put bit-field ordering for EXTRA2/3 into MSB0 order
[libreriscv.git] / openpower / sv / rfc / ls010.mdwn
1 # RFC ls010 SVP64 Zero-Overhead Loop Prefix Subsystem
2
3 Credits and acknowledgements:
4
5 * Luke Leighton
6 * Jacob Lifshay
7 * Hendrik Boom
8 * Richard Wilbur
9 * Alexandre Oliva
10 * Cesar Strauss
11 * NLnet Foundation, for funding
12 * OpenPOWER Foundation
13 * Paul Mackerras
14 * Toshaan Bharvani
15 * IBM for the Power ISA itself
16
17 Links:
18
19 * <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1045>
20
21 # Introduction
22
23 Simple-V is a type of Vectorisation best described as a "Prefix Loop
24 Subsystem" similar to the Z80 `LDIR` instruction and to the x86 `REP`
25 Prefix instruction. More advanced features are similar to the Z80
26 `CPIR` instruction. If viewed as an actual Vector ISA it introduces
27 over 1.5 million 64-bit Vector instructions. SVP64, the instruction
28 format, is therefore best viewed as an orthogonal RISC-style "Prefixing"
29 subsystem instead.
30
31 Except where explicitly stated all bit numbers remain as in the rest of
32 the Power ISA: in MSB0 form (the bits are numbered from 0 at the MSB on
33 the left and counting up as you move rightwards to the LSB end). All bit
34 ranges are inclusive (so `4:6` means bits 4, 5, and 6, in MSB0 order).
35 **All register numbering and element numbering however is LSB0 ordering**
36 which is a different convention from that used elsewhere in the Power ISA.
37
38 The SVP64 prefix always comes before the suffix in PC order and must be
39 considered an independent "Defined word" that augments the behaviour of
40 the following instruction, but does **not** change the actual Decoding
41 of that following instruction. **All prefixed instructions retain their
42 non-prefixed encoding and definition**.
43
44 *Architectural Resource Allocation note: it is prohibited to accept RFCs
45 which fundamentally violate this hard requirement. Under no circumstances
46 must the Suffix space have an alternate instruction encoding allocated
47 within SVP64 that is entirely different from the non-prefixed Defined
48 Word. Hardware Implementors critically rely on this inviolate guarantee
49 to implement High-Performance Multi-Issue micro-architectures that can
50 sustain 100% throughput*
51
52 | 0:5 | 6:31 | 32:63 |
53 |--------|--------------|--------------|
54 | EXT09 | v3.1 Prefix | v3.0/1 Suffix |
55
56 Two apparent exceptions to the above hard rule exist: SV Branch-Conditional
57 operations and LD/ST-update "Post-Increment" Mode. Post-Increment
58 was considered sufficiently high priority (significantly reducing hot-loop
59 instruction count) that one bit in the Prefix is reserved for it.
60 Vectorised Branch-Conditional operations "embed" the original Scalar
61 Branch-Conditional behaviour into a much more advanced variant that
62 is highly suited to High-Performance Computation (HPC), Supercomputing,
63 and parallel GPU Workloads.
64
65 Subset implementations in hardware are permitted, as long as certain
66 rules are followed, allowing for full soft-emulation including future
67 revisions. Compliancy Subsets exist to ensure minimum levels of binary
68 interoperability expectations within certain environments.
69
70 ## SVP64 encoding features
71
72 A number of features need to be compacted into a very small space of
73 only 24 bits:
74
75 * Independent per-register Scalar/Vector tagging and range extension on
76 every register
77 * Element width overrides on both source and destination
78 * Predication on both source and destination
79 * Two different sources of predication: INT and CR Fields
80 * SV Modes including saturation (for Audio, Video and DSP), mapreduce,
81 fail-first and predicate-result mode.
82
83 Different classes of operations require different formats. The earlier
84 sections cover the c9mmon formats and the four separate modes follow:
85 CR operations (crops), Arithmetic/Logical (termed "normal"), Load/Store
86 and Branch-Conditional.
87
88 ## Definition of Reserved in this spec.
89
90 For the new fields added in SVP64, instructions that have any of their
91 fields set to a reserved value must cause an illegal instruction trap,
92 to allow emulation of future instruction sets, or for subsets of SVP64 to
93 be implemented in hardware and the rest emulated. This includes SVP64
94 SPRs: reading or writing values which are not supported in hardware
95 must also raise illegal instruction traps in order to allow emulation.
96 Unless otherwise stated, reserved values are always all zeros.
97
98 This is unlike OpenPower ISA v3.1, which in many instances does not
99 require a trap if reserved fields are nonzero. Where the standard Power
100 ISA definition is intended the red keyword `RESERVED` is used.
101
102 ## Definition of "UnVectoriseable"
103
104 Any operation that inherently makes no sense if repeated is termed
105 "UnVectoriseable" or "UnVectorised". Examples include `sc` or `sync`
106 which have no registers. `mtmsr` is also classed as UnVectoriseable
107 because there is only one `MSR`.
108
109 ## Register files, elements, and Element-width Overrides
110
111 In the Upper Compliancy Levels the size of the GPR and FPR Register
112 files are expanded from 32 to 128 entries, and the number of CR Fields
113 expanded from CR0-CR7 to CR0-CR127.
114
115 Memory access remains exactly the same: the effects of `MSR.LE` remain
116 exactly the same, affecting as they already do and remain **only**
117 on the Load and Store memory-register operation byte-order, and having
118 nothing to do with the ordering of the contents of register files or
119 register-register operations.
120
121 Whilst the bits within the GPRs and FPRs are expected to be MSB0-ordered
122 and for numbering to be sequentially incremental the element offset
123 numbering is naturally **LSB0-sequentially-incrementing from zero not
124 MSB0-incrementing.** Expressed exclusively in MSB0-numbering, SVP64 is
125 unnecessarily complex to understand: the required subtractions from 63,
126 31, 15 and 7 unfortunately become a hostile minefield. Therefore for the
127 purposes of this section the more natural **LSB0 numbering is assumed**
128 and it is up to the reader to translate to MSB0 numbering.
129
130 The Canonical specification for how element-sequential numbering and
131 element-width overrides is defined is expressed in the following c
132 structure, assuming a Little-Endian system, and naturally using LSB0
133 numbering everywhere because the ANSI c specification is inherently LSB0:
134
135 ```
136 #pragma pack
137 typedef union {
138 uint8_t b[]; // elwidth 8
139 uint16_t s[]; // elwidth 16
140 uint32_t i[]; // elwidth 32
141 uint64_t l[]; // elwidth 64
142 uint8_t actual_bytes[8];
143 } el_reg_t;
144
145 elreg_t int_regfile[128];
146
147 void get_register_element(el_reg_t* el, int gpr, int element, int width) {
148 switch (width) {
149 case 64: el->l = int_regfile[gpr].l[element];
150 case 32: el->i = int_regfile[gpr].i[element];
151 case 16: el->s = int_regfile[gpr].s[element];
152 case 8 : el->b = int_regfile[gpr].b[element];
153 }
154 }
155 void set_register_element(el_reg_t* el, int gpr, int element, int width) {
156 switch (width) {
157 case 64: int_regfile[gpr].l[element] = el->l;
158 case 32: int_regfile[gpr].i[element] = el->i;
159 case 16: int_regfile[gpr].s[element] = el->s;
160 case 8 : int_regfile[gpr].b[element] = el->b;
161 }
162 }
163 ```
164
165 Example Vector-looped add operation implementation when elwidths are 64-bit:
166
167 ```
168 # add RT, RA,RB using the "uint64_t" union member, "l"
169 for i in range(VL):
170 int_regfile[RT].l[i] = int_regfile[RA].l[i] + int_regfile[RB].l[i]
171 ```
172
173 However if elwidth overrides are set to 16 for both source and destination:
174
175 ```
176 # add RT, RA, RB using the "uint64_t" union member "s"
177 for i in range(VL):
178 int_regfile[RT].s[i] = int_regfile[RA].s[i] + int_regfile[RB].s[i]
179 ```
180
181 Hardware Architectural note: to avoid a Read-Modify-Write at the register
182 file it is strongly recommended to implement byte-level write-enable lines
183 exactly as has been implemented in DRAM ICs for many decades. Additionally
184 the predicate mask bit is advised to be associated with the element
185 operation and alongside the result ultimately passed to the register file.
186 When element-width is set to 64-bit the relevant predicate mask bit
187 may be repeated eight times and pull all eight write-port byte-level
188 lines HIGH. Clearly when element-width is set to 8-bit the relevant
189 predicate mask bit corresponds directly with one single byte-level
190 write-enable line. It is up to the Hardware Architect to then amortise
191 (merge) elements together into both PredicatedSIMD Pipelines as well
192 as simultaneous non-overlapping Register File writes, to achieve High
193 Performance designs.
194
195 ## Scalar Identity Behaviour
196
197 SVP64 is designed so that when the prefix is all zeros, and
198 VL=1, no effect or
199 influence occurs (no augmentation) such that all standard Power ISA
200 v3.0/v3 1 instructions covered by the prefix are "unaltered". This
201 is termed `scalar identity behaviour` (based on the mathematical
202 definition for "identity", as in, "identity matrix" or better "identity
203 transformation").
204
205 Note that this is completely different from when VL=0. VL=0 turns all
206 operations under its influence into `nops` (regardless of the prefix)
207 whereas when VL=1 and the SV prefix is all zeros, the operation simply
208 acts as if SV had not been applied at all to the instruction (an
209 "identity transformation").
210
211 ## Register Naming and size
212
213 As indicated above SV Registers are simply the INT, FP and CR
214 register files extended linearly to larger sizes; SV Vectorisation
215 iterates sequentially through these registers (LSB0 sequential ordering
216 from 0 to VL-1).
217
218 Where the integer regfile in standard scalar Power ISA v3.0B/v3.1B is
219 r0 to r31, SV extends this as r0 to r127. Likewise FP registers are
220 extended to 128 (fp0 to fp127), and CR Fields are extended to 128 entries,
221 CR0 thru CR127.
222
223 The names of the registers therefore reflects a simple linear extension
224 of the Power ISA v3.0B / v3.1B register naming, and in hardware this
225 would be reflected by a linear increase in the size of the underlying
226 SRAM used for the regfiles.
227
228 Note: when an EXTRA field (defined below) is zero, SV is deliberately
229 designed so that the register fields are identical to as if SV was not in
230 effect i.e. under these circumstances (EXTRA=0) the register field names
231 RA, RB etc. are interpreted and treated as v3.0B / v3.1B scalar registers.
232 This is part of `scalar identity behaviour` described above.
233
234 ## Future expansion.
235
236 With the way that EXTRA fields are defined and applied to register fields,
237 future versions of SV may involve 256 or greater registers. Backwards
238 binary compatibility may be achieved with a PCR bit (Program Compatibility
239 Register). Further discussion is out of scope for this version of SVP64.
240
241 --------
242
243 \newpage{}
244
245 # Remapped Encoding (`RM[0:23]`)
246
247 To allow relatively easy remapping of which portions of the Prefix Opcode
248 Map are used for SVP64 without needing to rewrite a large portion of the
249 SVP64 spec, a mapping is defined from the OpenPower v3.1 prefix bits to
250 a new 24-bit Remapped Encoding denoted `RM[0]` at the MSB to `RM[23]`
251 at the LSB.
252
253 The mapping from the OpenPower v3.1 prefix bits to the Remapped Encoding
254 is defined in the Prefix Fields section.
255
256 ## Prefix Fields
257
258 TODO incorporate EXT09
259
260 To "activate" svp64 (in a way that does not conflict with v3.1B 64
261 bit Prefix mode), fields within the v3.1B Prefix Opcode Map are set
262 (see Prefix Opcode Map, above), leaving 24 bits "free" for use by SV.
263 This is achieved by setting bits 7 and 9 to 1:
264
265 | Name | Bits | Value | Description |
266 |------------|---------|-------|--------------------------------|
267 | EXT01 | `0:5` | `1` | Indicates Prefixed 64-bit |
268 | `RM[0]` | `6` | | Bit 0 of Remapped Encoding |
269 | SVP64_7 | `7` | `1` | Indicates this is SVP64 |
270 | `RM[1]` | `8` | | Bit 1 of Remapped Encoding |
271 | SVP64_9 | `9` | `1` | Indicates this is SVP64 |
272 | `RM[2:23]` | `10:31` | | Bits 2-23 of Remapped Encoding |
273
274 Laid out bitwise, this is as follows, showing how the 32-bits of the prefix
275 are constructed:
276
277 | 0:5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10:31 |
278 |--------|-------|---|-------|---|----------|
279 | EXT01 | RM | 1 | RM | 1 | RM |
280 | 000001 | RM[0] | 1 | RM[1] | 1 | RM[2:23] |
281
282 Following the prefix will be the suffix: this is simply a 32-bit v3.0B
283 / v3.1 instruction. That instruction becomes "prefixed" with the SVP
284 context: the Remapped Encoding field (RM).
285
286 It is important to note that unlike v3.1 64-bit prefixed instructions
287 there is insufficient space in `RM` to provide identification of any SVP64
288 Fields without first partially decoding the 32-bit suffix. Similar to
289 the "Forms" (X-Form, D-Form) the `RM` format is individually associated
290 with every instruction.
291
292 Extreme caution and care must therefore be taken when extending SVP64
293 in future, to not create unnecessary relationships between prefix and
294 suffix that could complicate decoding, adding latency.
295
296 # Common RM fields
297
298 The following fields are common to all Remapped Encodings:
299
300 | Field Name | Field bits | Description |
301 |------------|------------|----------------------------------------|
302 | MASKMODE | `0` | Execution (predication) Mask Kind |
303 | MASK | `1:3` | Execution Mask |
304 | SUBVL | `8:9` | Sub-vector length |
305
306 The following fields are optional or encoded differently depending
307 on context after decoding of the Scalar suffix:
308
309 | Field Name | Field bits | Description |
310 |------------|------------|----------------------------------------|
311 | ELWIDTH | `4:5` | Element Width |
312 | ELWIDTH_SRC | `6:7` | Element Width for Source |
313 | EXTRA | `10:18` | Register Extra encoding |
314 | MODE | `19:23` | changes Vector behaviour |
315
316 * MODE changes the behaviour of the SV operation (result saturation,
317 mapreduce)
318 * SUBVL groups elements together into vec2, vec3, vec4 for use in 3D
319 and Audio/Video DSP work
320 * ELWIDTH and ELWIDTH_SRC overrides the instruction's destination and
321 source operand width
322 * MASK (and MASK_SRC) and MASKMODE provide predication (two types of
323 sources: scalar INT and Vector CR).
324 * Bits 10 to 18 (EXTRA) are further decoded depending on the RM category
325 for the instruction, which is determined only by decoding the Scalar 32
326 bit suffix.
327
328 Similar to Power ISA `X-Form` etc. EXTRA bits are given designations,
329 such as `RM-1P-3S1D` which indicates for this example that the operation
330 is to be single-predicated and that there are 3 source operand EXTRA
331 tags and one destination operand tag.
332
333 Note that if ELWIDTH != ELWIDTH_SRC this may result in reduced performance
334 or increased latency in some implementations due to lane-crossing.
335
336 # Mode
337
338 Mode is an augmentation of SV behaviour. Different types of instructions
339 have different needs, similar to Power ISA v3.1 64 bit prefix 8LS and MTRR
340 formats apply to different instruction types. Modes include Reduction,
341 Iteration, arithmetic saturation, and Fail-First. More specific details
342 in each section and in the SVP64 appendix
343
344 * For condition register operations see [[sv/cr_ops]]
345 * For LD/ST Modes, see [[sv/ldst]].
346 * For Branch modes, see [[sv/branches]]
347 * For arithmetic and logical, see [[sv/normal]]
348
349 # ELWIDTH Encoding
350
351 Default behaviour is set to 0b00 so that zeros follow the convention
352 of `scalar identity behaviour`. In this case it means that elwidth
353 overrides are not applicable. Thus if a 32 bit instruction operates
354 on 32 bit, `elwidth=0b00` specifies that this behaviour is unmodified.
355 Likewise when a processor is switched from 64 bit to 32 bit mode,
356 `elwidth=0b00` states that, again, the behaviour is not to be modified.
