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1 # OPF ISA WG External RFC LS001 v2 14Sep2022
2
3 * RFC Author: Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton.
4 * RFC Contributors/Ideas: Brad Frey, Paul Mackerras, Konstantinos Magritis,
5 Cesar Strauss, Jacob Lifshay, Toshaan Bharvani, Dimitry Selyutin, Andrey
6 Miroshnikov
7 * Funded by NLnet under the Privacy and Enhanced Trust Programme, EU
8 Horizon2020 Grant 825310
9 * <https://git.openpower.foundation/isa/PowerISA/issues/64>
10 [[ls001/discussion]]
11
12 This proposal is to extend the Power ISA with an Abstract RISC-Paradigm
13 Vectorisation Concept that may be orthogonally applied to **all and any** suitable
14 Scalar instructions, present and future, in the Scalar Power ISA.
15 The Vectorisation System is called
16 ["Simple-V"](https://libre-soc.org/openpower/sv/)
17 and the Prefix Format is called
18 ["SVP64"](https://libre-soc.org/openpower/sv/).
19 **Simple-V is not a Traditional Vector ISA and therefore
20 does not add Vector opcodes or regfiles**.
21 An ISA Concept similar to Simple-V was originally invented in 1994 by
22 Peter Hsu (Architect of the MIPS R8000) but was dropped as MIPS did not
23 have an Out-of-Order Microarchitecture at the time.
24
25 Simple-V is designed for Embedded Scenarios right the way through
26 Audio/Visual DSPs to 3D GPUs and Supercomputing. As it does **not**
27 add actual Vector Instructions, relying solely and exclusively on the
28 **Scalar** ISA, it is **Scalar** instructions that need to be added to
29 the **Scalar** Power ISA before Simple-V may orthogonally Vectorise them.
30
31 The goal of RED Semiconductor Ltd, an OpenPOWER
32 Stakeholder, is to bring to market mass-volume general-purpose compute
33 processors that are competitive in the 3D GPU Audio Visual DSP EDGE IoT
34 desktop chromebook netbook smartphone laptop markets, performance-leveraged
35 by Simple-V. Simple-V thus has to
36 be accompanied by corresponding **Scalar** instructions that bring the
37 **Scalar** Power ISA up-to-date. These include IEEE754
38 [Transcendentals](https://libre-soc.org/openpower/transcendentals/)
39 [AV](https://libre-soc.org/openpower/sv/av_opcodes/)
40 cryptographic
41 [Biginteger](https://libre-soc.org/openpower/sv/biginteger/) and
42 [bitmanipulation](https://libre-soc.org/openpower/sv/bitmanip)
43 operations that ARM
44 Intel AMD and many other ISAs have been adding over the past 12 years
45 and Power ISA has not. Three additional FP-related sets are needed
46 (missing from SFFS) -
47 [int_fp_mv](https://libre-soc.org/openpower/sv/int_fp_mv/)
48 [fclass](https://libre-soc.org/openpower/sv/fclass/) and
49 [fcvt](https://libre-soc.org/openpower/sv/fcvt/)
50 and one set named
51 [crweird](https://libre-soc.org/openpower/sv/cr_int_predication/)
52 increase the capability of CR Fields.
53
54 *Thus it becomes necesary to consider the Architectural Resource
55 Allocation of not just Simple-V but the 80-100 Scalar instructions all
56 at the same time*.
57
58 It is also critical to note that Simple-V **does not modify the Scalar
59 Power ISA**, that **only** Scalar words may be
60 Vectorised, and that Vectorised instructions are **not** permitted to be
61 different from their Scalar words (`addi` must use the same Word encoding
62 as `sv.addi`, and any new Prefixed instruction added **must** also
63 be added as Scalar).
64 The sole semi-exception is Vectorised
65 Branch Conditional, in order to provide the usual Advanced Branching
66 capability present in every Commercial 3D GPU ISA, but it
67 is the *Vectorised* Branch-Conditional that is augmented, not Scalar
68 Branch.
69
70 # Basic principle
71
72 The inspiration for Simple-V came from the fact that on examination of every
73 Vector ISA pseudocode encountered the Vector operations were expressed
74 as a for-loop on a Scalar element
75 operation, and then both a Scalar **and** a Vector instruction was added.
76 With Zero-Overhead Looping *already* being mainstream in DSPs for over three
77 decades it felt natural to separate the looping at both the ISA and
78 the Hardware Level
79 and thus provide only Scalar instructions (instantly halving the number
80 of instructions), but rather than go the VLIW route (TI MSP Series)
81 keep closely to existing Power ISA standard Scalar execution.
82
83 Thus the basic principle of Simple-V is to provide a Precise-Interruptible
84 Zero-Overhead Loop system[^zolc] with associated register "offsetting"
85 which augments a Suffixed instruction as a "template",
86 incrementing the register numbering progressively *and automatically*
87 each time round the "loop". Thus it may be considered to be a form
88 of "Sub-Program-Counter" and at its simplest level can replace a large
89 sequence of regularly-increasing loop-unrolled instructions with just two:
90 one to set the Vector length and one saying where to
91 start from in the regfile.
92
93 On this sound and profoundly simple concept which leverages *Scalar*
94 Micro-architectural capabilities much more comprehensive festures are
95 easy to add, working up towards an ISA that easily matches the capability
96 of powerful 3D GPU Vector Supercomputing ISAs, without ever adding even
97 one single Vector opcode.
98
99 # Extension Levels
100
101 Simple-V has been subdivided into levels akin to the Power ISA Compliancy
102 Levels. For now let us call them "SV Extension Levels" to differentiate
103 the two. The reason for the
104 [SV Extension Levels](https://libre-soc.org/openpower/sv/compliancy_levels/)
105 is the same as for the
106 Power ISA Compliancy Levels (SFFS, SFS): to not overburden implementors
107 with features that they do not need. *There is no dependence between
108 the two types of Levels*. The resources below therefore are
109 not all required for all SV Extension Levels but they are all required
110 to be reserved.
111
112 # Binary Interoperability
113
114 Power ISA has a reputation as being long-term stable.
115 **Simple-V guarantees binary interoperability** by defining fixed
116 register file bitwidths and size for all instructions.
117 The seduction of permitting different implementors to choose a register file
118 bitwidth and size with the same instructions unfortunately has
119 the catastrophic side-effect of introducing not only binary incompatibility
120 but silent data corruption as well as no means to trap-and-emulate differing
121 bitwidths.[^vsx256]
122
123 Thus "Silicon-Partner" Scalability
124 is prohibited in the Simple-V Scalable Vector ISA,
125 This does
126 mean that `RESERVED` space is crucial to have, in order
127 to safely provide the option of
128 future expanded register file bitwidths and sizes[^msr],
129 under explicitly-distinguishable encoding,
130 **at the discretion of and with the full authority of the OPF ISA WG**,
131 not the implementor ("Silicon Partner").
132
133 # Hardware Implementations
134
135 The fundamental principle of Simple-V is that it sits between Issue and
136 Decode, pausing the Program-Counter to service a "Sub-PC"
137 hardware for-loop. This is very similar to "Zero-Overhead Loops"
138 in High-end DSPs (TI MSP Series).
139
140 Considerable effort has been expended to ensure that Simple-V is
141 practical to implement on an extremely wide range of Industry-wide
142 common **Scalar** micro-architectures. Finite State Machine (for
143 ultra-low-resource and Mission-Critical), In-order single-issue, all the
144 way through to Great-Big Out-of-Order Superscalar Multi-Issue. The
145 SV Extension Levels specifically recognise these differing scenarios.
146
147 SIMD back-end ALUs particularly those with element-level predicate
148 masks may be exploited to good effect with very little additional
149 complexity to achieve high throughput, even on a single-issue in-order
150 microarchitecture. As usually becomes quickly apparent with in-order, its
151 limitations extend also to when Simple-V is deployed, which is why
152 Multi-Issue Out-of-Order is the recommended (but not mandatory) Scalar
153 Micro-architecture.
154
155 The only major concern is in the upper SV Extension Levels: the Hazard
156 Management for increased number of Scalar Registers to 128 (in current
157 versions) but given that IBM POWER9/10 has VSX register numbering 64,
158 and modern GPUs have 128, 256 amd even 512 registers this was deemed
159 acceptable. Strategies do exist in hardware for Hazard Management of
160 such large numbers of registers, even for Multi-Issue microarchitectures.
161
162 # Simple-V Architectural Resources
163
164 * No new Interrupt types are required.
