svshape2 |
1060 | 0b1001 | reserved for svshape2 |
1061 | 0b1010 | reserved |
1062 | 0b1011 | iDCT Outer butterfly |
1063 | 0b1100 | iDCT Inner butterfly, on-the-fly (Vertical-First Mode) |
1064 | 0b1101 | iDCT COS table index generation |
1065 | 0b1110 | iDCT half-swap |
1066 | 0b1111 | FFT half-swap |
1067
1068 Examples showing how all of these Modes operate exists in the online
1069 [SVP64 unit tests](https://git.libre-soc.org/?p=openpower-isa.git;a=tree;f=src/openpower/decoder/isa;hb=HEAD). Explaining
1070 these Modes further in detail is beyond the scope of this document.
1071
1072 In Indexed Mode, there are only 5 bits available to specify the GPR
1073 to use, out of 128 GPRs (7 bit numbering). Therefore, only the top
1074 5 bits are given in the `SVxd` field: the bottom two implicit bits
1075 will be zero (`SVxd || 0b00`).
1076
1077 `svshape` has *limited applicability* due to being a 32-bit instruction.
1078 The full capability of SVSHAPE SPRs may be accessed by directly writing
1079 to SVSHAPE0-3 with `mtspr`. Circumstances include Matrices with dimensions
1080 larger than 32, and in-place Transpose. Potentially a future v3.1 Prefixed
1081 instruction, `psvshape`, may extend the capability here.
1082
1083 *Architectural Resource Allocation note: the SVRM field is carefully
1084 crafted to allocate two Modes, corresponding to bits 21-23 within the
1085 instruction being set to the value `0b100`, to `svshape2` (not
1086 `svshape`). These two Modes are
1087 considered "RESERVED" within the context of `svshape` but it is
1088 absolutely critical to allocate the exact same pattern in XO for
1089 both instructions in bits 26-31.*
1090
1091 -------------
1092
1093 \newpage{}
1094
1095
1096 # svindex instruction <a name="svindex"> </a>
1097
1098 SVI-Form
1099
1100 | 0:5|6:10 |11:15 |16:20 | 21:25 | 26:31 | Form |
1101 | -- | -- | --- | ---- | ----------- | ------| -------- |
1102 | PO | SVG | rmm | SVd | ew/yx/mm/sk | XO | SVI-Form |
1103
1104 * svindex SVG,rmm,SVd,ew,SVyx,mm,sk
1105
1106 Pseudo-code:
1107
1108 ```
1109 # based on nearest MAXVL compute other dimension
1110 MVL <- SVSTATE[0:6]
1111 d <- [0] * 6
1112 dim <- SVd+1
1113 do while d*dim <u ([0]*4 || MVL)
1114 d <- d + 1
1115
1116 # set up template, then copy once location identified
1117 shape <- [0]*32
1118 shape[30:31] <- 0b00 # mode
1119 if SVyx = 0 then
1120 shape[18:20] <- 0b110 # indexed xd/yd
1121 shape[0:5] <- (0b0 || SVd) # xdim
1122 if sk = 0 then shape[6:11] <- 0 # ydim
1123 else shape[6:11] <- 0b111111 # ydim max
1124 else
1125 shape[18:20] <- 0b111 # indexed yd/xd
1126 if sk = 1 then shape[6:11] <- 0 # ydim
1127 else shape[6:11] <- d-1 # ydim max
1128 shape[0:5] <- (0b0 || SVd) # ydim
1129 shape[12:17] <- (0b0 || SVG) # SVGPR
1130 shape[28:29] <- ew # element-width override
1131 shape[21] <- sk # skip 1st dimension
1132
1133 # select the mode for updating SVSHAPEs
1134 SVSTATE[62] <- mm # set or clear persistence
1135 if mm = 0 then
1136 # clear out all SVSHAPEs first
1137 SVSHAPE0[0:31] <- [0] * 32
1138 SVSHAPE1[0:31] <- [0] * 32
1139 SVSHAPE2[0:31] <- [0] * 32
1140 SVSHAPE3[0:31] <- [0] * 32
1141 SVSTATE[32:41] <- [0] * 10 # clear REMAP.mi/o
1142 SVSTATE[42:46] <- rmm # rmm exactly REMAP.SVme
1143 idx <- 0
1144 for bit = 0 to 4
1145 if rmm[4-bit] then
1146 # activate requested shape
1147 if idx = 0 then SVSHAPE0 <- shape
1148 if idx = 1 then SVSHAPE1 <- shape