357
358 Only when elwidth is nonzero is the element width overridden to the
359 explicitly required value.
360
361 ## Elwidth for Integers:
362
363 | Value | Mnemonic | Description |
364 |-------|----------------|------------------------------------|
365 | 00 | DEFAULT | default behaviour for operation |
366 | 01 | `ELWIDTH=w` | Word: 32-bit integer |
367 | 10 | `ELWIDTH=h` | Halfword: 16-bit integer |
368 | 11 | `ELWIDTH=b` | Byte: 8-bit integer |
369
370 This encoding is chosen such that the byte width may be computed as
371 `8<<(3-ew)`
372
373 ## Elwidth for FP Registers:
374
375 | Value | Mnemonic | Description |
376 |-------|----------------|------------------------------------|
377 | 00 | DEFAULT | default behaviour for FP operation |
378 | 01 | `ELWIDTH=f32` | 32-bit IEEE 754 Single floating-point |
379 | 10 | `ELWIDTH=f16` | 16-bit IEEE 754 Half floating-point |
380 | 11 | `ELWIDTH=bf16` | Reserved for `bf16` |
381
382 Note:
383 [`bf16`](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bfloat16_floating-point_format)
384 is reserved for a future implementation of SV
385
386 Note that any IEEE754 FP operation in Power ISA ending in "s" (`fadds`) shall
387 perform its operation at **half** the ELWIDTH then padded back out
388 to ELWIDTH. `sv.fadds/ew=f32` shall perform an IEEE754 FP16 operation that is then "padded" to fill out to an IEEE754 FP32. When ELWIDTH=DEFAULT
389 clearly the behaviour of `sv.fadds` is performed at 32-bit accuracy
390 then padded back out to fit in IEEE754 FP64, exactly as for Scalar
391 v3.0B "single" FP. Any FP operation ending in "s" where ELWIDTH=f16
392 or ELWIDTH=bf16 is reserved and must raise an illegal instruction
393 (IEEE754 FP8 or BF8 are not defined).
394
395 ## Elwidth for CRs:
396
397 Element-width overrides for CR Fields has no meaning. The bits
398 are therefore used for other purposes, or when Rc=1, the Elwidth
399 applies to the result being tested (a GPR or FPR), but not to the
400 Vector of CR Fields.
401
402 # SUBVL Encoding
403
404 The default for SUBVL is 1 and its encoding is 0b00 to indicate that
405 SUBVL is effectively disabled (a SUBVL for-loop of only one element). this
406 lines up in combination with all other "default is all zeros" behaviour.
407
408 | Value | Mnemonic | Subvec | Description |
409 |-------|-----------|---------|------------------------|
410 | 00 | `SUBVL=1` | single | Sub-vector length of 1 |
411 | 01 | `SUBVL=2` | vec2 | Sub-vector length of 2 |
412 | 10 | `SUBVL=3` | vec3 | Sub-vector length of 3 |
413 | 11 | `SUBVL=4` | vec4 | Sub-vector length of 4 |
414
415 The SUBVL encoding value may be thought of as an inclusive range of a
416 sub-vector. SUBVL=2 represents a vec2, its encoding is 0b01, therefore
417 this may be considered to be elements 0b00 to 0b01 inclusive.
418
419 # MASK/MASK_SRC & MASKMODE Encoding
420
421 One bit (`MASKMODE`) indicates the mode: CR or Int predication. The two
422 types may not be mixed.
423
424 Special note: to disable predication this field must be set to zero in
425 combination with Integer Predication also being set to 0b000. this has the
426 effect of enabling "all 1s" in the predicate mask, which is equivalent to
427 "not having any predication at all" and consequently, in combination with
428 all other default zeros, fully disables SV (`scalar identity behaviour`).
429
430 `MASKMODE` may be set to one of 2 values:
431
432 | Value | Description |
433 |-----------|------------------------------------------------------|
434 | 0 | MASK/MASK_SRC are encoded using Integer Predication |
435 | 1 | MASK/MASK_SRC are encoded using CR-based Predication |
436
437 Integer Twin predication has a second set of 3 bits that uses the same
438 encoding thus allowing either the same register (r3, r10 or r31) to be
439 used for both src and dest, or different regs (one for src, one for dest).
440
441 Likewise CR based twin predication has a second set of 3 bits, allowing
442 a different test to be applied.
443
444 Note that it is assumed that Predicate Masks (whether INT or CR) are
445 read *before* the operations proceed. In practice (for CR Fields)
446 this creates an unnecessary block on parallelism. Therefore, it is up
447 to the programmer to ensure that the CR fields used as Predicate Masks
448 are not being written to by any parallel Vector Loop. Doing so results
449 in **UNDEFINED** behaviour, according to the definition outlined in the
450 Power ISA v3.0B Specification.
451
452 Hardware Implementations are therefore free and clear to delay reading
453 of individual CR fields until the actual predicated element operation
454 needs to take place, safe in the knowledge that no programmer will have
455 issued a Vector Instruction where previous elements could have overwritten
456 (destroyed) not-yet-executed CR-Predicated element operations.
457
458 ## Integer Predication (MASKMODE=0)
459
460 When the predicate mode bit is zero the 3 bits are interpreted as below.
461 Twin predication has an identical 3 bit field similarly encoded.
462
463 `MASK` and `MASK_SRC` may be set to one of 8 values, to provide the
464 following meaning:
465
466 | Value | Mnemonic | Element `i` enabled if: |
467 |-------|----------|------------------------------|
468 | 000 | ALWAYS | predicate effectively all 1s |
469 | 001 | 1 << R3 | `i == R3` |
470 | 010 | R3 | `R3 & (1 << i)` is non-zero |
471 | 011 | ~R3 | `R3 & (1 << i)` is zero |
472 | 100 | R10 | `R10 & (1 << i)` is non-zero |
473 | 101 | ~R10 | `R10 & (1 << i)` is zero |
474 | 110 | R30 | `R30 & (1 << i)` is non-zero |
475 | 111 | ~R30 | `R30 & (1 << i)` is zero |
476
477 r10 and r30 are at the high end of temporary and unused registers,
478 so as not to interfere with register allocation from ABIs.
479
480 ## CR-based Predication (MASKMODE=1)
481
482 When the predicate mode bit is one the 3 bits are interpreted as below.
483 Twin predication has an identical 3 bit field similarly encoded.
484
485 `MASK` and `MASK_SRC` may be set to one of 8 values, to provide the
486 following meaning:
487
488 | Value | Mnemonic | Element `i` is enabled if |
489 |-------|----------|--------------------------|
490 | 000 | lt | `CR[offs+i].LT` is set |
491 | 001 | nl/ge | `CR[offs+i].LT` is clear |
492 | 010 | gt | `CR[offs+i].GT` is set |
493 | 011 | ng/le | `CR[offs+i].GT` is clear |
494 | 100 | eq | `CR[offs+i].EQ` is set |
495 | 101 | ne | `CR[offs+i].EQ` is clear |
496 | 110 | so/un | `CR[offs+i].FU` is set |
497 | 111 | ns/nu | `CR[offs+i].FU` is clear |
498
499 CR based predication. TODO: select alternate CR for twin predication? see
500 [[discussion]] Overlap of the two CR based predicates must be taken
501 into account, so the starting point for one of them must be suitably
502 high, or accept that for twin predication VL must not exceed the range
503 where overlap will occur, *or* that they use the same starting point
504 but select different *bits* of the same CRs
505
506 `offs` is defined as CR32 (4x8) so as to mesh cleanly with Vectorised
507 Rc=1 operations (see below). Rc=1 operations start from CR8 (TBD).
508
509 The CR Predicates chosen must start on a boundary that Vectorised CR
510 operations can access cleanly, in full. With EXTRA2 restricting starting
511 points to multiples of 8 (CR0, CR8, CR16...) both Vectorised Rc=1 and
512 CR Predicate Masks have to be adapted to fit on these boundaries as well.
513
514 # Extra Remapped Encoding <a name="extra_remap"> </a>
515
516 Shows all instruction-specific fields in the Remapped Encoding
517 `RM[10:18]` for all instruction variants. Note that due to the very
518 tight space, the encoding mode is *not* included in the prefix itself.
519 The mode is "applied", similar to Power ISA "Forms" (X-Form, D-Form)
520 on a per-instruction basis, and, like "Forms" are given a designation
521 (below) of the form `RM-nP-nSnD`. The full list of which instructions
522 use which remaps is here [[opcode_regs_deduped]]. (*Machine-readable CSV
523 files have been provided which will make the task of creating SV-aware
524 ISA decoders easier*).
525
526 These mappings are part of the SVP64 Specification in exactly the same
527 way as X-Form, D-Form. New Scalar instructions added to the Power ISA
528 will need a corresponding SVP64 Mapping, which can be derived by-rote
529 from examining the Register "Profile" of the instruction.
530
531 There are two categories: Single and Twin Predication. Due to space
532 considerations further subdivision of Single Predication is based on
533 whether the number of src operands is 2 or 3. With only 9 bits available
534 some compromises have to be made.
535
536 * `RM-1P-3S1D` Single Predication dest/src1/2/3, applies to 4-operand
537 instructions (fmadd, isel, madd).
538 * `RM-1P-2S1D` Single Predication dest/src1/2 applies to 3-operand
539 instructions (src1 src2 dest)
540 * `RM-2P-1S1D` Twin Predication (src=1, dest=1)
541 * `RM-2P-2S1D` Twin Predication (src=2, dest=1) primarily for LDST (Indexed)
542 * `RM-2P-1S2D` Twin Predication (src=1, dest=2) primarily for LDST Update
543
544 ## RM-1P-3S1D
545
546 | Field Name | Field bits | Description |
547 |------------|------------|----------------------------------------|
548 | Rdest\_EXTRA2 | `10:11` | extends Rdest (R\*\_EXTRA2 Encoding) |
549 | Rsrc1\_EXTRA2 | `12:13` | extends Rsrc1 (R\*\_EXTRA2 Encoding) |
550 | Rsrc2\_EXTRA2 | `14:15` | extends Rsrc2 (R\*\_EXTRA2 Encoding) |
551 | Rsrc3\_EXTRA2 | `16:17` | extends Rsrc3 (R\*\_EXTRA2 Encoding) |
552 | EXTRA2_MODE | `18` | used by `divmod2du` and `maddedu` for RS |
553
554 These are for 3 operand in and either 1 or 2 out instructions.
555 3-in 1-out includes `madd RT,RA,RB,RC`. (DRAFT) instructions
556 such as `maddedu` have an implicit second destination, RS, the
557 selection of which is determined by bit 18.
558
559 ## RM-1P-2S1D
560
561 | Field Name | Field bits | Description |
562 |------------|------------|-------------------------------------------|
563 | Rdest\_EXTRA3 | `10:12` | extends Rdest |
564 | Rsrc1\_EXTRA3 | `13:15` | extends Rsrc1 |
565 | Rsrc2\_EXTRA3 | `16:18` | extends Rsrc3 |
566
567 These are for 2 operand 1 dest instructions, such as `add RT, RA,
568 RB`. However also included are unusual instructions with an implicit
569 dest that is identical to its src reg, such as `rlwinmi`.
570
571 Normally, with instructions such as `rlwinmi`, the scalar v3.0B ISA would
572 not have sufficient bit fields to allow an alternative destination.
573 With SV however this becomes possible. Therefore, the fact that the
574 dest is implicitly also a src should not mislead: due to the *prefix*
575 they are different SV regs.
576
577 * `rlwimi RA, RS, ...`
578 * Rsrc1_EXTRA3 applies to RS as the first src
579 * Rsrc2_EXTRA3 applies to RA as the secomd src
580 * Rdest_EXTRA3 applies to RA to create an **independent** dest.
581
582 With the addition of the EXTRA bits, the three registers
583 each may be *independently* made vector or scalar, and be independently
584 augmented to 7 bits in length.
585
586 ## RM-2P-1S1D/2S
587
588 | Field Name | Field bits | Description |
589 |------------|------------|----------------------------|
590 | Rdest_EXTRA3 | `10:12` | extends Rdest |
591 | Rsrc1_EXTRA3 | `13:15` | extends Rsrc1 |
592 | MASK_SRC | `16:18` | Execution Mask for Source |
593
594 `RM-2P-2S` is for `stw` etc. and is Rsrc1 Rsrc2.
595
596 ## RM-1P-2S1D
597
598 single-predicate, three registers (2 read, 1 write)
599
600 | Field Name | Field bits | Description |
601 |------------|------------|----------------------------|
602 | Rdest_EXTRA3 | `10:12` | extends Rdest |
603 | Rsrc1_EXTRA3 | `13:15` | extends Rsrc1 |
604 | Rsrc2_EXTRA3 | `16:18` | extends Rsrc2 |
605
606 ## RM-2P-2S1D/1S2D/3S
607
608 The primary purpose for this encoding is for Twin Predication on LOAD
609 and STORE operations. see [[sv/ldst]] for detailed anslysis.
610
611 RM-2P-2S1D:
612
613 | Field Name | Field bits | Description |
614 |------------|------------|----------------------------|
615 | Rdest_EXTRA2 | `10:11` | extends Rdest (R\*\_EXTRA2 Encoding) |
616 | Rsrc1_EXTRA2 | `12:13` | extends Rsrc1 (R\*\_EXTRA2 Encoding) |
617 | Rsrc2_EXTRA2 | `14:15` | extends Rsrc2 (R\*\_EXTRA2 Encoding) |
618 | MASK_SRC | `16:18` | Execution Mask for Source |
619
620 Note that for 1S2P the EXTRA2 dest and src names are switched (Rsrc_EXTRA2
621 is in bits 10:11, Rdest1_EXTRA2 in 12:13)
622
623 Also that for 3S (to cover `stdx` etc.) the names are switched to 3 src:
624 Rsrc1_EXTRA2, Rsrc2_EXTRA2, Rsrc3_EXTRA2.
625
626 Note also that LD with update indexed, which takes 2 src and 2 dest
627 (e.g. `lhaux RT,RA,RB`), does not have room for 4 registers and also
628 Twin Predication. therefore these are treated as RM-2P-2S1D and the
629 src spec for RA is also used for the same RA as a dest.
630
631 Note that if ELWIDTH != ELWIDTH_SRC this may result in reduced performance
632 or increased latency in some implementations due to lane-crossing.
633
634 # R\*\_EXTRA2/3
635
636 EXTRA is the means by which two things are achieved:
637
638 1. Registers are marked as either Vector *or Scalar*
639 2. Register field numbers (limited typically to 5 bit)
640 are extended in range, both for Scalar and Vector.
641
642 The register files are therefore extended:
643
644 * INT is extended from r0-31 to r0-127
645 * FP is extended from fp0-32 to fp0-fp127
646 * CR Fields are extended from CR0-7 to CR0-127
647
648 However due to pressure in `RM.EXTRA` not all these registers
649 are accessible by all instructions, particularly those with
650 a large number of operands (`madd`, `isel`).
651
652 In the following tables register numbers are constructed from the
653 standard v3.0B / v3.1B 32 bit register field (RA, FRA) and the EXTRA2 or
654 EXTRA3 field from the SV Prefix, determined by the specific RM-xx-yyyy
655 designation for a given instruction. The prefixing is arranged so that
656 interoperability between prefixing and nonprefixing of scalar registers
657 is direct and convenient (when the EXTRA field is all zeros).
658
659 A pseudocode algorithm explains the relationship, for INT/FP (see
660 SVP64 appendix for CRs)
661
662 ```
663 if extra3_mode:
664 spec = EXTRA3
665 else:
666 spec = EXTRA2 << 1 # same as EXTRA3, shifted
667 if spec[0]: # vector
668 return (RA << 2) | spec[1:2]
669 else: # scalar
670 return (spec[1:2] << 5) | RA
671 ```
672
673 Future versions may extend to 256 by shifting Vector numbering up.
674 Scalar will not be altered.
675
676 Note that in some cases the range of starting points for Vectors
677 is limited.
678
679 ## INT/FP EXTRA3
680
681 If EXTRA3 is zero, maps to "scalar identity" (scalar Power ISA field
682 naming).
683
684 Fields are as follows:
685
686 * Value: R_EXTRA3
687 * Mode: register is tagged as scalar or vector
688 * Range/Inc: the range of registers accessible from this EXTRA
689 encoding, and the "increment" (accessibility). "/4" means
690 that this EXTRA encoding may only give access (starting point)
691 every 4th register.