165 No modifications to existing Power ISA opcodes are required.
166 No new Register Files are required (all because Simple-V is a category of
167 Zero-Overhead Looping on Scalar instructions)
168 * GPR FPR and CR Field Register extend to 128. A future
169 version may extend to 256 or beyond[^extend] or also extend VSX[^futurevsx]
170 * 24-bits are needed within the main SVP64 Prefix (equivalent to a 2-bit XO)
171 * Another 24-bit (a second 2-bit XO) is needed for a planned future encoding,
172 currently named "SVP64-Single"[^likeext001]
173 * A third 24-bits (third 2-bit XO) is strongly recommended to be `RESERVED`
174 such that future unforeseen capability is needed (although this may be
175 alternatively achieved with a mandatory PCR or MSR bit)
176 * To hold all Vector Context, five SPRs are needed for userspace.
177 If Supervisor and Hypervisor mode are to
178 also support Simple-V they will correspondingly need five SPRs each.
179 (Some 32/32-to-64 aliases are advantageous but not critical).
180 * Five 6-bit XO (A-Form) "Management" instructions are needed. These are
181 Scalar 32-bit instructions and *may* be 64-bit-extended in future
182 (safely within the SVP64 space: no need for an EXT001 encoding).
183
184 **Summary of Simple-V Opcode space**
185
186 * 75% of one Major Opcode (equivalent to the rest of EXT017)
187 * Five 6-bit XO 32-bit operations.
188
189 No further opcode space *for Simple-V* is envisaged to be required for
190 at least the next decade (including if added on VSX)
191
192 **Simple-V SPRs**
193
194 * **SVSTATE** - Vectorisation State sufficient for Precise-Interrupt
195 Context-switching and no adverse latency, it may be considered to
196 be a "Sub-PC" and as such absolutely must be treated with the same
197 respect and priority as MSR and PC.
198 * **SVSRR0** - identical in purpose to SRR0/1: storing SVSTATE on context-switch
199 along-side MSR and PC.
200 * **SVSHAPE0-3** - these are 32-bit and may be grouped in pairs, they REMAP
201 (shape) the Vectors[^svshape]
202 * **SVLR** - again similar to LR for exactly the same purpose, SVSTATE
203 is swapped with SVLR by SV-Branch-Conditional for exactly the same
204 reason that NIA is swapped with LR
205
206 **Vector Management Instructions**
207
208 These fit into QTY 5of 6-bit XO 32-bit encoding (svshape and svshape2 share
209 the same space):
210
211 * **setvl** - Cray-style Scalar Vector Length instruction
212 * **svstep** - used for Vertical-First Mode and for enquiring about internal
213 state
214 * **svremap** - "tags" registers for activating REMAP
215 * **svshape** - convenience instruction for quickly setting up Matrix, DCT,
216 FFT and Parallel Reduction REMAP
217 * **svshape2** - additional convenience instruction to set up "Offset" REMAP
218 (fits within svshape's XO encoding)
219 * **svindex** - convenience instruction for setting up "Indexed" REMAP.
220
221 \newpage{}
222 # SVP64 24-bit Prefixes
223
224 The SVP64 24-bit Prefix (RM) options aim to reduce instruction count
225 and assembler complexity.
226 These Modes do not interact with SVSTATE per se. SVSTATE
227 primarily controls the looping (quantity, order), RM
228 influences the *elements* (the Suffix). There is however
229 some close interaction when it comes to predication.
230 REMAP is outlined separately.
231
232 * **element-width overrides**, which dynamically redefine each SFFS or SFS
233 Scalar prefixed instruction to be 8-bit, 16-bit, 32-bit or 64-bit
234 operands **without requiring new 8/16/32 instructions.**[^pseudorewrite]
235 This results in full BF16 and FP16 opcodes being added to the Power ISA
236 **without adding BF16 or FP16 opcodes** including full conversion
237 between all formats.
238 * **predication**.
239 this is an absolutely essential feature for a 3D GPU VPU ISA.
240 CR Fields are available as Predicate Masks hence the reason for their
241 extension to 128. Twin-Predication is also provided: this may best
242 be envisaged as back-to-back VGATHER-VSCATTER but is not restricted
243 to LD/ST, its use saves on instruction count. Enabling one or other
244 of the predicates provides all of the other types of operations
245 found in Vector ISAs (VEXTRACT, VINSERT etc) again with no need
246 to actually provide explicit such instructions.
247 * **Saturation**. applies to **all** LD/ST and Arithmetic and Logical
248 operations (without adding explicit saturation ops)
249 * **Reduction and Prefix-Sum** (Fibonnacci Series) Modes, including a
250 "Reverse Gear" (running loops in reverse order).
251 * **vec2/3/4 "Packing" and "Unpacking"** (similar to VSX `vpack` and `vpkss`)
252 accessible in a way that is easier than REMAP, added for the same reasons
253 that drove `vpack` and `vpkss` etc. to be added: pixel, audio, and 3D
254 data manipulation. With Pack/Unpack being part of SVSTATE it can be
255 applied *in-place* saving register file space (no copy/mv needed).
256 * **Load/Store "fault-first"** speculative behaviour,
257 identical to SVE and RVV
258 Fault-first: provides auto-truncation of a speculative sequential parallel
259 LD/ST batch, helping
260 solve the "SIMD Considered Harmful" stripmining problem from a Memory
261 Access perspective.
262 * **Data-Dependent Fail-First**: a 100% Deterministic extension of the LDST
263 ffirst concept: first `Rc=1 BO test` failure terminates looping and
264 truncates VL to that exact point. Useful for implementing algorithms
265 such as `strcpy` in around 14 high-performance Vector instructions, the
266 option exists to include or exclude the failing element.
267 * **Predicate-result**: a strategic mode that effectively turns all and any
268 operations into a type of `cmp`. An `Rc=1 BO test` is performed and if
269 failing that element result is **not** written to the regfile. The `Rc=1`
270 Vector of co-results **is** always written (subject to usual predication).
271 Termed "predicate-result" because the combination of producing then
272 testing a result is as if the test was in a follow-up predicated
273 copy/mv operation, it reduces regfile pressure and instruction count.
274 Also useful on saturated or other overflowing operations, the overflowing
275 elements may be excluded from outputting to the regfile then
276 post-analysed outside of critical hot-loops.
277
278 **RM Modes**
279
280 There are five primary categories of instructions in Power ISA, each of
281 which needed slightly different Modes. For example, saturation and
282 element-width overrides are meaningless to Condition Register Field
283 operations, and Reduction is meaningless to LD/ST but Saturation
284 saves register file ports in critical hot-loops. Thus the 24 bits may
285 be suitably adapted to each category.
286
287 * Normal - arithmetic and logical including IEEE754 FP
288 * LD/ST immediate - includes element-strided and unit-strided
289 * LD/ST indexed
290 * CR Field ops
291 * Branch-Conditional - saves on instruction count in 3D parallel if/else
292
293 It does have to be pointed out that there is huge pressure on the
294 Mode bits. There was therefore insufficient room, unlike the way that
295 EXT001 was designed, to provide "identifying bits" *without first partially
296 decoding the Suffix*. This should in no way be conflated with or taken
297 as an indicator that changing the meaning of the Suffix is performed
298 or desirable.
299
300 Some considerable care has been taken to ensure that Decoding may be
301 performed in a strict forward-pipelined fashion that, aside from changes in
302 SVSTATE (necessarily cached and propagated alongside MSR and PC)
303 and aside from the initial 32/64 length detection (also kept simple),
304 a Multi-Issue Engine would have no difficulty (performance maximisable).
305 With the initial partial RM Mode type-identification
306 decode performed above the Vector operations may then
307 easily be passed downstream in a fully forward-progressive piplined fashion
308 to independent parallel units for further analysis.
309
310 **Vectorised Branch-Conditional**
311
312 As mentioned in the introduction this is the one sole instruction group
313 that
314 is different pseudocode from its scalar equivalent. However even there
315 its various Mode bits and options can be set such that in the degenerate
316 case the behaviour becomes identical to Scalar Branch-Conditional.
317
318 The two additional Modes within Vectorised Branch-Conditional, both of
319 which may be combined, are `CTR-Mode` and `VLI-Test` (aka "Data Fail First").
320 CTR Mode extends the way that CTR may be decremented unconditionally
321 within Scalar Branch-Conditional, and not only makes it conditional but
322 also interacts with predication. VLI-Test provides the same option
323 as Data-Dependent Fault-First to Deterministically truncate the Vector
324 Length at the fail **or success** point.
325
326 Boolean Logic rules on sets (treating the Vector of CR Fields to be tested by
327 `BO` as a set) dictate that the Branch should take place on either 'ALL'
328 tests succeeding (or failing) or whether 'SOME' tests succeed (or fail).