1149 if idx = 2 then SVSHAPE2 <- shape
1150 if idx = 3 then SVSHAPE3 <- shape
1151 SVSTATE[bit*2+32:bit*2+33] <- idx
1152 # increment shape index, modulo 4
1153 if idx = 3 then idx <- 0
1154 else idx <- idx + 1
1155 else
1156 # refined SVSHAPE/REMAP update mode
1157 bit <- rmm[0:2]
1158 idx <- rmm[3:4]
1159 if idx = 0 then SVSHAPE0 <- shape
1160 if idx = 1 then SVSHAPE1 <- shape
1161 if idx = 2 then SVSHAPE2 <- shape
1162 if idx = 3 then SVSHAPE3 <- shape
1163 SVSTATE[bit*2+32:bit*2+33] <- idx
1164 SVSTATE[46-bit] <- 1
1165 ```
1166
1167 Special Registers Altered:
1168
1169 ```
1170 SVSTATE, SVSHAPE0-3
1171 ```
1172
1173 `svindex` is a convenience instruction that reduces instruction count
1174 for Indexed REMAP Mode. It sets up (overwrites) all required SVSHAPE
1175 SPRs and **unlike** `svshape` can modify the REMAP area of the SVSTATE
1176 SPR as well, including setting persistence. The relevant SPRs *may*
1177 be directly programmed with `mtspr` however it is laborious to do so:
1178 svindex saves instructions covering much of Indexed REMAP capability.
1179
1180 Fields:
1181
1182 * **SVd** - SV REMAP x/y dim
1183 * **rmm** - REMAP mask: sets remap mi0-2/mo0-1 and SVSHAPEs,
1184 controlled by mm
1185 * **ew** - sets element width override on the Indices
1186 * **SVG** - GPR SVG<<2 to be used for Indexing
1187 * **yx** - 2D reordering to be used if yx=1
1188 * **mm** - mask mode. determines how `rmm` is interpreted.
1189 * **sk** - Dimension skipping enabled
1190
1191 *Note: SVd, like SVxd, SVyz and SVzd of `svshape`, are all stored
1192 "off-by-one". In the assembler
1193 mnemonic the values `1-32` are stored in binary as `0b00000..0b11111`*.
1194
1195 *Note: when `yx=1,sk=0` the second dimension is calculated as
1196 `CEIL(MAXVL/SVd)`*.
1197
1198 When `mm=0`:
1199
1200 * `rmm`, like REMAP.SVme, has bit 0
1201 correspond to mi0, bit 1 to mi1, bit 2 to mi2,
1202 bit 3 to mo0 and bit 4 to mi1
1203 * all SVSHAPEs and the REMAP parts of SVSHAPE are first reset (initialised to zero)
1204 * for each bit set in the 5-bit `rmm`, in order, the first
1205 as-yet-unset SVSHAPE will be updated
1206 with the other operands in the instruction, and the REMAP
1207 SPR set.
1208 * If all 5 bits of `rmm` are set then both mi0 and mo1 use SVSHAPE0.
1209 * SVSTATE persistence bit is cleared
1210 * No other alterations to SVSTATE are carried out
1211
1212 Example 1: if rmm=0b00110 then SVSHAPE0 and SVSHAPE1 are set up,
1213 and the REMAP SPR set so that mi1 uses SVSHAPE0 and mi2
1214 uses mi2. REMAP.SVme is also set to 0b00110, REMAP.mi1=0
1215 (SVSHAPE0) and REMAP.mi2=1 (SVSHAPE1)
1216
1217 Example 2: if rmm=0b10001 then again SVSHAPE0 and SVSHAPE1
1218 are set up, but the REMAP SPR is set so that mi0 uses SVSHAPE0
1219 and mo1 uses SVSHAPE1. REMAP.SVme=0b10001, REMAP.mi0=0, REMAP.mo1=1
1220
1221 Rough algorithmic form:
1222
1223 ```
1224 marray = [mi0, mi1, mi2, mo0, mo1]
1225 idx = 0
1226 for bit = 0 to 4:
1227 if not rmm[bit]: continue
1228 setup(SVSHAPE[idx])
1229 SVSTATE{marray[bit]} = idx
1230 idx = (idx+1) modulo 4
1231 ```
1232
1233 When `mm=1`:
1234
1235 * bits 0-2 (MSB0 numbering) of `rmm` indicate an index selecting mi0-mo1
1236 * bits 3-4 (MSB0 numbering) of `rmm` indicate which SVSHAPE 0-3 shall
1237 be updated
1238 * only the selected SVSHAPE is overwritten
1239 * only the relevant bits in the REMAP area of SVSTATE are updated
1240 * REMAP persistence bit is set.