692 * MSB..LSB: the bit field showing how the register opcode field
693 combines with EXTRA to give (extend) the register number (GPR)
694
695 | Value | Mode | Range/Inc | 6..0 |
696 |-----------|-------|---------------|---------------------|
697 | 000 | Scalar | `r0-r31`/1 | `0b00 RA` |
698 | 001 | Scalar | `r32-r63`/1 | `0b01 RA` |
699 | 010 | Scalar | `r64-r95`/1 | `0b10 RA` |
700 | 011 | Scalar | `r96-r127`/1 | `0b11 RA` |
701 | 100 | Vector | `r0-r124`/4 | `RA 0b00` |
702 | 101 | Vector | `r1-r125`/4 | `RA 0b01` |
703 | 110 | Vector | `r2-r126`/4 | `RA 0b10` |
704 | 111 | Vector | `r3-r127`/4 | `RA 0b11` |
705
706 ## INT/FP EXTRA2
707
708 If EXTRA2 is zero will map to
709 "scalar identity behaviour" i.e Scalar Power ISA register naming:
710
711 | Value | Mode | Range/inc | 6..0 |
712 |-----------|-------|---------------|-----------|
713 | 00 | Scalar | `r0-r31`/1 | `0b00 RA` |
714 | 01 | Scalar | `r32-r63`/1 | `0b01 RA` |
715 | 10 | Vector | `r0-r124`/4 | `RA 0b00` |
716 | 11 | Vector | `r2-r126`/4 | `RA 0b10` |
717
718 **Note that unlike in EXTRA3, in EXTRA2**:
719
720 * the GPR Vectors may only start from
721 `r0, r2, r4, r6, r8` and likewise FPR Vectors.
722 * the GPR Scalars may only go from `r0, r1, r2.. r63` and likewise FPR Scalars.
723
724 as there is insufficient bits to cover the full range.
725
726 ## CR Field EXTRA3
727
728 CR Field encoding is essentially the same but made more complex due to CRs
729 being bit-based, because the application of SVP64 element-numbering applies
730 to the CR *Field* numbering not the CR register *bit* numbering.
731 Note that Vectors may only start from `CR0, CR4, CR8, CR12, CR16, CR20`...
732 and Scalars may only go from `CR0, CR1, ... CR31`
733
734 Encoding shown MSB down to LSB
735
736 For a 5-bit operand (BA, BB, BT):
737
738 | Value | Mode | Range/Inc | 8..5 | 4..2 | 1..0 |
739 |-------|------|---------------|-----------| --------|---------|
740 | 000 | Scalar | `CR0-CR7`/1 | 0b0000 | BA[0:2] | BA[3:4] |
741 | 001 | Scalar | `CR8-CR15`/1 | 0b0001 | BA[0:2] | BA[3:4] |
742 | 010 | Scalar | `CR16-CR23`/1 | 0b0010 | BA[0:2] | BA[3:4] |
743 | 011 | Scalar | `CR24-CR31`/1 | 0b0011 | BA[0:2] | BA[3:4] |
744 | 100 | Vector | `CR0-CR112`/16 | BA[0:2] 0 | 0b000 | BA[3:4] |
745 | 101 | Vector | `CR4-CR116`/16 | BA[0:2] 0 | 0b100 | BA[3:4] |
746 | 110 | Vector | `CR8-CR120`/16 | BA[0:2] 1 | 0b000 | BA[3:4] |
747 | 111 | Vector | `CR12-CR124`/16 | BA[0:2] 1 | 0b100 | BA[3:4] |
748
749 For a 3-bit operand (e.g. BFA):
750
751 | Value | Mode | Range/Inc | 6..3 | 2..0 |
752 |-------|------|---------------|-----------| --------|
753 | 000 | Scalar | `CR0-CR7`/1 | 0b0000 | BFA |
754 | 001 | Scalar | `CR8-CR15`/1 | 0b0001 | BFA |
755 | 010 | Scalar | `CR16-CR23`/1 | 0b0010 | BFA |
756 | 011 | Scalar | `CR24-CR31`/1 | 0b0011 | BFA |
757 | 100 | Vector | `CR0-CR112`/16 | BFA 0 | 0b000 |
758 | 101 | Vector | `CR4-CR116`/16 | BFA 0 | 0b100 |
759 | 110 | Vector | `CR8-CR120`/16 | BFA 1 | 0b000 |
760 | 111 | Vector | `CR12-CR124`/16 | BFA 1 | 0b100 |
761
762 ## CR EXTRA2
763
764 CR encoding is essentially the same but made more complex due to CRs
765 being bit-based, because the application of SVP64 element-numbering applies
766 to the CR *Field* numbering not the CR register *bit* numbering.
767 See separate section for explanation and pseudocode.
768 Note that Vectors may only start from CR0, CR8, CR16, CR24, CR32...
769
770 Encoding shown MSB down to LSB
771
772 For a 5-bit operand (BA, BB, BC):
773
774 | Value | Mode | Range/Inc | 8..5 | 4..2 | 1..0 |
775 |-------|--------|----------------|---------|---------|---------|
776 | 00 | Scalar | `CR0-CR7`/1 | 0b0000 | BA[0:2] | BA[3:4] |
777 | 01 | Scalar | `CR8-CR15`/1 | 0b0001 | BA[0:2] | BA[3:4] |
778 | 10 | Vector | `CR0-CR112`/16 | BA[0:2] 0 | 0b000 | BA[3:4] |
779 | 11 | Vector | `CR8-CR120`/16 | BA[0:2] 1 | 0b000 | BA[3:4] |
780
781 For a 3-bit operand (e.g. BFA):
782
783 | Value | Mode | Range/Inc | 6..3 | 2..0 |
784 |-------|------|---------------|-----------| --------|
785 | 00 | Scalar | `CR0-CR7`/1 | 0b0000 | BFA |
786 | 01 | Scalar | `CR8-CR15`/1 | 0b0001 | BFA |
787 | 10 | Vector | `CR0-CR112`/16 | BFA 0 | 0b000 |
788 | 11 | Vector | `CR8-CR120`/16 | BFA 1 | 0b000 |
789
790 --------
791
792 \newpage{}
793
794
795 # Normal SVP64 Modes, for Arithmetic and Logical Operations
796
797 Normal SVP64 Mode covers Arithmetic and Logical operations
798 to provide suitable additional behaviour. The Mode
799 field is bits 19-23 of the [[svp64]] RM Field.
800
801 ## Mode
802
803 Mode is an augmentation of SV behaviour, providing additional
804 functionality. Some of these alterations are element-based (saturation),
805 others involve post-analysis (predicate result) and others are
806 Vector-based (mapreduce, fail-on-first).
807
808 [[sv/ldst]], [[sv/cr_ops]] and [[sv/branches]] are covered separately:
809 the following Modes apply to Arithmetic and Logical SVP64 operations:
810
811 * **simple** mode is straight vectorisation. no augmentations: the
812 vector comprises an array of independently created results.
813 * **ffirst** or data-dependent fail-on-first: see separate section.
814 the vector may be truncated depending on certain criteria.
815 *VL is altered as a result*.
816 * **sat mode** or saturation: clamps each element result to a min/max
817 rather than overflows / wraps. allows signed and unsigned clamping
818 for both INT and FP.
819 * **reduce mode**. if used correctly, a mapreduce (or a prefix sum)
820 is performed. see [[svp64/appendix]].
821 note that there are comprehensive caveats when using this mode.
822 * **pred-result** will test the result (CR testing selects a bit of CR
823 and inverts it, just like branch conditional testing) and if the
824 test fails it is as if the *destination* predicate bit was zero even
825 before starting the operation. When Rc=1 the CR element however is
826 still stored in the CR regfile, even if the test failed. See appendix
827 for details.
828
829 Note that ffirst and reduce modes are not anticipated to be
830 high-performance in some implementations. ffirst due to interactions
831 with VL, and reduce due to it requiring additional operations to produce
832 a result. simple, saturate and pred-result are however inter-element
833 independent and may easily be parallelised to give high performance,
834 regardless of the value of VL.
835
836 The Mode table for Arithmetic and Logical operations is laid out as
837 follows:
838
839 | 0-1 | 2 | 3 4 | description |
840 | --- | --- |---------|-------------------------- |
841 | 00 | 0 | dz sz | simple mode |
842 | 00 | 1 | 0 RG | scalar reduce mode (mapreduce) |
843 | 00 | 1 | 1 / | reserved |
844 | 01 | inv | CR-bit | Rc=1: ffirst CR sel |
845 | 01 | inv | VLi RC1 | Rc=0: ffirst z/nonz |
846 | 10 | N | dz sz | sat mode: N=0/1 u/s |
847 | 11 | inv | CR-bit | Rc=1: pred-result CR sel |
848 | 11 | inv | zz RC1 | Rc=0: pred-result z/nonz |
849
850 Fields:
851
852 * **sz / dz** if predication is enabled will put zeros into the dest
853 (or as src in the case of twin pred) when the predicate bit is zero.
854 otherwise the element is ignored or skipped, depending on context.
855 * **zz**: both sz and dz are set equal to this flag
856 * **inv CR bit** just as in branches (BO) these bits allow testing of
857 a CR bit and whether it is set (inv=0) or unset (inv=1)
858 * **RG** inverts the Vector Loop order (VL-1 downto 0) rather
859 than the normal 0..VL-1
860 * **N** sets signed/unsigned saturation.
861 * **RC1** as if Rc=1, enables access to `VLi`.
862 * **VLi** VL inclusive: in fail-first mode, the truncation of
863 VL *includes* the current element at the failure point rather
864 than excludes it from the count.
865
866 For LD/ST Modes, see [[sv/ldst]]. For Condition Registers see
867 [[sv/cr_ops]]. For Branch modes, see [[sv/branches]].
868
869 ## Rounding, clamp and saturate
870
871 To help ensure for example that audio quality is not compromised by
872 overflow, "saturation" is provided, as well as a way to detect when
873 saturation occurred if desired (Rc=1). When Rc=1 there will be a *vector*
874 of CRs, one CR per element in the result (Note: this is different from
875 VSX which has a single CR per block).
876
877 When N=0 the result is saturated to within the maximum range of an
878 unsigned value. For integer ops this will be 0 to 2^elwidth-1. Similar
879 logic applies to FP operations, with the result being saturated to
880 maximum rather than returning INF, and the minimum to +0.0
881
882 When N=1 the same occurs except that the result is saturated to the min
883 or max of a signed result, and for FP to the min and max value rather
884 than returning +/- INF.
885
886 When Rc=1, the CR "overflow" bit is set on the CR associated with the
887 element, to indicate whether saturation occurred. Note that due to
888 the hugely detrimental effect it has on parallel processing, XER.SO is
889 **ignored** completely and is **not** brought into play here. The CR
890 overflow bit is therefore simply set to zero if saturation did not occur,
891 and to one if it did.
892
893 Note also that saturate on operations that set OE=1 must raise an Illegal
894 Instruction due to the conflicting use of the CR.so bit for storing if
895 saturation occurred. Integer Operations that produce a Carry-Out (CA,
896 CA32): these two bits will be `UNDEFINED` if saturation is also requested.
897
898 Note that the operation takes place at the maximum bitwidth (max of
899 src and dest elwidth) and that truncation occurs to the range of the
900 dest elwidth.
901
902 *Programmer's Note: Post-analysis of the Vector of CRs to find out if any
903 given element hit saturation may be done using a mapreduced CR op (cror),
904 or by using the new crrweird instruction with Rc=1, which will transfer
905 the required CR bits to a scalar integer and update CR0, which will allow
906 testing the scalar integer for nonzero. see [[sv/cr_int_predication]]*
907
908 ## Reduce mode
909
910 Reduction in SVP64 is similar in essence to other Vector Processing ISAs,
911 but leverages the underlying scalar Base v3.0B operations. Thus it is
912 more a convention that the programmer may utilise to give the appearance
913 and effect of a Horizontal Vector Reduction. Due to the unusual decoupling
914 it is also possible to perform prefix-sum (Fibonacci Series) in certain
915 circumstances. Details are in the SVP64 appendix
916
917 Reduce Mode should not be confused with Parallel Reduction [[sv/remap]].
918 As explained in the [[sv/appendix]] Reduce Mode switches off the check
919 which would normally stop looping if the result register is scalar.
920 Thus, the result scalar register, if also used as a source scalar,
921 may be used to perform sequential accumulation. This *deliberately*
922 sets up a chain of Register Hazard Dependencies, whereas Parallel Reduce
923 [[sv/remap]] deliberately issues a Tree-Schedule of operations that may
924 be parallelised.
925
926 ## Fail-on-first
927
928 Data-dependent fail-on-first has two distinct variants: one for LD/ST,
929 the other for arithmetic operations (actually, CR-driven). Note in
930 each case the assumption is that vector elements are required to appear
931 to be executed in sequential Program Order. When REMAP is not active,
932 element 0 would be the first.
933
934 Data-driven (CR-driven) fail-on-first activates when Rc=1 or other
935 CR-creating operation produces a result (including cmp). Similar to
936 branch, an analysis of the CR is performed and if the test fails, the
937 vector operation terminates and discards all element operations **at and
938 above the current one**, and VL is truncated to either the *previous*
939 element or the current one, depending on whether VLi (VL "inclusive")
940 is clear or set, respectively.
941
942 Thus the new VL comprises a contiguous vector of results, all of which
943 pass the testing criteria (equal to zero, less than zero etc as defined
944 by the CR-bit test).
945
946 *Note: when VLi is clear, the behaviour at first seems counter-intuitive.
947 A result is calculated but if the test fails it is prohibited from being
948 actually written. This becomes intuitive again when it is remembered
949 that the length that VL is set to is the number of *written* elements, and
950 only when VLI is set will the current element be included in that count.*
951
952 The CR-based data-driven fail-on-first is "new" and not found in ARM SVE
953 or RVV. At the same time it is "old" because it is almost identical to
954 a generalised form of Z80's `CPIR` instruction. It is extremely useful
955 for reducing instruction count, however requires speculative execution
956 involving modifications of VL to get high performance implementations.
957 An additional mode (RC1=1) effectively turns what would otherwise be an
958 arithmetic operation into a type of `cmp`. The CR is stored (and the
959 CR.eq bit tested against the `inv` field). If the CR.eq bit is equal to
960 `inv` then the Vector is truncated and the loop ends.
961
962 VLi is only available as an option when `Rc=0` (or for instructions
963 which do not have Rc). When set, the current element is always also
964 included in the count (the new length that VL will be set to). This may
965 be useful in combination with "inv" to truncate the Vector to *exclude*
966 elements that fail a test, or, in the case of implementations of strncpy,
967 to include the terminating zero.
968
969 In CR-based data-driven fail-on-first there is only the option to select
970 and test one bit of each CR (just as with branch BO). For more complex
971 tests this may be insufficient. If that is the case, a vectorised crop
972 such as crand, cror or [[sv/cr_int_predication]] crweirder may be used,
973 and ffirst applied to the crop instead of to the arithmetic vector. Note
974 that crops are covered by the [[sv/cr_ops]] Mode format.
975
976 *Programmer's note: `VLi` is only accessible in normal operations which in
977 turn limits the CR field bit-testing to only `EQ/NE`. [[sv/cr_ops]] are
978 not so limited. Thus it is possible to use for example `sv.cror/ff=gt/vli
979 *0,*0,*0`, which is not a `nop` because it allows Fail-First Mode to
980 perform a test and truncate VL.*
981
982 Two extremely important aspects of ffirst are:
983
984 * LDST ffirst may never set VL equal to zero. This because on the first
985 element an exception must be raised "as normal".
986 * CR-based data-dependent ffirst on the other hand **can** set VL equal
987 to zero. This is the only means in the entirety of SV that VL may be set
988 to zero (with the exception of via the SV.STATE SPR). When VL is set
989 zero due to the first element failing the CR bit-test, all subsequent
990 vectorised operations are effectively `nops` which is
991 *precisely the desired and intended behaviour*.
992
993 The second crucial aspect, compared to LDST Ffirst:
994
995 * LD/ST Failfirst may (beyond the initial first element
996 conditions) truncate VL for any architecturally suitable reason. Beyond
997 the first element LD/ST Failfirst is arbitrarily speculative and 100%
998 non-deterministic.