329 These options provide the ability to cover the majority of Parallel
330 3D GPU Conditions, saving a not inconsiderable number of instructions
331 especially given the close interaction with CTR in hot-loops.
332
333 Also `SVLR` is introduced, which is a parallel twin of `LR`, and saving
334 and restoring of LR and SVLR may be deferred until the final decision
335 as to whether to branch. In this way `sv.bclrl` does not corrupt `LR`.
336
337 Vectorised Branch-Conditional due to its side-effects (e.g. reducing CTR
338 or truncating VL) has practical uses even if the Branch is deliberately
339 set to the next instruction (CIA+8). For example it may be used to reduce
340 CTR by the number of bits set in a GPR, if that GPR is given as the predicate
341 mask `sv.bc/pm=r3`.
342
343 # LD/ST RM Modes
344
345 Traditional Vector ISAs have vastly more (and more complex) addressing
346 modes: unit strided, element strided, Indexed, Structure Packing. All
347 of these had to be jammed in on top of existing Scalar instructions
348 **without modifying the Scalar instructions**. A small conceptual
349 "cheat" was therefore needed. The Immediate (D) is in some Modes
350 multiplied by the element index, which gives us element-strided.
351 For unit-strided the width of the operation (`ld`, 8 byte) is
352 multiplied by the element index and *substituted* for "D" when
353 the immediate, D, is zero. Modifications to support this
354 "cheat" on top of pre-existing Scalar HDL (and Simulators)
355 have both turned out to be minimal.[^mul]
356
357 Also added was the option to perform signed or unsigned Effective
358 Address calculation, which comes into play only on LD/ST Indexed,
359 when elwidth overrides are used. Another quirk: `RA` is never
360 allowed to have its width altered: it remains 64-bit, as it is
361 the Base Address.
362
363 One confusing thing is the unfortunate naming of LD/ST Indexed and
364 REMAP Indexed: some care is taken in the spec to discern the two.
365 LD/ST Indexed is Scalar `EA=RA+RB` (where **either** RA or RB
366 may be marked as Vectorised), where obviously the order in which
367 that Vector of RA (or RB) is read in the usual linear sequential
368 fashion. REMAP Indexed affects the
369 **order** in which the Vector of RA (or RB) is accessed,
370 according to a schedule determined by *another* vector of offsets
371 in the register file. Effectively this combines VSX `vperm`
372 back-to-back with LD/ST operations *in the calculation of each
373 Effective Address* in one instruction.
374
375 For DCT and FFT, normally it is very expensive to perform the
376 "bit-inversion" needed for address calculation and/or reordering
377 of elements. DCT in particular needs both bit-inversion *and
378 Gray-Coding* offsets (a complexity that often "justifies" full
379 assmbler loop-unrolling). DCT/FFT REMAP **automatically** performs
380 the required offset adjustment to get data loaded and stored in
381 the required order. Matrix REMAP can likewise perform up to 3
382 Dimensions of reordering (on both Immediate and Indexed), and
383 when combined with vec2/3/4 the reordering can even go as far as
384 four dimensions (four nested fixed size loops).
385
386 Twin Predication is worth a special mention. Many Vector ISAs have
387 special LD/ST `VCOMPRESS` and `VREDUCE` instructions, which sequentially
388 skip elements based on predicate mask bits. They also add special
389 `VINSERT` and `VEXTRACT` Register-based instructions to compensate
390 for lack of single-element LD/ST (where in Simple-V you just use
391 Scalar LD/ST). Also Broadcasting (`VSPLAT`) is either added to LDST
392 or as Register-based.
393
394 *All of the above modes are covered by Twin-Predication*
395
396 In particular, a special predicate mode `1<<r3` uses the register `r3`
397 *binary* value effectively as a single (Scalar) Index offset into
398 what would otherwise be a Vector operation. Combined with the
399 (mis-named) "mapreduce" mode when used as a source predicate
400 a `VSPLAT` is performed. When used as a destination predicate `1<<r3`
401 provides `VINSERT` behaviour.
402
403 Also worth an explicit mention is that Twin Predication when using
404 different source from destination predicate masks effectively combines
405 back-to-back `VCOMPRESS` and `VEXPAND` (in a single instruction), and,
406 further, that the benefits of Twin Predication are not limited to LD/ST,
407 they may be applied to Arithmetic, Logical and CR Field operations as well.
408
409 Overall the LD/ST Modes available are astoundingly powerful, especially
410 when combining arithmetic (lharx) with saturation, element-width overrides,
411 Twin Predication,
412 vec2/3/4 Structure Packing *and* REMAP, the combinations far exceed anything
413 seen in any other Vector ISA in history, yet are really nothing more
414 than concepts abstracted out in pure RISC form.[^ldstcisc]
415
416 # CR Field RM Modes.
417
418 CR Field operations (`crand` etc.) are somewhat underappreciated in the
419 Power ISA. The CR Fields however are perfect for providing up to four
420 separate Vectors of Predicate Masks: `EQ LT GT SO` and thus some special
421 attention was given to first making transfer between GPR and CR Fields
422 much more powerful with the
423 [crweird](https://libre-soc.org/openpower/sv/cr_int_predication/)
424 operations, and secondly by adding powerful binary and ternary CR Field
425 operations into the bitmanip extension.[^crops]
426
427 On these instructions RM Modes may still be applied (mapreduce and Data-Dependent Fail-first). The usefulness of
428 being able to auto-truncate subsequent Vector Processing at the point
429 at which a CR Field test fails, based on any arbitary logical operation involving `three` CR Field Vectors (`crternlogi`) should be clear, as
430 should the benefits of being able to do mapreduce and REMAP Parallel
431 Reduction on `crternlogi`: dramatic reduction in instruction count
432 for Branch-based control flow when faced with complex analysis of
433 multiple Vectors.
434
435 Overall the addition of the CR Operations and the CR RM Modes is about
436 getting instruction count down and increasing the power and flexibility of CR Fields as pressed into service for the purpose of Predicate Masks.
437
438 [^crops]: the alternative to powerful transfer instructions between GPR and CR Fields was to add the full duplicated suite of BMI and TBM operations present in GPR (popcnt, cntlz, set-before-first) as CR Field Operations. all of which was deemed inappropriate.
439
440 # SVP64Single 24-bits
441
442 The `SVP64-Single` 24-bit encoding focusses primarily on ensuring that
443 all 128 Scalar registers are fully accessible, provides element-width
444 overrides, one-bit predication
445 and brings Saturation to all existing Scalar operations.
446 BF16 and FP16 are thus
447 provided in the Scalar Power ISA without one single explicit FP16 or BF16
448 32-bit opcode being added. The downside: such Scalar operations are
449 all 64-bit encodings.
450
451 As SVP64Single is new and still under development, space for it may
452 instead be `RESERVED`. It is however necessary in *some* form
453 as there are limitations
454 in SVP64 Register numbering, particularly for 4-operand instructions,
455 that can only be easily overcome by SVP64Single.
456
457 # Vertical-First Mode
458
459 This is a Computer Science term that needed first to be invented.
460 There exists only one other Vertical-First Vector ISA in the world:
461 Mitch Alsup's VVM Extension for the 66000, details of which may be
462 obtained publicly on `comp.arch` or directly from Mitch Alsup under
463 NDA. Several people have
464 independently derived Vertical-First: it simply did not have a
465 Computer Science term associated with it.
466
467 If we envisage register and Memory layout to be Horizontal and
468 instructions to be Vertical, and to then have some form of Loop
469 System (wherther Zero-Overhead or just branch-conditional based)
470 it is easier to then conceptualise VF vs HF Mode:
471
472 * Vertical-First progresses through *instructions* first before
473 moving on to the next *register* (or Memory-address in the case
474 of Mitch Alsup's VVM).
475 * Horizontal-First (also known as Cray-style Vectors) progresses
476 through **registers** (or, register *elements* in traditional
477 Cray-Vector ISAs) in full before moving on to the next *instruction*.
478
479 Mitch Alsup's VVM Extension is a form of hardware-level auto-vectorisation
480 based around Zero-Overhead Loops. Using a Variable-Length Encoding all
481 loop-invariant registers are "tagged" such that the Hazard Management
482 Engine may perform optimally and do less work in automatically identifying
483 parallelism opportunities.