1241
1242 Example 1: if `rmm`=0b01110 then bits 0-2 (MSB0) are 0b011 and
1243 bits 3-4 are 0b10. thus, mo0 is selected and SVSHAPE2
1244 to be updated. REMAP.SVme[3] will be set high and REMAP.mo0
1245 set to 2 (SVSHAPE2).
1246
1247 Example 2: if `rmm`=0b10011 then bits 0-2 (MSB0) are 0b100 and
1248 bits 3-4 are 0b11. thus, mo1 is selected and SVSHAPE3
1249 to be updated. REMAP.SVme[4] will be set high and REMAP.mo1
1250 set to 3 (SVSHAPE3).
1251
1252 Rough algorithmic form:
1253
1254 ```
1255 marray = [mi0, mi1, mi2, mo0, mo1]
1256 bit = rmm[0:2]
1257 idx = rmm[3:4]
1258 setup(SVSHAPE[idx])
1259 SVSTATE{marray[bit]} = idx
1260 SVSTATE.pst = 1
1261 ```
1262
1263 In essence, `mm=0` is intended for use to set as much of the
1264 REMAP State SPRs as practical with a single instruction,
1265 whilst `mm=1` is intended to be a little more refined.
1266
1267 **Usage guidelines**
1268
1269 * **Disable 2D mapping**: to only perform Indexing without
1270 reordering use `SVd=1,sk=0,yx=0` (or set SVd to a value larger
1271 or equal to VL)
1272 * **Modulo 1D mapping**: to perform Indexing cycling through the
1273 first N Indices use `SVd=N,sk=0,yx=0` where `VL>N`. There is
1274 no requirement to set VL equal to a multiple of N.
1275 * **Modulo 2D transposed**: `SVd=M,sk=0,yx=1`, sets
1276 `xdim=M,ydim=CEIL(MAXVL/M)`.
1277
1278 Beyond these mappings it becomes necessary to write directly to
1279 the SVSTATE SPRs manually.
1280
1281 -------------
1282
1283 \newpage{}
1284
1285
1286 # svshape2 (offset-priority) <a name="svshape2"> </a>
1287
1288 SVM2-Form
1289
1290 | 0:5|6:9 |10|11:15 |16:20 | 21:24 | 25 | 26:31 | Form |
1291 | -- |----|--| --- | ----- | ------ | -- | ------| -------- |
1292 | PO |offs|yx| rmm | SVd | 100/mm | sk | XO | SVM2-Form |
1293
1294 * svshape2 offs,yx,rmm,SVd,sk,mm
1295
1296 Pseudo-code:
1297
1298 ```
1299 # based on nearest MAXVL compute other dimension
1300 MVL <- SVSTATE[0:6]
1301 d <- [0] * 6
1302 dim <- SVd+1
1303 do while d*dim <u ([0]*4 || MVL)
1304 d <- d + 1
1305 # set up template, then copy once location identified
1306 shape <- [0]*32
1307 shape[30:31] <- 0b00 # mode
1308 shape[0:5] <- (0b0 || SVd) # x/ydim
1309 if SVyx = 0 then
1310 shape[18:20] <- 0b000 # ordering xd/yd(/zd)
1311 if sk = 0 then shape[6:11] <- 0 # ydim
1312 else shape[6:11] <- 0b111111 # ydim max
1313 else
1314 shape[18:20] <- 0b010 # ordering yd/xd(/zd)
1315 if sk = 1 then shape[6:11] <- 0 # ydim
1316 else shape[6:11] <- d-1 # ydim max
1317 # offset (the prime purpose of this instruction)
1318 shape[24:27] <- SVo # offset
1319 if sk = 1 then shape[28:29] <- 0b01 # skip 1st dimension
1320 else shape[28:29] <- 0b00 # no skipping
1321 # select the mode for updating SVSHAPEs
1322 SVSTATE[62] <- mm # set or clear persistence
1323 if mm = 0 then
1324 # clear out all SVSHAPEs first
1325 SVSHAPE0[0:31] <- [0] * 32
1326 SVSHAPE1[0:31] <- [0] * 32
1327 SVSHAPE2[0:31] <- [0] * 32
1328 SVSHAPE3[0:31] <- [0] * 32
1329 SVSTATE[32:41] <- [0] * 10 # clear REMAP.mi/o
1330 SVSTATE[42:46] <- rmm # rmm exactly REMAP.SVme
1331 idx <- 0
1332 for bit = 0 to 4
1333 if rmm[4-bit] then
1334 # activate requested shape
1335 if idx = 0 then SVSHAPE0 <- shape
1336 if idx = 1 then SVSHAPE1 <- shape
1337 if idx = 2 then SVSHAPE2 <- shape
1338 if idx = 3 then SVSHAPE3 <- shape
1339 SVSTATE[bit*2+32:bit*2+33] <- idx
1340 # increment shape index, modulo 4
1341 if idx = 3 then idx <- 0
1342 else idx <- idx + 1
1343 else
1344 # refined SVSHAPE/REMAP update mode
1345 bit <- rmm[0:2]
1346 idx <- rmm[3:4]
1347 if idx = 0 then SVSHAPE0 <- shape