999 * CR-based data-dependent first on the other hand MUST NOT truncate VL
1000 arbitrarily to a length decided by the hardware: VL MUST only be
1001 truncated based explicitly on whether a test fails. This because it is
1002 a precise Deterministic test on which algorithms can and will will rely.
1003
1004 **Floating-point Exceptions**
1005
1006 When Floating-point exceptions are enabled VL must be truncated at
1007 the point where the Exception appears not to have occurred. If `VLi`
1008 is set then VL must include the faulting element, and thus the faulting
1009 element will always raise its exception. If however `VLi` is clear then
1010 VL **excludes** the faulting element and thus the exception will **never**
1011 be raised.
1012
1013 Although very strongly discouraged the Exception Mode that permits
1014 Floating Point Exception notification to arrive too late to unwind
1015 is permitted (under protest, due it violating the otherwise 100%
1016 Deterministic nature of Data-dependent Fail-first) and is `UNDEFINED`
1017 behaviour.
1018
1019 **Use of lax FP Exception Notification Mode could result in parallel
1020 computations proceeding with invalid results that have to be explicitly
1021 detected, whereas with the strict FP Execption Mode enabled, FFirst
1022 truncates VL, allows subsequent parallel computation to avoid the
1023 exceptions entirely**
1024
1025 ## Data-dependent fail-first on CR operations (crand etc)
1026
1027 Operations that actually produce or alter CR Field as a result have
1028 their own SVP64 Mode, described in [[sv/cr_ops]].
1029
1030 ## pred-result mode
1031
1032 This mode merges common CR testing with predication, saving on instruction
1033 count. Below is the pseudocode excluding predicate zeroing and elwidth
1034 overrides. Note that the pseudocode for SVP64 CR-ops is slightly different.
1035
1036 ```
1037 for i in range(VL):
1038 # predication test, skip all masked out elements.
1039 if predicate_masked_out(i):
1040 continue
1041 result = op(iregs[RA+i], iregs[RB+i])
1042 CRnew = analyse(result) # calculates eq/lt/gt
1043 # Rc=1 always stores the CR field
1044 if Rc=1 or RC1:
1045 CR.field[offs+i] = CRnew
1046 # now test CR, similar to branch
1047 if RC1 or CR.field[BO[0:1]] != BO[2]:
1048 continue # test failed: cancel store
1049 # result optionally stored but CR always is
1050 iregs[RT+i] = result
1051 ```
1052
1053 The reason for allowing the CR element to be stored is so that
1054 post-analysis of the CR Vector may be carried out. For example:
1055 Saturation may have occurred (and been prevented from updating, by the
1056 test) but it is desirable to know *which* elements fail saturation.
1057
1058 Note that RC1 Mode basically turns all operations into `cmp`. The
1059 calculation is performed but it is only the CR that is written. The
1060 element result is *always* discarded, never written (just like `cmp`).
1061
1062 Note that predication is still respected: predicate zeroing is slightly
1063 different: elements that fail the CR test *or* are masked out are zero'd.
1064
1065 --------
1066
1067 \newpage{}
1068
1069 # SV Load and Store
1070
1071 **Rationale**
1072
1073 All Vector ISAs dating back fifty years have extensive and comprehensive
1074 Load and Store operations that go far beyond the capabilities of Scalar
1075 RISC and most CISC processors, yet at their heart on an individual element
1076 basis may be found to be no different from RISC Scalar equivalents.
1077
1078 The resource savings from Vector LD/ST are significant and stem
1079 from the fact that one single instruction can trigger a dozen (or in
1080 some microarchitectures such as Cray or NEC SX Aurora) hundreds of
1081 element-level Memory accesses.
1082
1083 Additionally, and simply: if the Arithmetic side of an ISA supports
1084 Vector Operations, then in order to keep the ALUs 100% occupied the
1085 Memory infrastructure (and the ISA itself) correspondingly needs Vector
1086 Memory Operations as well.
1087
1088 Vectorised Load and Store also presents an extra dimension (literally)
1089 which creates scenarios unique to Vector applications, that a Scalar
1090 (and even a SIMD) ISA simply never encounters. SVP64 endeavours to add
1091 the modes typically found in *all* Scalable Vector ISAs, without changing
1092 the behaviour of the underlying Base (Scalar) v3.0B operations in any way.
1093
1094 ## Modes overview
1095
1096 Vectorisation of Load and Store requires creation, from scalar operations,
1097 a number of different modes:
1098
1099 * **fixed aka "unit" stride** - contiguous sequence with no gaps
1100 * **element strided** - sequential but regularly offset, with gaps
1101 * **vector indexed** - vector of base addresses and vector of offsets
1102 * **Speculative fail-first** - where it makes sense to do so
1103 * **Structure Packing** - covered in SV by [[sv/remap]] and Pack/Unpack Mode.
1104
1105 *Despite being constructed from Scalar LD/ST none of these Modes exist
1106 or make sense in any Scalar ISA. They **only** exist in Vector ISAs*
1107
1108 Also included in SVP64 LD/ST is both signed and unsigned Saturation,
1109 as well as Element-width overrides and Twin-Predication.
1110
1111 Note also that Indexed [[sv/remap]] mode may be applied to both v3.0
1112 LD/ST Immediate instructions *and* v3.0 LD/ST Indexed instructions.
1113 LD/ST-Indexed should not be conflated with Indexed REMAP mode:
1114 clarification is provided below.
1115
1116 **Determining the LD/ST Modes**
1117
1118 A minor complication (caused by the retro-fitting of modern Vector
1119 features to a Scalar ISA) is that certain features do not exactly make
1120 sense or are considered a security risk. Fail-first on Vector Indexed
1121 would allow attackers to probe large numbers of pages from userspace,
1122 where strided fail-first (by creating contiguous sequential LDs) does not.
1123
1124 In addition, reduce mode makes no sense. Realistically we need an
1125 alternative table definition for [[sv/svp64]] `RM.MODE`. The following
1126 modes make sense:
1127
1128 * saturation
1129 * predicate-result (mostly for cache-inhibited LD/ST)
1130 * simple (no augmentation)
1131 * fail-first (where Vector Indexed is banned)
1132 * Signed Effective Address computation (Vector Indexed only)
1133
1134 More than that however it is necessary to fit the usual Vector ISA
1135 capabilities onto both Power ISA LD/ST with immediate and to LD/ST
1136 Indexed. They present subtly different Mode tables, which, due to lack
1137 of space, have the following quirks:
1138
1139 * LD/ST Immediate has no individual control over src/dest zeroing,
1140 whereas LD/ST Indexed does.
1141 * LD/ST Immediate has no Saturated Pack/Unpack (Arithmetic Mode does)
1142 * LD/ST Indexed has no Pack/Unpack (REMAP may be used instead)
1143
1144 ## Format and fields
1145
1146 Fields used in tables below:
1147
1148 * **sz / dz** if predication is enabled will put zeros into the dest
1149 (or as src in the case of twin pred) when the predicate bit is zero.
1150 otherwise the element is ignored or skipped, depending on context.
1151 * **zz**: both sz and dz are set equal to this flag.
1152 * **inv CR bit** just as in branches (BO) these bits allow testing of
1153 a CR bit and whether it is set (inv=0) or unset (inv=1)
1154 * **N** sets signed/unsigned saturation.
1155 * **RC1** as if Rc=1, stores CRs *but not the result*
1156 * **SEA** - Signed Effective Address, if enabled performs sign-extension on
1157 registers that have been reduced due to elwidth overrides
1158 * **PI** - post-increment mode (applies to LD/ST with update only).
1159 the Effective Address utilised is always just RA, i.e. the computation of
1160 EA is stored in RA **after** it is actually used.
1161
1162 **LD/ST immediate**
1163
1164 The table for [[sv/svp64]] for `immed(RA)` which is `RM.MODE`
1165 (bits 19:23 of `RM`) is:
1166
1167 | 0-1 | 2 | 3 4 | description |
1168 | --- | --- |---------|--------------------------- |
1169 | 00 | 0 | zz els | simple mode |
1170 | 00 | 1 | PI LF | post-increment and Fault-First |
1171 | 01 | inv | CR-bit | Rc=1: ffirst CR sel |
1172 | 01 | inv | els RC1 | Rc=0: ffirst z/nonz |
1173 | 10 | N | zz els | sat mode: N=0/1 u/s |
1174 | 11 | inv | CR-bit | Rc=1: pred-result CR sel |
1175 | 11 | inv | els RC1 | Rc=0: pred-result z/nonz |
1176
1177 The `els` bit is only relevant when `RA.isvec` is clear: this indicates
1178 whether stride is unit or element:
1179
1180 ```
1181 if RA.isvec:
1182 svctx.ldstmode = indexed
1183 elif els == 0:
1184 svctx.ldstmode = unitstride
1185 elif immediate != 0:
1186 svctx.ldstmode = elementstride
1187 ```
1188
1189 An immediate of zero is a safety-valve to allow `LD-VSPLAT`: in effect
1190 the multiplication of the immediate-offset by zero results in reading from
1191 the exact same memory location, *even with a Vector register*. (Normally
1192 this type of behaviour is reserved for the mapreduce modes)
1193
1194 For `LD-VSPLAT`, on non-cache-inhibited Loads, the read can occur just
1195 the once and be copied, rather than hitting the Data Cache multiple
1196 times with the same memory read at the same location. The benefit of
1197 Cache-inhibited LD-splats is that it allows for memory-mapped peripherals
1198 to have multiple data values read in quick succession and stored in
1199 sequentially numbered registers (but, see Note below).
1200
1201 For non-cache-inhibited ST from a vector source onto a scalar destination:
1202 with the Vector loop effectively creating multiple memory writes to
1203 the same location, we can deduce that the last of these will be the
1204 "successful" one. Thus, implementations are free and clear to optimise
1205 out the overwriting STs, leaving just the last one as the "winner".
1206 Bear in mind that predicate masks will skip some elements (in source
1207 non-zeroing mode). Cache-inhibited ST operations on the other hand
1208 **MUST** write out a Vector source multiple successive times to the exact
1209 same Scalar destination. Just like Cache-inhibited LDs, multiple values
1210 may be written out in quick succession to a memory-mapped peripheral
1211 from sequentially-numbered registers.
1212
1213 Note that any memory location may be Cache-inhibited
1214 (Power ISA v3.1, Book III, 1.6.1, p1033)
1215
1216 *Programmer's Note: an immediate also with a Scalar source as a "VSPLAT"
1217 mode is simply not possible: there are not enough Mode bits. One single
1218 Scalar Load operation may be used instead, followed by any arithmetic
1219 operation (including a simple mv) in "Splat" mode.*
1220
1221 **LD/ST Indexed**
1222
1223 The modes for `RA+RB` indexed version are slightly different
1224 but are the same `RM.MODE` bits (19:23 of `RM`):
1225
1226 | 0-1 | 2 | 3 4 | description |
1227 | --- | --- |---------|-------------------------- |
1228 | 00 | SEA | dz sz | simple mode |
1229 | 01 | SEA | dz sz | Strided (scalar only source) |
1230 | 10 | N | dz sz | sat mode: N=0/1 u/s |
1231 | 11 | inv | CR-bit | Rc=1: pred-result CR sel |
1232 | 11 | inv | zz RC1 | Rc=0: pred-result z/nonz |
1233
1234 Vector Indexed Strided Mode is qualified as follows:
1235
1236 if mode = 0b01 and !RA.isvec and !RB.isvec:
1237 svctx.ldstmode = elementstride
1238
1239 A summary of the effect of Vectorisation of src or dest:
1240
1241 ```
1242 imm(RA) RT.v RA.v no stride allowed
1243 imm(RA) RT.s RA.v no stride allowed
1244 imm(RA) RT.v RA.s stride-select allowed
1245 imm(RA) RT.s RA.s not vectorised
1246 RA,RB RT.v {RA|RB}.v Standard Indexed
1247 RA,RB RT.s {RA|RB}.v Indexed but single LD (no VSPLAT)
1248 RA,RB RT.v {RA&RB}.s VSPLAT possible. stride selectable
1249 RA,RB RT.s {RA&RB}.s not vectorised (scalar identity)
1250 ```
1251
1252 Signed Effective Address computation is only relevant for Vector Indexed
1253 Mode, when elwidth overrides are applied. The source override applies to
1254 RB, and before adding to RA in order to calculate the Effective Address,
1255 if SEA is set RB is sign-extended from elwidth bits to the full 64 bits.
1256 For other Modes (ffirst, saturate), all EA computation with elwidth
1257 overrides is unsigned.
1258
1259 Note that cache-inhibited LD/ST when VSPLAT is activated will perform
1260 **multiple** LD/ST operations, sequentially. Even with scalar src
1261 a Cache-inhibited LD will read the same memory location *multiple
1262 times*, storing the result in successive Vector destination registers.
1263 This because the cache-inhibit instructions are typically used to read
1264 and write memory-mapped peripherals. If a genuine cache-inhibited
1265 LD-VSPLAT is required then a single *scalar* cache-inhibited LD should
1266 be performed, followed by a VSPLAT-augmented mv, copying the one *scalar*
1267 value into multiple register destinations.
1268
1269 Note also that cache-inhibited VSPLAT with Predicate-result is possible.
1270 This allows for example to issue a massive batch of memory-mapped
1271 peripheral reads, stopping at the first NULL-terminated character and
1272 truncating VL to that point. No branch is needed to issue that large
1273 burst of LDs, which may be valuable in Embedded scenarios.
1274
1275 ## Vectorisation of Scalar Power ISA v3.0B
1276
1277 Scalar Power ISA Load/Store operations may be seen from their
1278 pseudocode to be of the form:
1279
1280 ```
1281 lbux RT, RA, RB
1282 EA <- (RA) + (RB)
1283 RT <- MEM(EA)
1284 ```
1285
1286 and for immediate variants:
1287
1288 ```
1289 lb RT,D(RA)
1290 EA <- RA + EXTS(D)
1291 RT <- MEM(EA)
1292 ```
1293
1294 Thus in the first example, the source registers may each be independently
1295 marked as scalar or vector, and likewise the destination; in the second
1296 example only the one source and one dest may be marked as scalar or
1297 vector.
1298
1299 Thus we can see that Vector Indexed may be covered, and, as demonstrated
1300 with the pseudocode below, the immediate can be used to give unit
1301 stride or element stride. With there being no way to tell which from
1302 the Power v3.0B Scalar opcode alone, the choice is provided instead by
1303 the SV Context.
1304
1305 ```
1306 # LD not VLD! format - ldop RT, immed(RA)
1307 # op_width: lb=1, lh=2, lw=4, ld=8
1308 op_load(RT, RA, op_width, immed, svctx, RAupdate):
1309  ps = get_pred_val(FALSE, RA); # predication on src
1310  pd = get_pred_val(FALSE, RT); # ... AND on dest
1311  for (i=0, j=0, u=0; i < VL && j < VL;):
1312 # skip nonpredicates elements
1313 if (RA.isvec) while (!(ps & 1<<i)) i++;
1314 if (RAupdate.isvec) while (!(ps & 1<<u)) u++;
1315 if (RT.isvec) while (!(pd & 1<<j)) j++;
1316 if postinc:
1317 offs = 0; # added afterwards
1318 if RA.isvec: srcbase = ireg[RA+i]
1319 else srcbase = ireg[RA]
1320 elif svctx.ldstmode == elementstride:
1321 # element stride mode
1322 srcbase = ireg[RA]
1323 offs = i * immed # j*immed for a ST
1324 elif svctx.ldstmode == unitstride:
1325 # unit stride mode
1326 srcbase = ireg[RA]
1327 offs = immed + (i * op_width) # j*op_width for ST
1328 elif RA.isvec:
1329 # quirky Vector indexed mode but with an immediate
1330 srcbase = ireg[RA+i]
1331 offs = immed;
1332 else
1333 # standard scalar mode (but predicated)
1334 # no stride multiplier means VSPLAT mode
1335 srcbase = ireg[RA]
1336 offs = immed
1337
1338 # compute EA
1339 EA = srcbase + offs
1340 # load from memory
1341 ireg[RT+j] <= MEM[EA];
1342 # check post-increment of EA
1343 if postinc: EA = srcbase + immed;
1344 # update RA?