484 With it not being appropriate to use Variable-Length Encoding in the Power
485 ISA a different much more explicit strategy was taken in Simple-V.
486
487 The biggest advantage inherent in Vertical-First is that it is very easy
488 to introduce into compilers, because all looping, as far as programs
489 is concerned, remains expressed as *Scalar assembler*.[^autovec]
490 Whilst Mitch Alsup's
491 VVM biggest strength is its hardware-level auto-vectorisation
492 but is limited in its ability to call
493 functions, Simple-V's Vertical-First provides explicit control over the
494 parallelism ("hphint")[^hphint] and also allows for full state to be stored/restored
495 (SVLR combined with LR), permitting full function calls to be made
496 from inside Vertical-First Loops, and potentially allows arbitrarily-depth
497 nested VF Loops.
498
499 Simple-V Vertical-First Looping requires an explicit instruction to
500 move `SVSTATE` regfile offsets forward: `svstep`. An early version of
501 Vectorised
502 Branch-Conditional attempted to merge the functionality of `svstep`
503 into `sv.bc`: it became CISC-like in its complexity and was quickly reverted.
504
505 # Simple-V REMAP subsystem
506
507 [REMAP](https://libre-soc.org/openpower/sv/remap)
508 is extremely advanced but brings features already present in other
509 DSPs and Supercomputing ISAs. The usual sequential progression
510 through elements is pushed through a hardware-defined
511 *fully Deterministic*
512 "remapping". Normally (without REMAP)
513 algorithms are costly or
514 convoluted to implement. They are typically implemented
515 as hard-coded fully loop-unrolled assembler which is often
516 auto-generated by specialist tools, or written
517 entirely by hand.
518 All REMAP Schedules *including Indexed*
519 are 100% Deterministic from their point of declaration,
520 making it possible to forward-plan
521 Issue, Memory access and Register Hazard Management
522 in Multi-Issue Micro-architectures.
523 If combined with Vertical-First then much more complex operations may exploit
524 REMAP Schedules, such as Complex Number FFTs.
525
526 * **DCT/FFT** REMAP brings more capability than TI's MSP-Series DSPs and
527 Qualcom Hexagon DSPs, and is not restricted to Integer or FP.
528 (Galois Field is possible, implementing NTT). Operates *in-place*
529 significantly reducing register usage.
530 * **Matrix** REMAP brings more capability than any other Matrix Extension
531 (AMD GPUs, Intel, ARM), not being restricted to Power-2 sizes. Also not
532 limited to the type of operation, it may perform Warshall Transitive
533 Closure, Integer Matrix, Bitmanipulation Matrix, Galois Field (carryless
534 mul) Matrix, and with care potentially Graph Maximum Flow as well. Also
535 suited to Convolutions, Matrix Transpose and rotate, *all* of which is
536 in-place.
537 * **General-purpose Indexed** REMAP, this option is provided to implement
538 an equivalent of VSX `vperm`, as a general-purpose catch-all means of
539 covering algorithms outside of the other REMAP Engines.
540 * **Parallel Reduction** REMAP, performs an automatic map-reduce using
541 *any suitable scalar operation*.
542
543 Note that predication is possible on REMAP but is hard to use effectively.
544 It is often best to make copies of data (`VCOMPRESS`) then apply REMAP.
545
546 \newpage{}
547 # Scalar Operations
548
549 The primary reason for mentioning the additional Scalar operations
550 is because they are so numerous, with Power ISA not having advanced
551 in the *general purpose* compute area in the past 12 years, that some
552 considerable care is needed.
553
554 Summary:
555 **Including Simple-V, to fit everything at least 75% of 3 separate
556 Major Opcodes would be required**
557
558 Candidates (for all but the X-Form instructions) include:
559
560 * EXT006 (80% free)
561 * EXT017 (75% free but not recommended)
562 * EXT001 (50% free)
563 * EXT009 (100% free)
564 * EXT005 (100% free)
565 * brownfield space in EXT019 (25% but NOT recommended)
566
567 SVP64, SVP64-Single and SVP64-Reserved would require on their own each 25%
568 of one Major Opcode for a total of 75% of one Major Opcode. The remaining
569 **Scalar** opcodes, due to there being two separate sets of operations
570 with 16-bit immediates, will require the other space totalling two 75%
571 Majors.
572
573 Note critically that:
574
575 * Unlike EXT001, SVP64's 24-bits may **not** hold also any Scalar
576 operations. There is no free available space: a 25th bit would
577 be required. The entire 24-bits is **required** for the abstracted
578 Hardware-Looping Concept **even when these 24-bits are zero**
579 * Any Scalar 64-bit instruction (regardless of how it is encoded) is unsafe to
580 then Vectorise because this creates the situation of Prefixed-Prefixed,
581 resulting in deep complexity in Hardware Decode at a critical juncture, as
582 well as introducing 96-bit instructions.
583 * **All** of these Scalar instructions are candidates for Vectorisation.
584 Thus none of them may be 64-bit-Scalar-only.
585
586 **Minor Opcodes to fit candidates above**
587
588 In order of size, for bitmanip and A/V DSP purposes:
589
590 * QTY 3of 2-bit XO: ternlogi, crternlogi, grevlogi
591 * QTY 7of 3-bit XO: xpermi, binlut, grevlog, swizzle-mv/fmv, bitmask, bmrevi
592 * QTY 8of 5/6-bit (A-Form): xpermi, bincrflut, bmask, fmvis, fishmv, bmrev,
593 Galois Field
594 * QTY 30of 10-bit (X-Form): cldiv/mul, av-min/max/diff, absdac, xperm etc.
595 (easily fit EXT019, EXT031).
596
597 Note: Some of the Galois Field operations will require QTY 1of Polynomial
598 SPR (per userspace supervisor hypervisor).
599
600 **EXT004**
601
602 For biginteger math, two instructions in the same space as "madd" are to
603 be proposed. They are both 3-in 2-out operations taking or producing a
604 64-bit "pair" (like RTp), and perform 128/64 mul and div/mod operations
605 respectively. These are **not** the same as VSX operations which are
606 128/128, and they are **not** the same as existing Scalar mul/div/mod,
607 all of which are 64/64 (or 64/32).
608
609 **EXT059 and EXT063**
610
611 Additionally for High-Performance Compute and Competitive 3D GPU, IEEE754 FP
612 Transcendentals are required, as are some DCT/FFT "Twin-Butterfly" operations.
613 For each of EXT059 and EXT063:
614
615 * QTY 33of X-Form "1-argument" (fsin, fsins, fcos, fcoss)
616 * QTY 15of X-Form "2-argument" (pow, atan2, fhypot)
617 * QTY 5of A-Form "3-in 2-out" FP Butterfly operations for DCT/FFT
618 * QTY 8of X-Form "2-in 2-out" FP Butterfly operations (again for DCT/FFT)
619 * An additional 16 instructions for IEEE754-2019
620 (fminss/fmaxss, fminmag/fmaxmag)
621 [under evaluation](https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=923)
622 as of 08Sep2022
623
624 # Adding new opcodes.
625
626 With Simple-V being a type of Zero-Overhead Loop Engine on top of
627 Scalar operations some clear guidelines are needed on how both
628 existing "Defined Words" (Public v3.1 Section 1.6.3 term) and future
629 Scalar operations are added within the 64-bit space. Examples of
630 legal and illegal allocations are given later.
631
632 The primary point is that once an instruction is defined in Scalar
633 32-bit form its corresponding space **must** be reserved in the
634 SVP64 area with the exact same 32-bit form, even if that instruction
635 is "Unvectoriseable" (`sc`, `sync`, `rfid` and `mtspr` for example).
636 Instructions may **not** be added in the Vector space without also
637 being added in the Scalar space, and vice-versa, *even if Unvectoriseable*.
638
639 This is extremely important because the worst possible situation
640 is if a conflicting Scalar instruction is added by another Stakeholder,
641 which then turns out to be Vectoriseable: it would then have to be
642 added to the Vector Space with a *completely different Defined Word*
643 and things go rapidly downhill in the Decode Phase from there.
644 Setting a simple inviolate rule helps avoid this scenario but does
645 need to be borne in mind when discussing potential allocation
646 schemes, as well as when new Vectoriseable Opcodes are proposed
647 for addition by future RFCs: the opcodes **must** be uniformly
648 added to Scalar **and** Vector spaces, or added in one and reserved
649 in the other, or
650 not added at all in either.[^whoops]
651
652 \newpage{}
653 # Potential Opcode allocation solution (superseded)
654
655 *Note this scheme is superseded below but kept for completeness as it
656 defines terms and context*.