1348 if idx = 1 then SVSHAPE1 <- shape
1349 if idx = 2 then SVSHAPE2 <- shape
1350 if idx = 3 then SVSHAPE3 <- shape
1351 SVSTATE[bit*2+32:bit*2+33] <- idx
1352 SVSTATE[46-bit] <- 1
1353 ```
1354
1355 Special Registers Altered:
1356
1357 ```
1358 SVSTATE, SVSHAPE0-3
1359 ```
1360
1361 `svshape2` is an additional convenience instruction that prioritises
1362 setting `SVSHAPE.offset`. Its primary purpose is for use when
1363 element-width overrides are used. It has identical capabilities to `svindex` and
1364 in terms of both options (skip, etc.) and ability to activate REMAP
1365 (rmm, mask mode) but unlike `svindex` it does not set GPR REMAP,
1366 only a 1D or 2D `svshape`, and
1367 unlike `svshape` it can set an arbirrary `SVSHAPE.offset` immediate.
1368
1369 One of the limitations of Simple-V is that Vector elements start on the boundary
1370 of the Scalar regfile, which is fine when element-width overrides are not
1371 needed. If the starting point of a Vector with smaller elwidths must begin
1372 in the middle of a register, normally there would be no way to do so except
1373 through LD/ST. `SVSHAPE.offset` caters for this scenario and `svshape2`is
1374 makes it easier.
1375
1376 **Operand Fields**:
1377
1378 * **offs** (4 bits) - unsigned offset
1379 * **yx** (1 bit) - swap XY to YX
1380 * **SVd** dimension size
1381 * **rmm** REMAP mask
1382 * **mm** mask mode
1383 * **sk** (1 bit) skips 1st dimension if set
1384
1385 Dimensions are calculated exactly as `svindex`. `rmm` and
1386 `mm` are as per `svindex`.
1387
1388 *Programmer's Note: offsets for `svshape2` may be specified in the range
1389 0-15. Given that the principle of Simple-V is to fit on top of
1390 byte-addressable register files and that GPR and FPR are 64-bit (8 bytes)
1391 it should be clear that the offset may, when `elwidth=8`, begin an
1392 element-level operation starting element zero at any arbitrary byte.
1393 On cursory examination attempting to go beyond the range 0-7 seems
1394 unnecessary given that the **next GPR or FPR** is an
1395 alias for an offset in the range 8-15. Thus by simply increasing
1396 the starting Vector point of the operation to the next register it
1397 can be seen that the offset of 0-7 would be sufficient. Unfortunately
1398 however some operations are EXTRA2-encoded it is **not possible**
1399 to increase the GPR/FPR register number by one, because EXTRA2-encoding
1400 of GPR/FPR Vector numbers are restricted to even numbering.
1401 For CR Fields the EXTRA2 encoding is even more sparse.
1402 The additional offset range (8-15) helps overcome these limitations.*
1403
1404 *Hardware Implementor's note: with the offsets only being immediates
1405 and with register numbering being entirely immediate as well it is
1406 possible to correctly compute Register Hazards without requiring
1407 reading the contents of any SPRs. If however there are
1408 instructions that have directly written to the SVSTATE or SVSHAPE
1409 SPRs and those instructions are still in-flight then this position
1410 is clearly **invalid**. This is why Programmers are strongly
1411 discouraged from directly writing to these SPRs.*
1412
1413 *Architectural Resource Allocation note: this instruction shares
1414 the space of `svshape`. Therefore it is critical that the two
1415 instructions, `svshape` and `svshape2` have the exact same XO
1416 in bits 26 thru 31. It is also critical that for `svshape2`,
1417 bit 21 of XO is a 1, bit 22 of XO is a 0, and bit 23 of XO is a 0.*
1418
1419 [[!tag standards]]
1420
1421 -------------
1422
1423 \newpage{}
1424