1345 if RAupdate: ireg[RAupdate+u] = EA;
1346 if (!RT.isvec)
1347 break # destination scalar, end now
1348 if (RA.isvec) i++;
1349 if (RAupdate.isvec) u++;
1350 if (RT.isvec) j++;
1351 ```
1352
1353 Indexed LD is:
1354
1355 ```
1356 # format: ldop RT, RA, RB
1357 function op_ldx(RT, RA, RB, RAupdate=False) # LD not VLD!
1358  ps = get_pred_val(FALSE, RA); # predication on src
1359  pd = get_pred_val(FALSE, RT); # ... AND on dest
1360  for (i=0, j=0, k=0, u=0; i < VL && j < VL && k < VL):
1361 # skip nonpredicated RA, RB and RT
1362 if (RA.isvec) while (!(ps & 1<<i)) i++;
1363 if (RAupdate.isvec) while (!(ps & 1<<u)) u++;
1364 if (RB.isvec) while (!(ps & 1<<k)) k++;
1365 if (RT.isvec) while (!(pd & 1<<j)) j++;
1366 if svctx.ldstmode == elementstride:
1367 EA = ireg[RA] + ireg[RB]*j # register-strided
1368 else
1369 EA = ireg[RA+i] + ireg[RB+k] # indexed address
1370 if RAupdate: ireg[RAupdate+u] = EA
1371 ireg[RT+j] <= MEM[EA];
1372 if (!RT.isvec)
1373 break # destination scalar, end immediately
1374 if (RA.isvec) i++;
1375 if (RAupdate.isvec) u++;
1376 if (RB.isvec) k++;
1377 if (RT.isvec) j++;
1378 ```
1379
1380 Note that Element-Strided uses the Destination Step because with both
1381 sources being Scalar as a prerequisite condition of activation of
1382 Element-Stride Mode, the source step (being Scalar) would never advance.
1383
1384 Note in both cases that [[sv/svp64]] allows RA-as-a-dest in "update"
1385 mode (`ldux`) to be effectively a *completely different* register from
1386 RA-as-a-source. This because there is room in svp64 to extend RA-as-src
1387 as well as RA-as-dest, both independently as scalar or vector *and*
1388 independently extending their range.
1389
1390 *Programmer's note: being able to set RA-as-a-source as separate from
1391 RA-as-a-destination as Scalar is **extremely valuable** once it is
1392 remembered that Simple-V element operations must be in Program Order,
1393 especially in loops, for saving on multiple address computations. Care
1394 does have to be taken however that RA-as-src is not overwritten by
1395 RA-as-dest unless intentionally desired, especially in element-strided
1396 Mode.*
1397
1398 ## LD/ST Indexed vs Indexed REMAP
1399
1400 Unfortunately the word "Indexed" is used twice in completely different
1401 contexts, potentially causing confusion.
1402
1403 * There has existed instructions in the Power ISA `ld RT,RA,RB` since
1404 its creation: these are called "LD/ST Indexed" instructions and their
1405 name and meaning is well-established.
1406 * There now exists, in Simple-V, a REMAP mode called "Indexed"
1407 Mode that can be applied to *any* instruction **including those
1408 named LD/ST Indexed**.
1409
1410 Whilst it may be costly in terms of register reads to allow REMAP Indexed
1411 Mode to be applied to any Vectorised LD/ST Indexed operation such as
1412 `sv.ld *RT,RA,*RB`, or even misleadingly labelled as redundant, firstly
1413 the strict application of the RISC Paradigm that Simple-V follows makes
1414 it awkward to consider *preventing* the application of Indexed REMAP to
1415 such operations, and secondly they are not actually the same at all.
1416
1417 Indexed REMAP, as applied to RB in the instruction `sv.ld *RT,RA,*RB`
1418 effectively performs an *in-place* re-ordering of the offsets, RB.
1419 To achieve the same effect without Indexed REMAP would require taking
1420 a *copy* of the Vector of offsets starting at RB, manually explicitly
1421 reordering them, and finally using the copy of re-ordered offsets in a
1422 non-REMAP'ed `sv.ld`. Using non-strided LD as an example, pseudocode
1423 showing what actually occurs, where the pseudocode for `indexed_remap`
1424 may be found in [[sv/remap]]:
1425
1426 ```
1427 # sv.ld *RT,RA,*RB with Index REMAP applied to RB
1428 for i in 0..VL-1:
1429 if remap.indexed:
1430 rb_idx = indexed_remap(i) # remap
1431 else:
1432 rb_idx = i # use the index as-is
1433 EA = GPR(RA) + GPR(RB+rb_idx)
1434 GPR(RT+i) = MEM(EA, 8)
1435 ```
1436
1437 Thus it can be seen that the use of Indexed REMAP saves copying
1438 and manual reordering of the Vector of RB offsets.
1439
1440 ## LD/ST ffirst
1441
1442 LD/ST ffirst treats the first LD/ST in a vector (element 0 if REMAP
1443 is not active) as an ordinary one, with all behaviour with respect to
1444 Interrupts Exceptions Page Faults Memory Management being identical
1445 in every regard to Scalar v3.0 Power ISA LD/ST. However for elements
1446 1 and above, if an exception would occur, then VL is **truncated**
1447 to the previous element: the exception is **not** then raised because
1448 the LD/ST that would otherwise have caused an exception is *required*
1449 to be cancelled. Additionally an implementor may choose to truncate VL
1450 for any arbitrary reason *except for the very first*.
1451
1452 ffirst LD/ST to multiple pages via a Vectorised Index base is
1453 considered a security risk due to the abuse of probing multiple
1454 pages in rapid succession and getting speculative feedback on which
1455 pages would fail. Therefore Vector Indexed LD/ST is prohibited
1456 entirely, and the Mode bit instead used for element-strided LD/ST.
1457
1458 ```
1459 for(i = 0; i < VL; i++)
1460 reg[rt + i] = mem[reg[ra] + i * reg[rb]];
1461 ```
1462
1463 High security implementations where any kind of speculative probing of
1464 memory pages is considered a risk should take advantage of the fact
1465 that implementations may truncate VL at any point, without requiring
1466 software to be rewritten and made non-portable. Such implementations may
1467 choose to *always* set VL=1 which will have the effect of terminating
1468 any speculative probing (and also adversely affect performance), but
1469 will at least not require applications to be rewritten.
1470
1471 Low-performance simpler hardware implementations may also choose (always)
1472 to also set VL=1 as the bare minimum compliant implementation of LD/ST
1473 Fail-First. It is however critically important to remember that the first
1474 element LD/ST **MUST** be treated as an ordinary LD/ST, i.e. **MUST**
1475 raise exceptions exactly like an ordinary LD/ST.
1476
1477 For ffirst LD/STs, VL may be truncated arbitrarily to a nonzero value
1478 for any implementation-specific reason. For example: it is perfectly
1479 reasonable for implementations to alter VL when ffirst LD or ST operations
1480 are initiated on a nonaligned boundary, such that within a loop the
1481 subsequent iteration of that loop begins the following ffirst LD/ST
1482 operations on an aligned boundary such as the beginning of a cache line,
1483 or beginning of a Virtual Memory page. Likewise, to reduce workloads or
1484 balance resources.
1485
1486 Vertical-First Mode is slightly strange in that only one element at a time
1487 is ever executed anyway. Given that programmers may legitimately choose
1488 to alter srcstep and dststep in non-sequential order as part of explicit
1489 loops, it is neither possible nor safe to make speculative assumptions
1490 about future LD/STs. Therefore, Fail-First LD/ST in Vertical-First is
1491 `UNDEFINED`. This is very different from Arithmetic (Data-dependent)
1492 FFirst where Vertical-First Mode is fully deterministic, not speculative.
1493
1494 ## LOAD/STORE Elwidths <a name="elwidth"></a>
1495
1496 Loads and Stores are almost unique in that the Power Scalar ISA
1497 provides a width for the operation (lb, lh, lw, ld). Only `extsb` and
1498 others like it provide an explicit operation width. There are therefore
1499 *three* widths involved:
1500
1501 * operation width (lb=8, lh=16, lw=32, ld=64)
1502 * src element width override (8/16/32/default)
1503 * destination element width override (8/16/32/default)
1504
1505 Some care is therefore needed to express and make clear the transformations,
1506 which are expressly in this order:
1507
1508 * Calculate the Effective Address from RA at full width
1509 but (on Indexed Load) allow srcwidth overrides on RB
1510 * Load at the operation width (lb/lh/lw/ld) as usual
1511 * byte-reversal as usual
1512 * Non-saturated mode:
1513 - zero-extension or truncation from operation width to dest elwidth
1514 - place result in destination at dest elwidth
1515 * Saturated mode:
1516 - Sign-extension or truncation from operation width to dest width
1517 - signed/unsigned saturation down to dest elwidth
1518
1519 In order to respect Power v3.0B Scalar behaviour the memory side
1520 is treated effectively as completely separate and distinct from SV
1521 augmentation. This is primarily down to quirks surrounding LE/BE and
1522 byte-reversal.
1523
1524 It is rather unfortunately possible to request an elwidth override on
1525 the memory side which does not mesh with the overridden operation width:
1526 these result in `UNDEFINED` behaviour. The reason is that the effect
1527 of attempting a 64-bit `sv.ld` operation with a source elwidth override
1528 of 8/16/32 would result in overlapping memory requests, particularly
1529 on unit and element strided operations. Thus it is `UNDEFINED` when
1530 the elwidth is smaller than the memory operation width. Examples include
1531 `sv.lw/sw=16/els` which requests (overlapping) 4-byte memory reads offset
1532 from each other at 2-byte intervals. Store likewise is also `UNDEFINED`
1533 where the dest elwidth override is less than the operation width.
1534
1535 Note the following regarding the pseudocode to follow:
1536
1537 * `scalar identity behaviour` SV Context parameter conditions turn this
1538 into a straight absolute fully-compliant Scalar v3.0B LD operation
1539 * `brev` selects whether the operation is the byte-reversed variant (`ldbrx`
1540 rather than `ld`)
1541 * `op_width` specifies the operation width (`lb`, `lh`, `lw`, `ld`) as
1542 a "normal" part of Scalar v3.0B LD
1543 * `imm_offs` specifies the immediate offset `ld r3, imm_offs(r5)`, again
1544 as a "normal" part of Scalar v3.0B LD
1545 * `svctx` specifies the SV Context and includes VL as well as
1546 source and destination elwidth overrides.
1547
1548 Below is the pseudocode for Unit-Strided LD (which includes Vector
1549 capability). Observe in particular that RA, as the base address in both
1550 Immediate and Indexed LD/ST, does not have element-width overriding
1551 applied to it.
1552
1553 Note that predication, predication-zeroing, and other modes except
1554 saturation have all been removed, for clarity and simplicity:
1555
1556 ```
1557 # LD not VLD!
1558 # this covers unit stride mode and a type of vector offset
1559 function op_ld(RT, RA, op_width, imm_offs, svctx)
1560 for (int i = 0, int j = 0; i < svctx.VL && j < svctx.VL):
1561 if not svctx.unit/el-strided:
1562 # strange vector mode, compute 64 bit address which is
1563 # not polymorphic! elwidth hardcoded to 64 here
1564 srcbase = get_polymorphed_reg(RA, 64, i)
1565 else:
1566 # unit / element stride mode, compute 64 bit address
1567 srcbase = get_polymorphed_reg(RA, 64, 0)
1568 # adjust for unit/el-stride
1569 srcbase += ....
1570
1571 # read the underlying memory
1572 memread <= MEM(srcbase + imm_offs, op_width)
1573
1574 # check saturation.
1575 if svpctx.saturation_mode:
1576 # ... saturation adjustment...
1577 memread = clamp(memread, op_width, svctx.dest_elwidth)
1578 else:
1579 # truncate/extend to over-ridden dest width.
1580 memread = adjust_wid(memread, op_width, svctx.dest_elwidth)
1581
1582 # takes care of inserting memory-read (now correctly byteswapped)
1583 # into regfile underlying LE-defined order, into the right place
1584 # within the NEON-like register, respecting destination element
1585 # bitwidth, and the element index (j)
1586 set_polymorphed_reg(RT, svctx.dest_elwidth, j, memread)
1587
1588 # increments both src and dest element indices (no predication here)
1589 i++;
1590 j++;
1591 ```
1592
1593 Note above that the source elwidth is *not used at all* in LD-immediate.
1594
1595 For LD/Indexed, the key is that in the calculation of the Effective Address,
1596 RA has no elwidth override but RB does. Pseudocode below is simplified
1597 for clarity: predication and all modes except saturation are removed:
1598
1599 ```
1600 # LD not VLD! ld*rx if brev else ld*
1601 function op_ld(RT, RA, RB, op_width, svctx, brev)
1602 for (int i = 0, int j = 0; i < svctx.VL && j < svctx.VL):
1603 if not svctx.el-strided:
1604 # RA not polymorphic! elwidth hardcoded to 64 here
1605 srcbase = get_polymorphed_reg(RA, 64, i)
1606 else:
1607 # element stride mode, again RA not polymorphic
1608 srcbase = get_polymorphed_reg(RA, 64, 0)
1609 # RB *is* polymorphic
1610 offs = get_polymorphed_reg(RB, svctx.src_elwidth, i)
1611 # sign-extend
1612 if svctx.SEA: offs = sext(offs, svctx.src_elwidth, 64)
1613
1614 # takes care of (merges) processor LE/BE and ld/ldbrx
1615 bytereverse = brev XNOR MSR.LE
1616
1617 # read the underlying memory
1618 memread <= MEM(srcbase + offs, op_width)
1619
1620 # optionally performs byteswap at op width
1621 if (bytereverse):
1622 memread = byteswap(memread, op_width)
1623
1624 if svpctx.saturation_mode:
1625 # ... saturation adjustment...
1626 memread = clamp(memread, op_width, svctx.dest_elwidth)
1627 else:
1628 # truncate/extend to over-ridden dest width.
1629 memread = adjust_wid(memread, op_width, svctx.dest_elwidth)
1630
1631 # takes care of inserting memory-read (now correctly byteswapped)
1632 # into regfile underlying LE-defined order, into the right place
1633 # within the NEON-like register, respecting destination element
1634 # bitwidth, and the element index (j)
1635 set_polymorphed_reg(RT, svctx.dest_elwidth, j, memread)
1636
1637 # increments both src and dest element indices (no predication here)
1638 i++;
1639 j++;
1640 ```
1641
1642 ## Remapped LD/ST
1643
1644 In the [[sv/remap]] page the concept of "Remapping" is described. Whilst
1645 it is expensive to set up (2 64-bit opcodes minimum) it provides a way to
1646 arbitrarily perform 1D, 2D and 3D "remapping" of up to 64 elements worth
1647 of LDs or STs. The usual interest in such re-mapping is for example in
1648 separating out 24-bit RGB channel data into separate contiguous registers.
1649
1650 REMAP easily covers this capability, and with dest elwidth overrides
1651 and saturation may do so with built-in conversion that would normally
1652 require additional width-extension, sign-extension and min/max Vectorised
1653 instructions as post-processing stages.
1654
1655 Thus we do not need to provide specialist LD/ST "Structure Packed" opcodes
1656 because the generic abstracted concept of "Remapping", when applied to
1657 LD/ST, will give that same capability, with far more flexibility.
1658
1659 It is worth noting that Pack/Unpack Modes of SVSTATE, which may be
1660 established through `svstep`, are also an easy way to perform regular
1661 Structure Packing, at the vec2/vec3/vec4 granularity level. Beyond that,
1662 REMAP will need to be used.
1663
1664 --------
1665
1666 \newpage{}
1667
1668 # Condition Register SVP64 Operations
1669
1670 Condition Register Fields are only 4 bits wide: this presents some
1671 interesting conceptual challenges for SVP64, which was designed
1672 primarily for vectors of arithmetic and logical operations. However
1673 if predicates may be bits of CR Fields it makes sense to extend
1674 Simple-V to cover CR Operations, especially given that Vectorised Rc=1
1675 may be processed by Vectorised CR Operations tbat usefully in turn
1676 may become Predicate Masks to yet more Vector operations, like so:
1677
1678 ```
1679 sv.cmpi/ew=8 *B,*ra,0 # compare bytes against zero
1680 sv.cmpi/ew=8 *B2,*ra,13. # and against newline
1681 sv.cror PM.EQ,B.EQ,B2.EQ # OR compares to create mask
1682 sv.stb/sm=EQ ... # store only nonzero/newline
1683 ```
1684
1685 Element width however is clearly meaningless for a 4-bit collation of
1686 Conditions, EQ LT GE SO. Likewise, arithmetic saturation (an important
1687 part of Arithmetic SVP64) has no meaning. An alternative Mode Format is
1688 required, and given that elwidths are meaningless for CR Fields the bits
1689 in SVP64 `RM` may be used for other purposes.