657 There are unfortunately some inviolate requirements that directly place
658 pressure on the EXT000-EXT063 (32-bit) opcode space to such a degree that
659 it risks jeapordising the Power ISA. These requirements are:
660
661 * all of the scalar operations must be Vectoriseable
662 * all of the scalar operations intended for Vectorisation
663 must be in a 32-bit encoding (not prefixed-prefixed to 96-bit)
664 * bringing Scalar Power ISA up-to-date from the past 12 years
665 needs 75% of two Major opcodes all on its own
666
667 There exists a potential scheme which meets (exceeds) the above criteria,
668 providing plenty of room for both Scalar (and Vectorised) operations,
669 *and* provides SVP64-Single with room to grow. It
670 is based loosely around Public v3.1 EXT001 Encoding.[^ext001]
671
672 | 0-5 | 6 | 7 | 8-31 | Description |
673 |-----|---|---|-------|---------------------------|
674 | PO | 0 | 0 | 0000 | new-suffix `RESERVED1` |
675 | PO | 0 | 0 | !zero | new-suffix, scalar (SVP64Single), or `RESERVED3` |
676 | PO | 1 | 0 | 0000 | new scalar-only word, or `RESERVED2` |
677 | PO | 1 | 0 | !zero | old-suffix, scalar (SVP64Single), or `RESERVED4` |
678 | PO | 0 | 1 | nnnn | new-suffix, vector (SVP64) |
679 | PO | 1 | 1 | nnnn | old-suffix, vector (SVP64) |
680
681 * **PO** - Primary Opcode. Likely candidates: EXT005, EXT009
682 * **bit 6** - specifies whether the suffix is old (EXT000-EXT063)
683 or new (EXTn00-EXTn63, n greater than 1)
684 * **bit 7** - defines whether the Suffix is Scalar-Prefixed or Vector-Prefixed
685 (caveat: see bits 8-31)
686 * **old-suffix** - the EXT000 to EXT063 32-bit Major opcodes of Power ISA 3.0
687 * **new scalar-only** - a **new** Major Opcode area **exclusively**
688 for Scalar-only instructions that shall **never** be Prefixed by SVP64
689 (RESERVED2 EXT300-EXT363)
690 * **new-suffix** - a **new** Major Opcode area (RESERVED1 EXT200-EXT263)
691 that **may** be Prefixed by SVP64 and SVP64Single
692 * **0000** - all 24 bits bits 8-31 are zero (0x000000)
693 * **!zero** - bits 8-31 may be any value *other* than zero (0x000001-0xffffff)
694 * **nnnn** - bits 8-31 may be any value in the range 0x000000 to 0xffffff
695 * **SVP64Single** - a ([TBD](https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=905))
696 *Scalar* Encoding that is near-identical to SVP64
697 except that it is equivalent to hard-coded VL=1
698 at all times. Predication is permitted, Element-width-overrides is
699 permitted, Saturation is permitted.
700 If not allocated within the scope of this RFC
701 then these are requested to be `RESERVED` for a future Simple-V
702 proposal.
703 * **SVP64** - a (well-defined, 2 years) DRAFT Proposal for a Vectorisation
704 Augmentation of suffixes.
705
706 For the needs identified by Libre-SOC (75% of 2 POs),
707 `RESERVED1` space *needs*
708 allocation to new POs, `RESERVED2` does not.[^only2]
709
710 | | Scalar (bit7=0,8-31=0000) | Scalar (bit7=0,8-31=!zero)| Vector (bit7=1) |
711 |----------|---------------------------|---------------------------|------------------|
712 |new bit6=0| `RESERVED1`:{EXT200-263} | `RESERVED3`:SVP64-Single:{EXT200-263} | SVP64:{EXT200-263} |
713 |old bit6=1| `RESERVED2`:{EXT300-363} | `RESERVED4`:SVP64-Single:{EXT000-063} | SVP64:{EXT000-063} |
714
715 * **`RESERVED2`:{EXT300-363}** (not strictly necessary to be added) is not
716 and **cannot** ever be Vectorised or Augmented by Simple-V or any future
717 Simple-V Scheme.
718 it is a pure **Scalar-only** word-length PO Group. It may remain `RESERVED`.
719 * **`RESERVED1`:{EXT200-263}** is also a new set of 64 word-length Major
720 Opcodes.
721 These opcodes would be Simple-V-Augmentable
722 unlike `EXT300-363` which may **never** be Simple-V-Augmented
723 under any circumstances.
724 * **RESERVED3:`SVP64-Single:{EXT200-263}`** - Major opcodes 200-263 with
725 Single-Augmentation, providing a one-bit predicate mask, element-width
726 overrides on source and destination, and the option to extend the Scalar
727 Register numbering (r0-32 extends to r0-127). **Placing of alternative
728 instruction encodings other than those exactly defined in EXT200-263
729 is prohibited**.
730 * **RESERVED4:`SVP64-Single:{EXT000-063}`** - Major opcodes 000-063 with
731 Single-Augmentation, just like SVP64-Single on EXT200-263, these are
732 in effect Single-Augmented-Prefixed variants of the v3.0 32-bit Power ISA.
733 Alternative instruction encodings other than the exact same 32-bit word
734 from EXT000-EXT063 are likewise prohibited.
735 * **`SVP64:{EXT000-063}`** and **`SVP64:{EXT200-263}`** - Full Vectorisation
736 of EXT000-063 and EXT200-263 respectively, these Prefixed instructions
737 are likewise prohibited from being a different encoding from their
738 32-bit scalar versions.
739
740 Limitations of this scheme is that new 32-bit Scalar operations have to have
741 a 32-bit "prefix pattern" in front of them. If commonly-used this could
742 increase binary size. Thus the Encodings EXT300-363 and EXT200-263 should
743 only be allocated for less-popular operations. However the scheme does
744 have the strong advantage of *tripling* the available number of Major
745 Opcodes in the Power ISA, caveat being that care on allocation is needed
746 because EXT200-EXT263 may be SVP64-Augmented whilst EXT300-EXT363 may **not**.
747 The issues of allocation for bitmanip etc. from Libre-SOC is therefore
748 overwhelmingly made moot. The only downside is that there is no
749 `SVP64-Reserved` which will have to be achieved with SPRs (PCR or MSR).
750
751 *Most importantly what this scheme does not do is provide large areas
752 for other (non-Vectoriseable) RFCs.*
753
754 # Potential Opcode allocation solution (2)
755
756 One of the risks of the bit 6/7 scheme above is that there is no
757 room to share PO9 (EXT009) with other potential uses. A workaround for
758 that is as follows:
759
760 * EXT009, like EXT001 of Public v3.1, is **defined** as a 64-bit
761 encoding. This makes Multi-Issue Length-identification trivial.
762 * bit 6 if 0b1 is 100% for Simple-V augmentation of (Public v3.1 1.6.3)
763 "Defined Words" (aka EXT000-063), with the exception of 0x26000000
764 as a Prefix, which is a new RESERVED encoding.
765 * when bit 6 is 0b0 and bits 32-33 are 0b11 are **defined** as also
766 allocated to Simple-V
767 * all other patterns are `RESERVED` for other non-Vectoriseable
768 purposes (just over 37.5%).
769
770 | 0-5 | 6 | 7 | 8-31 | 32:33 | Description |
771 |-----|---|---|-------|-------|----------------------------|
772 | PO9?| 0 | 0 | !zero | 00-10 | RESERVED (other) |
773 | PO9?| 0 | 1 | xxxx | 00-10 | RESERVED (other) |
774 | PO9?| x | 0 | 0000 | xx | RESERVED (other) |
775 | PO9?| 0 | 0 | !zero | 11 | SVP64 (current and future) |
776 | PO9?| 0 | 1 | xxxx | 11 | SVP64 (current and future) |
777 | PO9?| 1 | 0 | !zero | xx | SVP64 (current and future) |
778 | PO9?| 1 | 1 | xxxx | xx | SVP64 (current and future) |
779
780 This ensures that any potential for future conflict over uses of the
781 EXT009 space, jeapordising Simple-V in the process, are avoided,
782 yet leaves huge areas (just over 37.5% of the 64-bit space) for other
783 (non-Vectoriseable) uses.