1690
1691 This alternative mapping **only** applies to instructions that **only**
1692 reference a CR Field or CR bit as the sole exclusive result. This section
1693 **does not** apply to instructions which primarily produce arithmetic
1694 results that also, as an aside, produce a corresponding CR Field (such as
1695 when Rc=1). Instructions that involve Rc=1 are definitively arithmetic
1696 in nature, where the corresponding Condition Register Field can be
1697 considered to be a "co-result". Such CR Field "co-result" arithmeric
1698 operations are firmly out of scope for this section, being covered fully
1699 by [[sv/normal]].
1700
1701 * Examples of v3.0B instructions to which this section does
1702 apply is
1703 - `mfcr` and `cmpi` (3 bit operands) and
1704 - `crnor` and `crand` (5 bit operands).
1705 * Examples to which this section does **not** apply include
1706 `fadds.` and `subf.` which both produce arithmetic results
1707 (and a CR Field co-result).
1708
1709 The CR Mode Format still applies to `sv.cmpi` because despite
1710 taking a GPR as input, the output from the Base Scalar v3.0B `cmpi`
1711 instruction is purely to a Condition Register Field.
1712
1713 Other modes are still applicable and include:
1714
1715 * **Data-dependent fail-first**.
1716 useful to truncate VL based on analysis of a Condition Register result bit.
1717 * **Reduction**.
1718 Reduction is useful for analysing a Vector of Condition Register Fields
1719 and reducing it to one single Condition Register Field.
1720
1721 Predicate-result does not make any sense because when Rc=1 a co-result
1722 is created (a CR Field). Testing the co-result allows the decision to
1723 be made to store or not store the main result, and for CR Ops the CR
1724 Field result *is* the main result.
1725
1726 ## Format
1727
1728 SVP64 RM `MODE` (includes `ELWIDTH_SRC` bits) for CR-based operations:
1729
1730 |6 | 7 |19-20| 21 | 22 23 | description |
1731 |--|---|-----| --- |---------|----------------- |
1732 |/ | / |0 RG | 0 | dz sz | simple mode |
1733 |/ | / |0 RG | 1 | dz sz | scalar reduce mode (mapreduce) |
1734 |zz|SNZ|1 VLI| inv | CR-bit | Ffirst 3-bit mode |
1735 |/ |SNZ|1 VLI| inv | dz sz | Ffirst 5-bit mode (implies CR-bit from result) |
1736
1737 Fields:
1738
1739 * **sz / dz** if predication is enabled will put zeros into the dest
1740 (or as src in the case of twin pred) when the predicate bit is zero.
1741 otherwise the element is ignored or skipped, depending on context.
1742 * **zz** set both sz and dz equal to this flag
1743 * **SNZ** In fail-first mode, on the bit being tested, when sz=1 and
1744 SNZ=1 a value "1" is put in place of "0".
1745 * **inv CR-bit** just as in branches (BO) these bits allow testing of
1746 a CR bit and whether it is set (inv=0) or unset (inv=1)
1747 * **RG** inverts the Vector Loop order (VL-1 downto 0) rather
1748 than the normal 0..VL-1
1749 * **SVM** sets "subvector" reduce mode
1750 * **VLi** VL inclusive: in fail-first mode, the truncation of
1751 VL *includes* the current element at the failure point rather
1752 than excludes it from the count.
1753
1754 ## Data-dependent fail-first on CR operations
1755
1756 The principle of data-dependent fail-first is that if, during the course
1757 of sequentially evaluating an element's Condition Test, one such test
1758 is encountered which fails, then VL (Vector Length) is truncated (set)
1759 at that point. In the case of Arithmetic SVP64 Operations the Condition
1760 Register Field generated from Rc=1 is used as the basis for the truncation
1761 decision. However with CR-based operations that CR Field result to be
1762 tested is provided *by the operation itself*.
1763
1764 Data-dependent SVP64 Vectorised Operations involving the creation
1765 or modification of a CR can require an extra two bits, which are not
1766 available in the compact space of the SVP64 RM `MODE` Field. With the
1767 concept of element width overrides being meaningless for CR Fields it
1768 is possible to use the `ELWIDTH` field for alternative purposes.
1769
1770 Condition Register based operations such as `sv.mfcr` and `sv.crand`
1771 can thus be made more flexible. However the rules that apply in this
1772 section also apply to future CR-based instructions.
1773
1774 There are two primary different types of CR operations:
1775
1776 * Those which have a 3-bit operand field (referring to a CR Field)
1777 * Those which have a 5-bit operand (referring to a bit within the
1778 whole 32-bit CR)
1779
1780 Examining these two types it is observed that the difference may
1781 be considered to be that the 5-bit variant *already* provides the
1782 prerequisite information about which CR Field bit (EQ, GE, LT, SO) is
1783 to be operated on by the instruction. Thus, logically, we may set the
1784 following rule:
1785
1786 * When a 5-bit CR Result field is used in an instruction, the
1787 5-bit variant of Data-Dependent Fail-First
1788 must be used. i.e. the bit of the CR field to be tested is
1789 the one that has just been modified (created) by the operation.
1790 * When a 3-bit CR Result field is used the 3-bit variant
1791 must be used, providing as it does the missing `CRbit` field
1792 in order to select which CR Field bit of the result shall
1793 be tested (EQ, LE, GE, SO)
1794
1795 The reason why the 3-bit CR variant needs the additional CR-bit field
1796 should be obvious from the fact that the 3-bit CR Field from the base
1797 Power ISA v3.0B operation clearly does not contain and is missing the
1798 two CR Field Selector bits. Thus, these two bits (to select EQ, LE,
1799 GE or SO) must be provided in another way.
1800
1801 Examples of the former type:
1802
1803 * crand, cror, crnor. These all are 5-bit (BA, BB, BT). The bit
1804 to be tested against `inv` is the one selected by `BT`
1805 * mcrf. This has only 3-bit (BF, BFA). In order to select the
1806 bit to be tested, the alternative encoding must be used.
1807 With `CRbit` coming from the SVP64 RM bits 22-23 the bit
1808 of BF to be tested is identified.
1809
1810 Just as with SVP64 [[sv/branches]] there is the option to truncate
1811 VL to include the element being tested (`VLi=1`) and to exclude it
1812 (`VLi=0`).
1813
1814 Also exactly as with [[sv/normal]] fail-first, VL cannot, unlike
1815 [[sv/ldst]], be set to an arbitrary value. Deterministic behaviour
1816 is *required*.
1817
1818 ## Reduction and Iteration
1819
1820 Bearing in mind as described in the svp64 Appendix, SVP64 Horizontal
1821 Reduction is a deterministic schedule on top of base Scalar v3.0
1822 operations, the same rules apply to CR Operations, i.e. that programmers
1823 must follow certain conventions in order for an *end result* of a
1824 reduction to be achieved. Unlike other Vector ISAs *there are no explicit
1825 reduction opcodes* in SVP64: Schedules however achieve the same effect.
1826
1827 Due to these conventions only reduction on operations such as `crand`
1828 and `cror` are meaningful because these have Condition Register Fields
1829 as both input and output. Meaningless operations are not prohibited
1830 because the cost in hardware of doing so is prohibitive, but neither
1831 are they `UNDEFINED`. Implementations are still required to execute them
1832 but are at liberty to optimise out any operations that would ultimately
1833 be overwritten, as long as Strict Program Order is still obvservable by
1834 the programmer.
1835
1836 Also bear in mind that 'Reverse Gear' may be enabled, which can be
1837 used in combination with overlapping CR operations to iteratively
1838 accumulate results. Issuing a `sv.crand` operation for example with
1839 `BA` differing from `BB` by one Condition Register Field would result
1840 in a cascade effect, where the first-encountered CR Field would set the
1841 result to zero, and also all subsequent CR Field elements thereafter:
1842
1843 ```
1844 # sv.crand/mr/rg CR4.ge.v, CR5.ge.v, CR4.ge.v
1845 for i in VL-1 downto 0 # reverse gear
1846 CR.field[4+i].ge &= CR.field[5+i].ge
1847 ```
1848
1849 `sv.crxor` with reduction would be particularly useful for parity
1850 calculation for example, although there are many ways in which the same
1851 calculation could be carried out after transferring a vector of CR Fields
1852 to a GPR using crweird operations.
1853
1854 Implementations are free and clear to optimise these reductions in any way
1855 they see fit, as long as the end-result is compatible with Strict Program
1856 Order being observed, and Interrupt latency is not adversely impacted.
1857
1858 ## Unusual and quirky CR operations
1859
1860 **cmp and other compare ops**
1861
1862 `cmp` and `cmpi` etc take GPRs as sources and create a CR Field as a result.
1863
1864 cmpli BF,L,RA,UI
1865 cmpeqb BF,RA,RB
1866
1867 With `ELWIDTH` applying to the source GPR operands this is perfectly fine.
1868
1869 **crweird operations**
1870
1871 There are 4 weird CR-GPR operations and one reasonable one in
1872 the [[cr_int_predication]] set:
1873
1874 * crrweird
1875 * mtcrweird
1876 * crweirder
1877 * crweird
1878 * mcrfm - reasonably normal and referring to CR Fields for src and dest.
1879
1880 The "weird" operations have a non-standard behaviour, being able to
1881 treat *individual bits* of a GPR effectively as elements. They are
1882 expected to be Micro-coded by most Hardware implementations.
1883
1884
1885 --------
1886
1887 \newpage{}
1888
1889 # SVP64 Branch Conditional behaviour
1890
1891 Please note: although similar, SVP64 Branch instructions should be
1892 considered completely separate and distinct from standard scalar
1893 OpenPOWER-approved v3.0B branches. **v3.0B branches are in no way
1894 impacted, altered, changed or modified in any way, shape or form by the
1895 SVP64 Vectorised Variants**.
1896
1897 It is also extremely important to note that Branches are the sole
1898 pseudo-exception in SVP64 to `Scalar Identity Behaviour`. SVP64 Branches
1899 contain additional modes that are useful for scalar operations (i.e. even
1900 when VL=1 or when using single-bit predication).
1901
1902 **Rationale**
1903
1904 Scalar 3.0B Branch Conditional operations, `bc`, `bctar` etc. test
1905 a Condition Register. However for parallel processing it is simply
1906 impossible to perform multiple independent branches: the Program
1907 Counter simply cannot branch to multiple destinations based on multiple
1908 conditions. The best that can be done is to test multiple Conditions
1909 and make a decision of a *single* branch, based on analysis of a *Vector*
1910 of CR Fields which have just been calculated from a *Vector* of results.
1911
1912 In 3D Shader binaries, which are inherently parallelised and predicated,
1913 testing all or some results and branching based on multiple tests is
1914 extremely common, and a fundamental part of Shader Compilers. Example:
1915 without such multi-condition test-and-branch, if a predicate mask is
1916 all zeros a large batch of instructions may be masked out to `nop`,
1917 and it would waste CPU cycles to run them. 3D GPU ISAs can test for
1918 this scenario and, with the appropriate predicate-analysis instruction,
1919 jump over fully-masked-out operations, by spotting that *all* Conditions
1920 are false.
1921
1922 Unless Branches are aware and capable of such analysis, additional
1923 instructions would be required which perform Horizontal Cumulative
1924 analysis of Vectorised Condition Register Fields, in order to reduce
1925 the Vector of CR Fields down to one single yes or no decision that a
1926 Scalar-only v3.0B Branch-Conditional could cope with. Such instructions
1927 would be unavoidable, required, and costly by comparison to a single
1928 Vector-aware Branch. Therefore, in order to be commercially competitive,
1929 `sv.bc` and other Vector-aware Branch Conditional instructions are a
1930 high priority for 3D GPU (and OpenCL-style) workloads.
1931
1932 Given that Power ISA v3.0B is already quite powerful, particularly
1933 the Condition Registers and their interaction with Branches, there are
1934 opportunities to create extremely flexible and compact Vectorised Branch
1935 behaviour. In addition, the side-effects (updating of CTR, truncation
1936 of VL, described below) make it a useful instruction even if the branch
1937 points to the next instruction (no actual branch).
1938
1939 ## Overview
1940
1941 When considering an "array" of branch-tests, there are four
1942 primarily-useful modes: AND, OR, NAND and NOR of all Conditions.
1943 NAND and NOR may be synthesised from AND and OR by inverting `BO[1]`
1944 which just leaves two modes:
1945
1946 * Branch takes place on the **first** CR Field test to succeed
1947 (a Great Big OR of all condition tests). Exit occurs
1948 on the first **successful** test.
1949 * Branch takes place only if **all** CR field tests succeed:
1950 a Great Big AND of all condition tests. Exit occurs
1951 on the first **failed** test.
1952
1953 Early-exit is enacted such that the Vectorised Branch does not
1954 perform needless extra tests, which will help reduce reads on
1955 the Condition Register file.
1956
1957 *Note: Early-exit is **MANDATORY** (required) behaviour. Branches
1958 **MUST** exit at the first sequentially-encountered failure point,
1959 for exactly the same reasons for which it is mandatory in programming
1960 languages doing early-exit: to avoid damaging side-effects and to provide
1961 deterministic behaviour. Speculative testing of Condition Register
1962 Fields is permitted, as is speculative calculation of CTR, as long as,
1963 as usual in any Out-of-Order microarchitecture, that speculative testing
1964 is cancelled should an early-exit occur. i.e. the speculation must be
1965 "precise": Program Order must be preserved*
1966
1967 Also note that when early-exit occurs in Horizontal-first Mode, srcstep,
1968 dststep etc. are all reset, ready to begin looping from the beginning
1969 for the next instruction. However for Vertical-first Mode srcstep
1970 etc. are incremented "as usual" i.e. an early-exit has no special impact,
1971 regardless of whether the branch occurred or not. This can leave srcstep
1972 etc. in what may be considered an unusual state on exit from a loop and
1973 it is up to the programmer to reset srcstep, dststep etc. to known-good
1974 values *(easily achieved with `setvl`)*.
1975
1976 Additional useful behaviour involves two primary Modes (both of which
1977 may be enabled and combined):
1978
1979 * **VLSET Mode**: identical to Data-Dependent Fail-First Mode
1980 for Arithmetic SVP64 operations, with more
1981 flexibility and a close interaction and integration into the
1982 underlying base Scalar v3.0B Branch instruction.
1983 Truncation of VL takes place around the early-exit point.
1984 * **CTR-test Mode**: gives much more flexibility over when and why
1985 CTR is decremented, including options to decrement if a Condition
1986 test succeeds *or if it fails*.
1987
1988 With these side-effects, basic Boolean Logic Analysis advises that it
1989 is important to provide a means to enact them each based on whether
1990 testing succeeds *or fails*. This results in a not-insignificant number
1991 of additional Mode Augmentation bits, accompanying VLSET and CTR-test
1992 Modes respectively.
1993
1994 Predicate skipping or zeroing may, as usual with SVP64, be controlled by
1995 `sz`. Where the predicate is masked out and zeroing is enabled, then in
1996 such circumstances the same Boolean Logic Analysis dictates that rather
1997 than testing only against zero, the option to test against one is also
1998 prudent. This introduces a new immediate field, `SNZ`, which works in
1999 conjunction with `sz`.
2000
2001 Vectorised Branches can be used in either SVP64 Horizontal-First or
2002 Vertical-First Mode. Essentially, at an element level, the behaviour
2003 is identical in both Modes, although the `ALL` bit is meaningless in
2004 Vertical-First Mode.
2005
2006 It is also important to bear in mind that, fundamentally, Vectorised
2007 Branch-Conditional is still extremely close to the Scalar v3.0B
2008 Branch-Conditional instructions, and that the same v3.0B Scalar
2009 Branch-Conditional instructions are still *completely separate and
2010 independent*, being unaltered and unaffected by their SVP64 variants in
2011 every conceivable way.