784
785 These areas thus need to be Allocated (SVP64 and Scalar EXT248-263):
786
787 | 0-5 | 6 | 7 | 8-31 | 32-3 | Description |
788 |-----|---|---|-------|------|---------------------------|
789 | PO | 0 | 0 | !zero | 0b11 | SVP64Single:EXT248-263, or `RESERVED3` |
790 | PO | 0 | 0 | 0000 | 0b11 | Scalar EXT248-263 |
791 | PO | 0 | 1 | nnnn | 0b11 | SVP64:EXT248-263 |
792 | PO | 1 | 0 | !zero | nn | SVP64Single:EXT000-063 or `RESERVED4` |
793 | PO | 1 | 1 | nnnn | nn | SVP64:EXT000-063 |
794
795 and reserved areas, QTY 1of 32-bit, and QTY 3of 55-bit, are:
796
797 | 0-5 | 6 | 7 | 8-31 | 32-3 | Description |
798 |-----|---|---|-------|------|---------------------------|
799 | PO9?| 1 | 0 | 0000 | xx | `RESERVED1` or EXT300-363 |
800 | PO9?| 0 | x | xxxx | 0b00 | `RESERVED2` or EXT200-216 |
801 | PO9?| 0 | x | xxxx | 0b01 | `RESERVED2` or EXT216-231 |
802 | PO9?| 0 | x | xxxx | 0b10 | `RESERVED2` or EXT232-247 |
803
804 Where:
805
806 * SVP64Single (`RESERVED3/4`) is *planned* for a future RFC
807 (but needs reserving as part of this RFC)
808 * `RESERVED1/2` is available for new general-purpose
809 (non-Vectoriseable) 32-bit encodings (other RFCs)
810 * EXT248-263 is for "new" instructions
811 which **must** be granted corresponding space
812 in SVP64.
813 * Anything Vectorised-EXT000-063 is **automatically** being
814 requested as 100% Reserved for every single "Defined Word"
815 (Public v3.1 1.6.3 definition). Vectorised-EXT001 or EXT009
816 is defined as illegal.
817 * Any **future** instruction
818 added to EXT000-063 likewise, must **automatically** be
819 assigned corresponding reservations in the SVP64:EXT000-063
820 and SVP64Single:EXT000-063 area, regardless of whether the
821 instruction is Vectoriseable or not.
822
823 Bit-allocation Summary:
824
825 * EXT3nn and other areas provide space for up to
826 QTY 4of non-Vectoriseable EXTn00-EXTn47 ranges.
827 * QTY 3of 55-bit spaces also exist for future use (longer by 3 bits
828 than opcodes allocated in EXT001)
829 * Simple-V EXT2nn is restricted to range EXT248-263
830 * non-Simple-V EXT2nn (if ever allocated by a future RFC) is restricted to range EXT200-247
831 * Simple-V EXT0nn takes up 50% of PO9 for this and future Simple-V RFCs
832
833 The clear separation between Simple-V and non-Simple-V stops
834 conflict in future RFCs, both of which get plenty of space.
835 EXT000-063 pressure is reduced in both Vectoriseable and
836 non-Vectoriseable, and the 100+ Vectoriseable Scalar operations
837 identified by Libre-SOC may safely be proposed and each evaluated
838 on their merits.
839
840 \newpage{}
841
842 **EXT000-EXT063**
843
844 These are Scalar word-encodings. Often termed "v3.0 Scalar" in this document
845 Power ISA v3.1 Section 1.6.3 Book I calls it a "defined word".
846
847 | 0-5 | 6-31 |
848 |--------|--------|
849 | PO | EXT000-063 "Defined word" |
850
851 **SVP64Single:{EXT000-063}** bit6=old bit7=scalar
852
853 This encoding, identical to SVP64Single:{EXT248-263},
854 introduces SVP64Single Augmentation of Scalar "defined words".
855 All meanings must be identical to EXT000-063, and is is likewise
856 prohibited to add an instruction in this area without also adding
857 the exact same (non-Augmented) instruction in EXT000-063 with the
858 exact same Scalar word.
859 Bits 32-37 0b00000 to 0b11111 represent EXT000-063 respectively.
860 Augmenting EXT001 or EXT009 is prohibited.
861
862 | 0-5 | 6 | 7 | 8-31 | 32-63 |
863 |--------|---|---|-------|---------|
864 | PO (9)?| 1 | 0 | !zero | SVP64Single:{EXT000-063} |
865
866 **SVP64:{EXT000-063}** bit6=old bit7=vector
867
868 This encoding is identical to **SVP64:{EXT248-263}** except it
869 is the Vectorisation of existing v3.0/3.1 Scalar-words, EXT000-063.
870 All the same rules apply with the addition that
871 Vectorisation of EXT001 or EXT009 is prohibited.
872
873 | 0-5 | 6 | 7 | 8-31 | 32-63 |
874 |--------|---|---|-------|---------|
875 | PO (9)?| 1 | 1 | nnnn | SVP64:{EXT000-063} |
876
877 **{EXT248-263}** bit6=new bit7=scalar
878
879 This encoding represents the opportunity to introduce EXT248-263.
880 It is a Scalar-word encoding, and does not require implementing
881 SVP64 or SVP64-Single, but does require the Vector-space to be allocated.
882 PO2 is in the range 0b11000 to 0b111111 to represent EXT248-263 respectively.
883
884 | 0-5 | 6 | 7 | 8-31 | 32-3 | 34-37 | 38-63 |
885 |--------|---|---|-------|------|---------|---------|
886 | PO (9)?| 0 | 0 | 0000 | 0b11 |PO2[2:5] | {EXT248-263} |
887
888 **SVP64Single:{EXT248-263}** bit6=new bit7=scalar
889
890 This encoding, which is effectively "implicit VL=1"
891 and comprising (from bits 8-31 being non-zero)
892 *at least some* form of Augmentation, it represents the opportunity
893 to Augment EXT248-263 with the SVP64Single capabilities.
894 Must be allocated under Scalar *and* SVP64 simultaneously.
895
896 | 0-5 | 6 | 7 | 8-31 | 32-3 | 34-37 | 38-63 |
897 |--------|---|---|-------|------|---------|---------|
898 | PO (9)?| 0 | 0 | !zero | 0b11 |PO2[2:5] | SVP64Single:{EXT248-263} |
899
900 **SVP64:{EXT248-263}** bit6=new bit7=vector
901
902 This encoding, which permits VL to be dynamic (settable from GPR or CTR)
903 is the Vectorisation of EXT248-263.
904 Instructions may not be placed in this category without also being
905 implemented as pure Scalar *and* SVP64Single. Unlike SVP64Single
906 however, there is **no reserved encoding** (bits 8-24 zero).
907 VL=1 may occur dynamically
908 at runtime, even when bits 8-31 are zero.
909
910 | 0-5 | 6 | 7 | 8-31 | 32-3 | 34-37 | 38-63 |
911 |--------|---|---|-------|------|---------|---------|
912 | PO (9)?| 0 | 1 | nnnn | 0b11 |PO2[2:5] | SVP64:{EXT248-263} |
913
914 **RESERVED2 / EXT300-363** bit6=old bit7=scalar
915
916 This is entirely at the discretion of the ISA WG. Libre-SOC is *not*
917 proposing the addition of EXT300-363: it is merely a possibility for
918 future. The reason the space is not needed is because this is within
919 the realm of Scalar-extended (SVP64Single), and with the 24-bit prefix
920 area being all-zero (bits 8-31) this is defined as "having no augmentation"
921 (in the Simple-V Specification it is termed `Scalar Identity Behaviour`).
922 This in turn makes this prefix a *degenerate duplicate* so may be allocated
923 for other purposes.
924
925 | 0-5 | 6 | 7 | 8-31 | 32-63 |
926 |--------|---|---|-------|---------|
927 | PO (9)?| 1 | 0 | 0000 | EXT300-363 or `RESERVED1` |
928
929 \newpage{}
930 # Example Legal Encodings and RESERVED spaces
931
932 This section illustrates what is legal encoding, what is not, and
933 why the 4 spaces should be `RESERVED` even if not allocated as part
934 of this RFC.
935
936 **legal, scalar and vector**
937
938 | width | assembler | prefix? | suffix | description |
939 |-------|-----------|--------------|-----------|---------------|
940 | 32bit | fishmv | none | 0x12345678| scalar EXT0nn |
941 | 64bit | ss.fishmv | 0x26!zero | 0x12345678| scalar SVP64Single:EXT0nn |
942 | 64bit | sv.fishmv | 0x27nnnnnn | 0x12345678| vector SVP64:EXT0nn |
943
944 OR:
945
946 | width | assembler | prefix? | suffix | description |
947 |-------|-----------|--------------|-----------|---------------|
948 | 64bit | fishmv | 0x24000000 | 0x12345678| scalar EXT2nn |
949 | 64bit | ss.fishmv | 0x24!zero | 0x12345678| scalar SVP64Single:EXT2nn |
950 | 64bit | sv.fishmv | 0x25nnnnnn | 0x12345678| vector SVP64:EXT2nn |
951
952 Here the encodings are the same, 0x12345678 means the same thing in
953 all cases. Anything other than this risks either damage (truncation
954 of capabilities of Simple-V) or far greater complexity in the
955 Decode Phase.
956
957 This drives the compromise proposal (above) to reserve certain
958 EXT2nn POs right
959 across the board
960 (in the Scalar Suffix side, irrespective of Prefix), some allocated
961 to Simple-V, some not.
962
963 **illegal due to missing**
964
965 | width | assembler | prefix? | suffix | description |
966 |-------|-----------|--------------|-----------|---------------|
967 | 32bit | fishmv | none | 0x12345678| scalar EXT0nn |
968 | 64bit | ss.fishmv | 0x26!zero | 0x12345678| scalar SVP64Single:EXT0nn |
969 | 64bit | unallocated | 0x27nnnnnn | 0x12345678| vector SVP64:EXT0nn |
970
971 This is illegal because the instruction is possible to Vectorise,
972 therefore it should be **defined** as Vectoriseable.
973
974 **illegal due to unvectoriseable**
975
976 | width | assembler | prefix? | suffix | description |
977 |-------|-----------|--------------|-----------|---------------|
978 | 32bit | mtmsr | none | 0x12345678| scalar EXT0nn |
979 | 64bit | ss.mtmsr | 0x26!zero | 0x12345678| scalar SVP64Single:EXT0nn |
980 | 64bit | sv.mtmsr | 0x27nnnnnn | 0x12345678| vector SVP64:EXT0nn |
981
982 This is illegal because the instruction `mtmsr` is not possible to Vectorise,
983 at all. This does **not** convey an opportunity to allocate the
984 space to an alternative instruction.
985
986 **illegal unvectoriseable in EXT2nn**
987
988 | width | assembler | prefix? | suffix | description |
989 |-------|-----------|--------------|-----------|---------------|
990 | 64bit | mtmsr2 | 0x24000000 | 0x12345678| scalar EXT2nn |
991 | 64bit | ss.mtmsr2 | 0x24!zero | 0x12345678| scalar SVP64Single:EXT2nn |
992 | 64bit | sv.mtmsr2 | 0x25nnnnnn | 0x12345678| vector SVP64:EXT2nn |
993
994 For a given hypothetical `mtmsr2` which is inherently Unvectoriseable
995 whilst it may be put into the scalar EXT2nn space it may **not** be
996 allocated in the Vector space. As with Unvectoriseable EXT0nn opcodes
997 this does not convey the right to use the 0x24/0x26 space for alternative
998 opcodes. This hypothetical Unvectoriseable operation would be better off
999 being allocated as EXT001 Prefixed, EXT000-063, or hypothetically in
1000 EXT300-363.
1001
1002 **ILLEGAL: dual allocation**
1003
1004 | width | assembler | prefix? | suffix | description |
1005 |-------|-----------|--------------|-----------|---------------|
1006 | 32bit | fredmv | none | 0x12345678| scalar EXT0nn |
1007 | 64bit | ss.fredmv | 0x26!zero | 0x12345678| scalar SVP64Single:EXT0nn |
1008 | 64bit | sv.fishmv | 0x27nnnnnn | 0x12345678| vector SVP64:EXT0nn |
1009
1010 the use of 0x12345678 for fredmv in scalar but fishmv in Vector is
1011 illegal. the suffix in both 64-bit locations
1012 must be allocated to a Vectoriseable EXT000-063
1013 "Defined Word" (Public v3.1 Section 1.6.3 definition)
1014 or not at all.
1015
1016 \newpage{}
1017
1018 **illegal unallocated scalar EXT0nn or EXT2nn:**
1019
1020 | width | assembler | prefix? | suffix | description |
1021 |-------|-----------|--------------|-----------|---------------|
1022 | 32bit | unallocated | none | 0x12345678| scalar EXT0nn |
1023 | 64bit | ss.fredmv | 0x26!zero | 0x12345678| scalar SVP64Single:EXT0nn |
1024 | 64bit | sv.fishmv | 0x27nnnnnn | 0x12345678| vector SVP64:EXT0nn |
1025
1026 and:
1027
1028 | width | assembler | prefix? | suffix | description |
1029 |-------|-----------|--------------|-----------|---------------|
1030 | 64bit | unallocated | 0x24000000 | 0x12345678| scalar EXT2nn |
1031 | 64bit | ss.fishmv | 0x24!zero | 0x12345678| scalar SVP64Single:EXT2nn |
1032 | 64bit | sv.fishmv | 0x25nnnnnn | 0x12345678| vector SVP64:EXT2nn |
1033
1034 Both of these Simple-V operations are illegally-allocated. The fact that
1035 there does not exist a scalar "Defined Word" (even for EXT200-263) - the
1036 unallocated block - means that the instruction may **not** be allocated in
1037 the Simple-V space.
1038
1039 **illegal attempt to put Scalar EXT004 into Vector EXT2nn**
1040
1041 | width | assembler | prefix? | suffix | description |
1042 |-------|-----------|--------------|-----------|---------------|
1043 | 32bit | unallocated | none | 0x10345678| scalar EXT0nn |
1044 | 64bit | ss.fishmv | 0x24!zero | 0x10345678| scalar SVP64Single:EXT2nn |
1045 | 64bit | sv.fishmv | 0x25nnnnnn | 0x10345678| vector SVP64:EXT2nn |
1046
1047 This is an illegal attempt to place an EXT004 "Defined Word"
1048 (Public v3.1 Section 1.6.3) into the EXT2nn Vector space.
1049 This is not just illegal it is not even possible to achieve.
1050 If attempted, by dropping EXT004 into bits 32-37, the top two
1051 MSBs are actually *zero*, and the Vector EXT2nn space is only
1052 legal for Primary Opcodes in the range 248-263, where the top
1053 two MSBs are 0b11. Thus this faulty attempt actually falls
1054 unintentionally
1055 into `RESERVED` "Non-Vectoriseable" Encoding space.
1056
1057 **illegal attempt to put Scalar EXT001 into Vector space**
1058
1059 | width | assembler | prefix? | suffix | description |
1060 |-------|-----------|--------------|-----------|---------------|
1061 | 64bit | EXT001 | 0x04nnnnnn | any | scalar EXT001 |
1062 | 96bit | sv.EXT001 | 0x24!zero | EXT001 | scalar SVP64Single:EXT001 |
1063 | 96bit | sv.EXT001 | 0x25nnnnnn | EXT001 | vector SVP64:EXT001 |
1064
1065 This becomes in effect an effort to define 96-bit instructions,
1066 which are illegal due to cost at the Decode Phase (Variable-Length
1067 Encoding). Likewise attempting to embed EXT009 (chained) is also
1068 illegal. The implications are clear unfortunately that all 64-bit
1069 EXT001 Scalar instructions are Unvectoriseable.
1070
1071 \newpage{}
1072 # Use cases
1073
1074 In the following examples the programs are fully executable under the
1075 Libre-SOC Simple-V-augmented Power ISA Simulator. Reproducible
1076 (scripted) Installation instructions:
1077 <https://libre-soc.org/HDL_workflow/devscripts/>
1078
1079 ## LD/ST-Multi
1080
1081 Context-switching saving and restoring of registers on the stack often
1082 requires explicit loop-unrolling to achieve effectively. In SVP64 it
1083 is possible to use a Predicate Mask to "compact" or "expand" a swathe
1084 of desired registers, dynamically. Known as "VCOMPRESS" and "VEXPAND",
1085 runtime-configurable LD/ST-Multi is achievable with 2 instructions.
1086
1087 ```
1088 # load 64 registers off the stack, in-order, skipping unneeded ones
1089 # by using CR0-CR63's "EQ" bits to select only those needed.
1090 setvli 64
1091 sv.ld/sm=EQ *rt,0(ra)
1092 ```
1093
1094 ## Twin-Predication, re-entrant
1095
1096 This example demonstrates two key concepts: firstly Twin-Predication
1097 (separate source predicate mask from destination predicate mask) and
1098 that sufficient state is stored within the Vector Context SPR, SVSTATE,
1099 for full re-entrancy on a Context Switch or function call *even if
1100 in the middle of executing a loop*. Also demonstrates that it is
1101 permissible for a programmer to write **directly** to the SVSTATE
1102 SPR, and still expect Deterministic Behaviour. It's not exactly recommended
1103 (performance may be impacted by direct SVSTATE access), but it is not
1104 prohibited either.