2012
2013 *Programming note: One important point is that SVP64 instructions are
2014 64 bit. (8 bytes not 4). This needs to be taken into consideration
2015 when computing branch offsets: the offset is relative to the start of
2016 the instruction, which **includes** the SVP64 Prefix*
2017
2018 ## Format and fields
2019
2020 With element-width overrides being meaningless for Condition Register
2021 Fields, bits 4 thru 7 of SVP64 RM may be used for additional Mode bits.
2022
2023 SVP64 RM `MODE` (includes repurposing `ELWIDTH` bits 4:5, and
2024 `ELWIDTH_SRC` bits 6-7 for *alternate* uses) for Branch Conditional:
2025
2026 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 23 | description |
2027 | - | - | - | - | -- | -- | -- | -- | --- |--------|----------------- |
2028 |ALL|SNZ| / | / | SL |SLu | 0 | 0 | / | LRu sz | simple mode |
2029 |ALL|SNZ| / |VSb| SL |SLu | 0 | 1 | VLI | LRu sz | VLSET mode |
2030 |ALL|SNZ|CTi| / | SL |SLu | 1 | 0 | / | LRu sz | CTR-test mode |
2031 |ALL|SNZ|CTi|VSb| SL |SLu | 1 | 1 | VLI | LRu sz | CTR-test+VLSET mode |
2032
2033 Brief description of fields:
2034
2035 * **sz=1** if predication is enabled and `sz=1` and a predicate
2036 element bit is zero, `SNZ` will
2037 be substituted in place of the CR bit selected by `BI`,
2038 as the Condition tested.
2039 Contrast this with
2040 normal SVP64 `sz=1` behaviour, where *only* a zero is put in
2041 place of masked-out predicate bits.
2042 * **sz=0** When `sz=0` skipping occurs as usual on
2043 masked-out elements, but unlike all
2044 other SVP64 behaviour which entirely skips an element with
2045 no related side-effects at all, there are certain
2046 special circumstances where CTR
2047 may be decremented. See CTR-test Mode, below.
2048 * **ALL** when set, all branch conditional tests must pass in order for
2049 the branch to succeed. When clear, it is the first sequentially
2050 encountered successful test that causes the branch to succeed.
2051 This is identical behaviour to how programming languages perform
2052 early-exit on Boolean Logic chains.
2053 * **VLI** VLSET is identical to Data-dependent Fail-First mode.
2054 In VLSET mode, VL *may* (depending on `VSb`) be truncated.
2055 If VLI (Vector Length Inclusive) is clear,
2056 VL is truncated to *exclude* the current element, otherwise it is
2057 included. SVSTATE.MVL is not altered: only VL.
2058 * **SL** identical to `LR` except applicable to SVSTATE. If `SL`
2059 is set, SVSTATE is transferred to SVLR (conditionally on
2060 whether `SLu` is set).
2061 * **SLu**: SVSTATE Link Update, like `LRu` except applies to SVSTATE.
2062 * **LRu**: Link Register Update, used in conjunction with LK=1
2063 to make LR update conditional
2064 * **VSb** In VLSET Mode, after testing,
2065 if VSb is set, VL is truncated if the test succeeds. If VSb is clear,
2066 VL is truncated if a test *fails*. Masked-out (skipped)
2067 bits are not considered
2068 part of testing when `sz=0`
2069 * **CTi** CTR inversion. CTR-test Mode normally decrements per element
2070 tested. CTR inversion decrements if a test *fails*. Only relevant
2071 in CTR-test Mode.
2072
2073 LRu and CTR-test modes are where SVP64 Branches subtly differ from
2074 Scalar v3.0B Branches. `sv.bcl` for example will always update LR,
2075 whereas `sv.bcl/lru` will only update LR if the branch succeeds.
2076
2077 Of special interest is that when using ALL Mode (Great Big AND of all
2078 Condition Tests), if `VL=0`, which is rare but can occur in Data-Dependent
2079 Modes, the Branch will always take place because there will be no failing
2080 Condition Tests to prevent it. Likewise when not using ALL Mode (Great
2081 Big OR of all Condition Tests) and `VL=0` the Branch is guaranteed not
2082 to occur because there will be no *successful* Condition Tests to make
2083 it happen.
2084
2085 ## Vectorised CR Field numbering, and Scalar behaviour
2086
2087 It is important to keep in mind that just like all SVP64 instructions,
2088 the `BI` field of the base v3.0B Branch Conditional instruction may be
2089 extended by SVP64 EXTRA augmentation, as well as be marked as either
2090 Scalar or Vector. It is also crucially important to keep in mind that for
2091 CRs, SVP64 sequentially increments the CR *Field* numbers. CR *Fields*
2092 are treated as elements, not bit-numbers of the CR *register*.
2093
2094 The `BI` operand of Branch Conditional operations is five bits, in scalar
2095 v3.0B this would select one bit of the 32 bit CR, comprising eight CR
2096 Fields of 4 bits each. In SVP64 there are 16 32 bit CRs, containing
2097 128 4-bit CR Fields. Therefore, the 2 LSBs of `BI` select the bit from
2098 the CR Field (EQ LT GT SO), and the top 3 bits are extended to either
2099 scalar or vector and to select CR Fields 0..127 as specified in SVP64
2100 [[sv/svp64/appendix]].
2101
2102 When the CR Fields selected by SVP64-Augmented `BI` is marked as scalar,
2103 then as the usual SVP64 rules apply: the Vector loop ends at the first
2104 element tested (the first CR *Field*), after taking predication into
2105 consideration. Thus, also as usual, when a predicate mask is given, and
2106 `BI` marked as scalar, and `sz` is zero, srcstep skips forward to the
2107 first non-zero predicated element, and only that one element is tested.
2108
2109 In other words, the fact that this is a Branch Operation (instead of an
2110 arithmetic one) does not result, ultimately, in significant changes as
2111 to how SVP64 is fundamentally applied, except with respect to:
2112
2113 * the unique properties associated with conditionally
2114 changing the Program Counter (aka "a Branch"), resulting in early-out
2115 opportunities
2116 * CTR-testing
2117
2118 Both are outlined below, in later sections.
2119
2120 ## Horizontal-First and Vertical-First Modes
2121
2122 In SVP64 Horizontal-First Mode, the first failure in ALL mode (Great Big
2123 AND) results in early exit: no more updates to CTR occur (if requested);
2124 no branch occurs, and LR is not updated (if requested). Likewise for
2125 non-ALL mode (Great Big Or) on first success early exit also occurs,
2126 however this time with the Branch proceeding. In both cases the testing
2127 of the Vector of CRs should be done in linear sequential order (or in
2128 REMAP re-sequenced order): such that tests that are sequentially beyond
2129 the exit point are *not* carried out. (*Note: it is standard practice
2130 in Programming languages to exit early from conditional tests, however a
2131 little unusual to consider in an ISA that is designed for Parallel Vector
2132 Processing. The reason is to have strictly-defined guaranteed behaviour*)
2133
2134 In Vertical-First Mode, setting the `ALL` bit results in `UNDEFINED`
2135 behaviour. Given that only one element is being tested at a time in
2136 Vertical-First Mode, a test designed to be done on multiple bits is
2137 meaningless.
2138
2139 ## Description and Modes
2140
2141 Predication in both INT and CR modes may be applied to `sv.bc` and other
2142 SVP64 Branch Conditional operations, exactly as they may be applied to
2143 other SVP64 operations. When `sz` is zero, any masked-out Branch-element
2144 operations are not included in condition testing, exactly like all other
2145 SVP64 operations, *including* side-effects such as potentially updating
2146 LR or CTR, which will also be skipped. There is *one* exception here,
2147 which is when `BO[2]=0, sz=0, CTR-test=0, CTi=1` and the relevant element
2148 predicate mask bit is also zero: under these special circumstances CTR
2149 will also decrement.
2150
2151 When `sz` is non-zero, this normally requests insertion of a zero in
2152 place of the input data, when the relevant predicate mask bit is zero.
2153 This would mean that a zero is inserted in place of `CR[BI+32]` for
2154 testing against `BO`, which may not be desirable in all circumstances.
2155 Therefore, an extra field is provided `SNZ`, which, if set, will insert
2156 a **one** in place of a masked-out element, instead of a zero.
2157
2158 (*Note: Both options are provided because it is useful to deliberately
2159 cause the Branch-Conditional Vector testing to fail at a specific point,
2160 controlled by the Predicate mask. This is particularly useful in `VLSET`
2161 mode, which will truncate SVSTATE.VL at the point of the first failed
2162 test.*)
2163
2164 Normally, CTR mode will decrement once per Condition Test, resulting under
2165 normal circumstances that CTR reduces by up to VL in Horizontal-First
2166 Mode. Just as when v3.0B Branch-Conditional saves at least one instruction
2167 on tight inner loops through auto-decrementation of CTR, likewise it
2168 is also possible to save instruction count for SVP64 loops in both
2169 Vertical-First and Horizontal-First Mode, particularly in circumstances
2170 where there is conditional interaction between the element computation
2171 and testing, and the continuation (or otherwise) of a given loop. The
2172 potential combinations of interactions is why CTR testing options have
2173 been added.
2174
2175 Also, the unconditional bit `BO[0]` is still relevant when Predication
2176 is applied to the Branch because in `ALL` mode all nonmasked bits have
2177 to be tested, and when `sz=0` skipping occurs. Even when VLSET mode is
2178 not used, CTR may still be decremented by the total number of nonmasked
2179 elements, acting in effect as either a popcount or cntlz depending
2180 on which mode bits are set. In short, Vectorised Branch becomes an
2181 extremely powerful tool.
2182
2183 **Micro-Architectural Implementation Note**: *when implemented on top
2184 of a Multi-Issue Out-of-Order Engine it is possible to pass a copy of
2185 the predicate and the prerequisite CR Fields to all Branch Units, as
2186 well as the current value of CTR at the time of multi-issue, and for
2187 each Branch Unit to compute how many times CTR would be subtracted,
2188 in a fully-deterministic and parallel fashion. A SIMD-based Branch
2189 Unit, receiving and processing multiple CR Fields covered by multiple
2190 predicate bits, would do the exact same thing. Obviously, however, if
2191 CTR is modified within any given loop (mtctr) the behaviour of CTR is
2192 no longer deterministic.*
2193
2194 ### Link Register Update
2195
2196 For a Scalar Branch, unconditional updating of the Link Register LR
2197 is useful and practical. However, if a loop of CR Fields is tested,
2198 unconditional updating of LR becomes problematic.
2199
2200 For example when using `bclr` with `LRu=1,LK=0` in Horizontal-First Mode,
2201 LR's value will be unconditionally overwritten after the first element,
2202 such that for execution (testing) of the second element, LR has the value
2203 `CIA+8`. This is covered in the `bclrl` example, in a later section.
2204
2205 The addition of a LRu bit modifies behaviour in conjunction with LK,
2206 as follows:
2207
2208 * `sv.bc` When LRu=0,LK=0, Link Register is not updated
2209 * `sv.bcl` When LRu=0,LK=1, Link Register is updated unconditionally
2210 * `sv.bcl/lru` When LRu=1,LK=1, Link Register will
2211 only be updated if the Branch Condition fails.
2212 * `sv.bc/lru` When LRu=1,LK=0, Link Register will only be updated if
2213 the Branch Condition succeeds.
2214
2215 This avoids destruction of LR during loops (particularly Vertical-First
2216 ones).
2217
2218 **SVLR and SVSTATE**
2219
2220 For precisely the reasons why `LK=1` was added originally to the Power
2221 ISA, with SVSTATE being a peer of the Program Counter it becomes necessary
2222 to also add an SVLR (SVSTATE Link Register) and corresponding control bits
2223 `SL` and `SLu`.
2224
2225 ### CTR-test
2226
2227 Where a standard Scalar v3.0B branch unconditionally decrements CTR when
2228 `BO[2]` is clear, CTR-test Mode introduces more flexibility which allows
2229 CTR to be used for many more types of Vector loops constructs.
2230
2231 CTR-test mode and CTi interaction is as follows: note that `BO[2]`
2232 is still required to be clear for CTR decrements to be considered,
2233 exactly as is the case in Scalar Power ISA v3.0B
2234
2235 * **CTR-test=0, CTi=0**: CTR decrements on a per-element basis
2236 if `BO[2]` is zero. Masked-out elements when `sz=0` are
2237 skipped (i.e. CTR is *not* decremented when the predicate
2238 bit is zero and `sz=0`).
2239 * **CTR-test=0, CTi=1**: CTR decrements on a per-element basis
2240 if `BO[2]` is zero and a masked-out element is skipped
2241 (`sz=0` and predicate bit is zero). This one special case is the
2242 **opposite** of other combinations, as well as being
2243 completely different from normal SVP64 `sz=0` behaviour)
2244 * **CTR-test=1, CTi=0**: CTR decrements on a per-element basis
2245 if `BO[2]` is zero and the Condition Test succeeds.
2246 Masked-out elements when `sz=0` are skipped (including
2247 not decrementing CTR)
2248 * **CTR-test=1, CTi=1**: CTR decrements on a per-element basis
2249 if `BO[2]` is zero and the Condition Test *fails*.
2250 Masked-out elements when `sz=0` are skipped (including
2251 not decrementing CTR)
2252
2253 `CTR-test=0, CTi=1, sz=0` requires special emphasis because it is the
2254 only time in the entirety of SVP64 that has side-effects when
2255 a predicate mask bit is clear. **All** other SVP64 operations
2256 entirely skip an element when sz=0 and a predicate mask bit is zero.
2257 It is also critical to emphasise that in this unusual mode,
2258 no other side-effects occur: **only** CTR is decremented, i.e. the
2259 rest of the Branch operation is skipped.
2260
2261 ### VLSET Mode
2262
2263 VLSET Mode truncates the Vector Length so that subsequent instructions
2264 operate on a reduced Vector Length. This is similar to Data-dependent
2265 Fail-First and LD/ST Fail-First, where for VLSET the truncation occurs
2266 at the Branch decision-point.
2267
2268 Interestingly, due to the side-effects of `VLSET` mode it is actually
2269 useful to use Branch Conditional even to perform no actual branch
2270 operation, i.e to point to the instruction after the branch. Truncation of
2271 VL would thus conditionally occur yet control flow alteration would not.
2272
2273 `VLSET` mode with Vertical-First is particularly unusual. Vertical-First
2274 is designed to be used for explicit looping, where an explicit call to
2275 `svstep` is required to move both srcstep and dststep on to the next
2276 element, until VL (or other condition) is reached. Vertical-First Looping
2277 is expected (required) to terminate if the end of the Vector, VL, is
2278 reached. If however that loop is terminated early because VL is truncated,
2279 VLSET with Vertical-First becomes meaningless. Resolving this would
2280 require two branches: one Conditional, the other branching unconditionally
2281 to create the loop, where the Conditional one jumps over it.
2282
2283 Therefore, with `VSb`, the option to decide whether truncation should
2284 occur if the branch succeeds *or* if the branch condition fails allows
2285 for the flexibility required. This allows a Vertical-First Branch to
2286 *either* be used as a branch-back (loop) *or* as part of a conditional
2287 exit or function call from *inside* a loop, and for VLSET to be integrated
2288 into both types of decision-making.
2289
2290 In the case of a Vertical-First branch-back (loop), with `VSb=0` the
2291 branch takes place if success conditions are met, but on exit from that
2292 loop (branch condition fails), VL will be truncated. This is extremely
2293 useful.
2294
2295 `VLSET` mode with Horizontal-First when `VSb=0` is still useful, because
2296 it can be used to truncate VL to the first predicated (non-masked-out)
2297 element.
2298
2299 The truncation point for VL, when VLi is clear, must not include skipped
2300 elements that preceded the current element being tested. Example:
2301 `sz=0, VLi=0, predicate mask = 0b110010` and the Condition Register
2302 failure point is at CR Field element 4.
2303
2304 * Testing at element 0 is skipped because its predicate bit is zero
2305 * Testing at element 1 passed
2306 * Testing elements 2 and 3 are skipped because their
2307 respective predicate mask bits are zero
2308 * Testing element 4 fails therefore VL is truncated to **2**
2309 not 4 due to elements 2 and 3 being skipped.
2310
2311 If `sz=1` in the above example *then* VL would have been set to 4 because
2312 in non-zeroing mode the zero'd elements are still effectively part of the
2313 Vector (with their respective elements set to `SNZ`)
2314
2315 If `VLI=1` then VL would be set to 5 regardless of sz, due to being inclusive
2316 of the element actually being tested.
2317
2318 ### VLSET and CTR-test combined
2319
2320 If both CTR-test and VLSET Modes are requested, it is important to
2321 observe the correct order. What occurs depends on whether VLi is enabled,
2322 because VLi affects the length, VL.
2323
2324 If VLi (VL truncate inclusive) is set:
2325
2326 1. compute the test including whether CTR triggers
2327 2. (optionally) decrement CTR
2328 3. (optionally) truncate VL (VSb inverts the decision)
2329 4. decide (based on step 1) whether to terminate looping
2330 (including not executing step 5)
2331 5. decide whether to branch.
2332
2333 If VLi is clear, then when a test fails that element
2334 and any following it
2335 should **not** be considered part of the Vector. Consequently:
2336
2337 1. compute the branch test including whether CTR triggers
2338 2. if the test fails against VSb, truncate VL to the *previous*
2339 element, and terminate looping. No further steps executed.
2340 3. (optionally) decrement CTR
2341 4. decide whether to branch.
2342
2343 ## Boolean Logic combinations
2344
2345 In a Scalar ISA, Branch-Conditional testing even of vector results may be
2346 performed through inversion of tests. NOR of all tests may be performed
2347 by inversion of the scalar condition and branching *out* from the scalar
2348 loop around elements, using scalar operations.
2349
2350 In a parallel (Vector) ISA it is the ISA itself which must perform
2351 the prerequisite logic manipulation. Thus for SVP64 there are an
2352 extraordinary number of nesessary combinations which provide completely
2353 different and useful behaviour. Available options to combine:
2354
2355 * `BO[0]` to make an unconditional branch would seem irrelevant if
2356 it were not for predication and for side-effects (CTR Mode
2357 for example)
2358 * Enabling CTR-test Mode and setting `BO[2]` can still result in the
2359 Branch
2360 taking place, not because the Condition Test itself failed, but
2361 because CTR reached zero **because**, as required by CTR-test mode,
2362 CTR was decremented as a **result** of Condition Tests failing.
2363 * `BO[1]` to select whether the CR bit being tested is zero or nonzero
2364 * `R30` and `~R30` and other predicate mask options including CR and
2365 inverted CR bit testing
2366 * `sz` and `SNZ` to insert either zeros or ones in place of masked-out
2367 predicate bits
2368 * `ALL` or `ANY` behaviour corresponding to `AND` of all tests and
2369 `OR` of all tests, respectively.
2370 * Predicate Mask bits, which combine in effect with the CR being
2371 tested.
2372 * Inversion of Predicate Masks (`~r3` instead of `r3`, or using
2373 `NE` rather than `EQ`) which results in an additional
2374 level of possible ANDing, ORing etc. that would otherwise
2375 need explicit instructions.
2376
2377 The most obviously useful combinations here are to set `BO[1]` to zero
2378 in order to turn `ALL` into Great-Big-NAND and `ANY` into Great-Big-NOR.
2379 Other Mode bits which perform behavioural inversion then have to work
2380 round the fact that the Condition Testing is NOR or NAND. The alternative
2381 to not having additional behavioural inversion (`SNZ`, `VSb`, `CTi`)
2382 would be to have a second (unconditional) branch directly after the first,
2383 which the first branch jumps over. This contrivance is avoided by the
2384 behavioural inversion bits.
2385
2386 ## Pseudocode and examples
2387
2388 Please see the SVP64 appendix regarding CR bit ordering and for
2389 the definition of `CR{n}`
2390
2391 For comparative purposes this is a copy of the v3.0B `bc` pseudocode
2392
2393 ```
2394 if (mode_is_64bit) then M <- 0
2395 else M <- 32
2396 if ¬BO[2] then CTR <- CTR - 1
2397 ctr_ok <- BO[2] | ((CTR[M:63] != 0) ^ BO[3])
2398 cond_ok <- BO[0] | ¬(CR[BI+32] ^ BO[1])
2399 if ctr_ok & cond_ok then
2400 if AA then NIA <-iea EXTS(BD || 0b00)
2401 else NIA <-iea CIA + EXTS(BD || 0b00)
2402 if LK then LR <-iea CIA + 4
2403 ```
2404
2405 Simplified pseudocode including LRu and CTR skipping, which illustrates
2406 clearly that SVP64 Scalar Branches (VL=1) are **not** identical to
2407 v3.0B Scalar Branches. The key areas where differences occur are the
2408 inclusion of predication (which can still be used when VL=1), in when and
2409 why CTR is decremented (CTRtest Mode) and whether LR is updated (which
2410 is unconditional in v3.0B when LK=1, and conditional in SVP64 when LRu=1).
2411
2412 Inline comments highlight the fact that the Scalar Branch behaviour and
2413 pseudocode is still clearly visible and embedded within the Vectorised
2414 variant:
2415
2416 ```
2417 if (mode_is_64bit) then M <- 0
2418 else M <- 32
2419 # the bit of CR to test, if the predicate bit is zero,
2420 # is overridden
2421 testbit = CR[BI+32]
2422 if ¬predicate_bit then testbit = SVRMmode.SNZ
2423 # otherwise apart from the override ctr_ok and cond_ok
2424 # are exactly the same
2425 ctr_ok <- BO[2] | ((CTR[M:63] != 0) ^ BO[3])
2426 cond_ok <- BO[0] | ¬(testbit ^ BO[1])
2427 if ¬predicate_bit & ¬SVRMmode.sz then
2428 # this is entirely new: CTR-test mode still decrements CTR
2429 # even when predicate-bits are zero
2430 if ¬BO[2] & CTRtest & ¬CTi then
2431 CTR = CTR - 1
2432 # instruction finishes here
2433 else
2434 # usual BO[2] CTR-mode now under CTR-test mode as well
2435 if ¬BO[2] & ¬(CTRtest & (cond_ok ^ CTi)) then CTR <- CTR - 1
2436 # new VLset mode, conditional test truncates VL
2437 if VLSET and VSb = (cond_ok & ctr_ok) then
2438 if SVRMmode.VLI then SVSTATE.VL = srcstep+1
2439 else SVSTATE.VL = srcstep
2440 # usual LR is now conditional, but also joined by SVLR
2441 lr_ok <- LK
2442 svlr_ok <- SVRMmode.SL
2443 if ctr_ok & cond_ok then
2444 if AA then NIA <-iea EXTS(BD || 0b00)
2445 else NIA <-iea CIA + EXTS(BD || 0b00)
2446 if SVRMmode.LRu then lr_ok <- ¬lr_ok
2447 if SVRMmode.SLu then svlr_ok <- ¬svlr_ok
2448 if lr_ok then LR <-iea CIA + 4
2449 if svlr_ok then SVLR <- SVSTATE
2450 ```
2451
2452 Below is the pseudocode for SVP64 Branches, which is a little less
2453 obvious but identical to the above. The lack of obviousness is down to
2454 the early-exit opportunities.
2455
2456 Effective pseudocode for Horizontal-First Mode:
2457
2458 ```
2459 if (mode_is_64bit) then M <- 0
2460 else M <- 32
2461 cond_ok = not SVRMmode.ALL
2462 for srcstep in range(VL):
2463 # select predicate bit or zero/one
2464 if predicate[srcstep]:
2465 # get SVP64 extended CR field 0..127
2466 SVCRf = SVP64EXTRA(BI>>2)
2467 CRbits = CR{SVCRf}
2468 testbit = CRbits[BI & 0b11]
2469 # testbit = CR[BI+32+srcstep*4]
2470 else if not SVRMmode.sz:
2471 # inverted CTR test skip mode
2472 if ¬BO[2] & CTRtest & ¬CTI then
2473 CTR = CTR - 1
2474 continue # skip to next element
2475 else
2476 testbit = SVRMmode.SNZ
2477 # actual element test here
2478 ctr_ok <- BO[2] | ((CTR[M:63] != 0) ^ BO[3])
2479 el_cond_ok <- BO[0] | ¬(testbit ^ BO[1])
2480 # check if CTR dec should occur
2481 ctrdec = ¬BO[2]
2482 if CTRtest & (el_cond_ok ^ CTi) then
2483 ctrdec = 0b0
2484 if ctrdec then CTR <- CTR - 1
2485 # merge in the test
2486 if SVRMmode.ALL:
2487 cond_ok &= (el_cond_ok & ctr_ok)
2488 else
2489 cond_ok |= (el_cond_ok & ctr_ok)
2490 # test for VL to be set (and exit)
2491 if VLSET and VSb = (el_cond_ok & ctr_ok) then
2492 if SVRMmode.VLI then SVSTATE.VL = srcstep+1
2493 else SVSTATE.VL = srcstep
2494 break
2495 # early exit?
2496 if SVRMmode.ALL != (el_cond_ok & ctr_ok):
2497 break
2498 # SVP64 rules about Scalar registers still apply!
2499 if SVCRf.scalar:
2500 break
2501 # loop finally done, now test if branch (and update LR)
2502 lr_ok <- LK
2503 svlr_ok <- SVRMmode.SL
2504 if cond_ok then
2505 if AA then NIA <-iea EXTS(BD || 0b00)
2506 else NIA <-iea CIA + EXTS(BD || 0b00)
2507 if SVRMmode.LRu then lr_ok <- ¬lr_ok
2508 if SVRMmode.SLu then svlr_ok <- ¬svlr_ok
2509 if lr_ok then LR <-iea CIA + 4
2510 if svlr_ok then SVLR <- SVSTATE
2511 ```
2512
2513 Pseudocode for Vertical-First Mode:
2514
2515 ```
2516 # get SVP64 extended CR field 0..127
2517 SVCRf = SVP64EXTRA(BI>>2)
2518 CRbits = CR{SVCRf}
2519 # select predicate bit or zero/one
2520 if predicate[srcstep]:
2521 if BRc = 1 then # CR0 vectorised
2522 CR{SVCRf+srcstep} = CRbits
2523 testbit = CRbits[BI & 0b11]
2524 else if not SVRMmode.sz:
2525 # inverted CTR test skip mode
2526 if ¬BO[2] & CTRtest & ¬CTI then
2527 CTR = CTR - 1
2528 SVSTATE.srcstep = new_srcstep
2529 exit # no branch testing
2530 else
2531 testbit = SVRMmode.SNZ
2532 # actual element test here
2533 cond_ok <- BO[0] | ¬(testbit ^ BO[1])
2534 # test for VL to be set (and exit)
2535 if VLSET and cond_ok = VSb then
2536 if SVRMmode.VLI
2537 SVSTATE.VL = new_srcstep+1
2538 else
2539 SVSTATE.VL = new_srcstep
2540 ```
2541
2542 ### Example Shader code
2543
2544 ```
2545 // assume f() g() or h() modify a and/or b
2546 while(a > 2) {
2547 if(b < 5)
2548 f();
2549 else
2550 g();
2551 h();
2552 }
2553 ```
2554
2555 which compiles to something like:
2556
2557 ```
2558 vec<i32> a, b;
2559 // ...
2560 pred loop_pred = a > 2;
2561 // loop continues while any of a elements greater than 2
2562 while(loop_pred.any()) {
2563 // vector of predicate bits
2564 pred if_pred = loop_pred & (b < 5);
2565 // only call f() if at least 1 bit set
2566 if(if_pred.any()) {
2567 f(if_pred);
2568 }
2569 label1:
2570 // loop mask ANDs with inverted if-test
2571 pred else_pred = loop_pred & ~if_pred;
2572 // only call g() if at least 1 bit set
2573 if(else_pred.any()) {
2574 g(else_pred);
2575 }
2576 h(loop_pred);
2577 }
2578 ```
2579
2580 which will end up as:
2581
2582 ```
2583 # start from while loop test point
2584 b looptest
2585 while_loop:
2586 sv.cmpi CR80.v, b.v, 5 # vector compare b into CR64 Vector
2587 sv.bc/m=r30/~ALL/sz CR80.v.LT skip_f # skip when none
2588 # only calculate loop_pred & pred_b because needed in f()
2589 sv.crand CR80.v.SO, CR60.v.GT, CR80.V.LT # if = loop & pred_b
2590 f(CR80.v.SO)
2591 skip_f:
2592 # illustrate inversion of pred_b. invert r30, test ALL
2593 # rather than SOME, but masked-out zero test would FAIL,
2594 # therefore masked-out instead is tested against 1 not 0
2595 sv.bc/m=~r30/ALL/SNZ CR80.v.LT skip_g
2596 # else = loop & ~pred_b, need this because used in g()
2597 sv.crternari(A&~B) CR80.v.SO, CR60.v.GT, CR80.V.LT
2598 g(CR80.v.SO)
2599 skip_g:
2600 # conditionally call h(r30) if any loop pred set
2601 sv.bclr/m=r30/~ALL/sz BO[1]=1 h()
2602 looptest:
2603 sv.cmpi CR60.v a.v, 2 # vector compare a into CR60 vector
2604 sv.crweird r30, CR60.GT # transfer GT vector to r30
2605 sv.bc/m=r30/~ALL/sz BO[1]=1 while_loop
2606 end:
2607 ```
2608
2609 ### LRu example
2610
2611 show why LRu would be useful in a loop. Imagine the following
2612 c code:
2613
2614 ```
2615 for (int i = 0; i < 8; i++) {
2616 if (x < y) break;
2617 }
2618 ```
2619
2620 Under these circumstances exiting from the loop is not only based on
2621 CTR it has become conditional on a CR result. Thus it is desirable that
2622 NIA *and* LR only be modified if the conditions are met
2623
2624 v3.0 pseudocode for `bclrl`:
2625
2626 ```
2627 if (mode_is_64bit) then M <- 0
2628 else M <- 32
2629 if ¬BO[2] then CTR <- CTR - 1
2630 ctr_ok <- BO[2] | ((CTR[M:63] != 0) ^ BO[3])
2631 cond_ok <- BO[0] | ¬(CR[BI+32] ^ BO[1])
2632 if ctr_ok & cond_ok then NIA <-iea LR[0:61] || 0b00
2633 if LK then LR <-iea CIA + 4
2634 ```
2635
2636 the latter part for SVP64 `bclrl` becomes:
2637
2638 ```
2639 for i in 0 to VL-1:
2640 ...
2641 ...
2642 cond_ok <- BO[0] | ¬(CR[BI+32] ^ BO[1])
2643 lr_ok <- LK
2644 if ctr_ok & cond_ok then
2645 NIA <-iea LR[0:61] || 0b00
2646 if SVRMmode.LRu then lr_ok <- ¬lr_ok
2647 if lr_ok then LR <-iea CIA + 4
2648 # if NIA modified exit loop
2649 ```
2650
2651 The reason why should be clear from this being a Vector loop:
2652 unconditional destruction of LR when LK=1 makes `sv.bclrl` ineffective,
2653 because the intention going into the loop is that the branch should be to
2654 the copy of LR set at the *start* of the loop, not half way through it.
2655 However if the change to LR only occurs if the branch is taken then it
2656 becomes a useful instruction.
2657
2658 The following pseudocode should **not** be implemented because it
2659 violates the fundamental principle of SVP64 which is that SVP64 looping
2660 is a thin wrapper around Scalar Instructions. The pseducode below is
2661 more an actual Vector ISA Branch and as such is not at all appropriate:
2662
2663 ```
2664 for i in 0 to VL-1:
2665 ...
2666 ...
2667 cond_ok <- BO[0] | ¬(CR[BI+32] ^ BO[1])
2668 if ctr_ok & cond_ok then NIA <-iea LR[0:61] || 0b00
2669 # only at the end of looping is LK checked.
2670 # this completely violates the design principle of SVP64
2671 # and would actually need to be a separate (scalar)
2672 # instruction "set LR to CIA+4 but retrospectively"
2673 # which is clearly impossible
2674 if LK then LR <-iea CIA + 4
2675 ```
2676
2677 [[!tag standards]]