1105
1106 ```
1107 292 # checks that we are able to resume in the middle of a VL loop,
1108 293 # after an interrupt, or after the user has updated src/dst step
1109 294 # let's assume the user has prepared src/dst step before running this
1110 295 # vector instruction
1111 296 # test_intpred_reentrant
1112 297 # reg num 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
1113 298 # srcstep=1 v
1114 299 # src r3=0b0101 Y N Y N
1115 300 # : |
1116 301 # + - - + |
1117 302 # : +-------+
1118 303 # : |
1119 304 # dest ~r3=0b1010 N Y N Y
1120 305 # dststep=2 ^
1121 306
1122 307 sv.extsb/sm=r3/dm=~r3 *5, *9
1123 ```
1124
1125 <https://git.libre-soc.org/?p=openpower-isa.git;a=blob;f=src/openpower/decoder/isa/test_caller_svp64_predication.py;hb=HEAD>
1126
1127 ## 3D GPU style "Branch Conditional"
1128
1129 (*Note: Specification is ready, Simulator still under development of
1130 full specification capabilities*)
1131 This example demonstrates a 2-long Vector Branch-Conditional only
1132 succeeding if *all* elements in the Vector are successful. This
1133 avoids the need for additional instructions that would need to
1134 perform a Parallel Reduction of a Vector of Condition Register
1135 tests down to a single value, on which a Scalar Branch-Conditional
1136 could then be performed. Full Rationale at
1137 <https://libre-soc.org/openpower/sv/branches/>
1138
1139 ```
1140 80 # test_sv_branch_cond_all
1141 81 for i in [7, 8, 9]:
1142 83 addi 1, 0, i+1 # set r1 to i
1143 84 addi 2, 0, i # set r2 to i
1144 85 cmpi cr0, 1, 1, 8 # compare r1 with 8 and store to cr0
1145 86 cmpi cr1, 1, 2, 8 # compare r2 with 8 and store to cr1
1146 87 sv.bc/all 12, *1, 0xc # bgt 0xc - branch if BOTH
1147 88 # r1 AND r2 greater 8 to the nop below
1148 89 addi 3, 0, 0x1234, # if tests fail this shouldn't execute
1149 90 or 0, 0, 0 # branch target
1150 ```
1151
1152 <https://git.libre-soc.org/?p=openpower-isa.git;a=blob;f=src/openpower/decoder/isa/test_caller_svp64_bc.py;hb=HEAD>
1153
1154 \newpage{}
1155 ## DCT
1156
1157 DCT has dozens of uses in Audio-Visual processing and CODECs.
1158 A full 8-wide in-place triple-loop Inverse DCT may be achieved
1159 in 8 instructions. Expanding this to 16-wide is a matter of setting
1160 `svshape 16` **and the same instructions used**.
1161 Lee Composition may be deployed to construct non-power-two DCTs.
1162 The cosine table may be computed (once) with 18 Vector instructions
1163 (one of them `fcos`)
1164
1165 ```
1166 1014 # test_sv_remap_fpmadds_ldbrev_idct_8_mode_4
1167 1015 # LOAD bit-reversed with half-swap
1168 1016 svshape 8, 1, 1, 14, 0
1169 1017 svremap 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0
1170 1018 sv.lfs/els *0, 4(1)
1171 1019 # Outer butterfly, iterative sum
1172 1020 svremap 31, 0, 1, 2, 1, 0, 1
1173 1021 svshape 8, 1, 1, 11, 0
1174 1022 sv.fadds *0, *0, *0
1175 1023 # Inner butterfly, twin +/- MUL-ADD-SUB
1176 1024 svshape 8, 1, 1, 10, 0
1177 1025 sv.ffmadds *0, *0, *0, *8
1178 ```
1179
1180 <https://git.libre-soc.org/?p=openpower-isa.git;a=blob;f=src/openpower/decoder/isa/test_caller_svp64_dct.py;hb=HEAD>
1181
1182 ## Matrix Multiply
1183
1184 Matrix Multiply of any size (non-power-2) up to a total of 127 operations
1185 is achievable with only three instructions. Normally in any other SIMD
1186 ISA at least one source requires Transposition and often massive rolling
1187 repetition of data is required. These 3 instructions may be used as the
1188 "inner triple-loop kernel" of the usual 6-loop Massive Matrix Multiply.
1189
1190 ```
1191 28 # test_sv_remap1 5x4 by 4x3 matrix multiply
1192 29 svshape 5, 4, 3, 0, 0
1193 30 svremap 31, 1, 2, 3, 0, 0, 0
1194 31 sv.fmadds *0, *8, *16, *0
1195 ```
1196
1197 <https://git.libre-soc.org/?p=openpower-isa.git;a=blob;f=src/openpower/decoder/isa/test_caller_svp64_matrix.py;hb=HEAD>
1198
1199 ## Parallel Reduction
1200
1201 Parallel (Horizontal) Reduction is often deeply problematic in SIMD and
1202 Vector ISAs. Parallel Reduction is Fully Deterministic in Simple-V and
1203 thus may even usefully be deployed on non-associative and non-commutative
1204 operations.
1205
1206 ```
1207 75 # test_sv_remap2
1208 76 svshape 7, 0, 0, 7, 0
1209 77 svremap 31, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 # different order
1210 78 sv.subf *0, *8, *16
1211 79
1212 80 REMAP sv.subf RT,RA,RB - inverted application of RA/RB
1213 81 left/right due to subf
1214 ```
1215
1216 <https://git.libre-soc.org/?p=openpower-isa.git;a=blob;f=src/openpower/decoder/isa/test_caller_svp64_parallel_reduce.py;hb=HEAD>
1217
1218 [[!tag opf_rfc]]
1219
1220 [^zolc]: first introduced in DSPs, Zero-Overhead Loops are astoundingly effective in reducing total number of instructions executed or needed. [ZOLC](https://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.301.4646&rep=rep1&type=pdf) reduces instructions by **25 to 80 percent**.
1221 [^msr]: an MSR bit or bits, conceptually equivalent to `MSR.SF` and added for the same reasons, would suffice perfectly.
1222 [^extend]: Prefix opcode space (or MSR bits) **must** be reserved in advance to do so, in order to avoid the catastrophic binary-incompatibility mistake made by RISC-V RVV and ARM SVE/2
1223 [^likeext001]: SVP64-Single is remarkably similar to the "bit 1" of EXT001 being set to indicate that the 64-bits is to be allocated in full to a new encoding, but in fact SVP64-single still embeds v3.0 Scalar operations.
1224 [^pseudorewrite]: elwidth overrides does however mean that all SFS / SFFS pseudocode will need rewriting to be in terms of XLEN. This has the indirect side-effect of automatically making a 32-bit Scalar Power ISA Specification possible, as well as a future 128-bit one (Cross-reference: RISC-V RV32 and RV128
1225 [^only2]: reminder that this proposal only needs 75% of two POs for Scalar instructions. The rest of EXT200-263 is for general use.
1226 [^ext001]: Recall that EXT100 to EXT163 is for Public v3.1 64-bit-augmented Operations prefixed by EXT001, for which, from Section 1.6.3, bit 6 is set to 1. This concept is where the above scheme originated. Section 1.6.3 uses the term "defined word" to refer to pre-existing EXT000-EXT063 32-bit instructions so prefixed to create the new numbering EXT100-EXT163, respectively
1227 [^futurevsx]: A future version or other Stakeholder *may* wish to drop Simple-V onto VSX: this would be a separate RFC
1228 [^vsx256]: imagine a hypothetical future VSX-256 using the exact same instructions as VSX. the binary incompatibility introducrd would catastrophically **and retroactively** damage existing IBM POWER8,9,10 hardware's reputation and that of Power ISA overall.
1229 [^autovec]: Compiler auto-vectorisation for best exploitation of SIMD and Vector ISAs on Scalar programming languages (c, c++) is an Indusstry-wide known-hard decades-long problem. Cross-reference the number of hand-optimised assembler algorithms.
1230 [^hphint]: intended for use when the compiler has determined the extent of Memory or register aliases in loops: `a[i] += a[i+4]` would necessitate a Vertical-First hphint of 4
1231 [^svshape]: although SVSHAPE0-3 should, realistically, be regarded as high a priority as SVSTATE, and given corresponding SVSRR and SVLR equivalents, it was felt that having to context-switch **five** SPRs on Interrupts and function calls was too much.
1232 [^whoops]: two efforts were made to mix non-uniform encodings into Simple-V space: one deliberate to see how it would go, and one accidental. They both went extremely badly, the deliberate one costing over two months to add then remove.
1233 [^mul]: Setting this "multiplier" to 1 clearly leaves pre-existing Scalar behaviour completely intact as a degenerate case.
1234 [^ldstcisc]: At least the CISC "auto-increment" modes are not present, from the CDC 6600 and Motorola 68000! although these would be fun to introduce they do unfortunately make for 3-in 3-out register profiles, all 64-bit, which explains why the 6600 and 68000 had separate special dedicated address regfiles.