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1 # External RFC ls012: Discuss priorities of Libre-SOC Scalar(Vector) ops
2
3 * <https://git.openpower.foundation/isa/PowerISA/issues/121>
4 * <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1051>
5 * <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1052>
6
7 The purpose of this RFC is:
8
9 * to give a full list of the upcoming Scalar opcodes developed by Libre-SOC
10 (respecting and being cognisant that *all* of them are Vectorisable)
11 * formally agree a priority order on an itertive basis with new versions
12 of this RFC,
13 * which ones should be EXT022 Sandbox, which in EXT0xx, which in EXT2xx,
14 * and for IBM to get a clear picture of the Opcode Allocation needs.
15
16 As this is a Formal ISA RFC the evaluation shall ultimatly define
17 (in advance of the actual submission of the instructions themselves)
18 which instructions will be submitted over the next 8-18 months.
19
20 *It is expected that readers visit and interact with the Libre-SOC
21 resources in order to do due-diligence on the prioritisation
22 evaluation. Otherwise the ISA WG is overwhelmed by "drip-fed" RFCs
23 that may turn out not to be useful, against a background of having
24 no guiding overview or pre-filtering, and everybody's precious time
25 is wasted. Also note that the Libre-SOC Team, being funded by NLnet
26 under Privacy and Enhanced Trust Grants, are **prohibited** from signing
27 Commercial-Confidentiality NDAs, as doing so is a direct conflict of
28 interest with their funding body's Charitable Foundation Status and
29 remit, and therefore the **entire** set of almost 150 new SFFS instructions
30 can only go via the External RFC Process. Also be advised and aware
31 that "Libre-SOC" != "RED Semiconductor Ltd". The two are completely **separate**
32 organisations*.
33
34 Worth bearing in mind during evaluation that every "Defined Word" may
35 or may not be Vectoriseable, but that every "Defined Word" should have
36 merits on its own, not just when Vectorised. An example of a borderline
37 Vectoriseable Defined Word is `mv.swizzle` which only really becomes
38 high-priority for Audio/Video, Vector GPU and HPC Workloads, but has
39 less merit as a Scalar-only operation.
40
41 Power ISA Scalar (SFFS) has not been significantly advanced in 12
42 years: IBM's primary focus has understandably been on PackedSIMD VSX.
43 Unfortunately, with VSX being 914 instructions and 128-bit it is far too
44 much for any new team to consider (10 years development effort) and far
45 outside of Embedded or Tablet/Desktop/Laptop power budgets. Thus bringing
46 Power Scalar up-to-date to modern standards *and on its own merits*
47 is a reasonable goal, and the advantages of the reduced focus is that
48 SFFS remains RISC-paradigm, and that lessons can be learned from other
49 ISAs from the intervening years. Good examples here include `bmask`.
50
51 SVP64 Prefixing - also known by the terms "Zero-Overhead-Loop-Prefixing"
52 as well as "True-Scalable-Vector Prefixing" - also literally brings new
53 dimensions to the Power ISA. Thus when adding new Scalar "Defined Words"
54 it has to unavoidably and simultaneously be taken into consideration
55 their value when Vector-Prefixed, *as well as* SVP64Single-Prefixed.
56
57 **Target areas**
58
59 Whilst entirely general-purpose there are some categories that these
60 instructions are targetting: Bitmanipulation, Big-integer, cryptography,
61 Audio/Visual, High-Performance Compute, GPU workloads and DSP.
62
63 **Instruction count guide and approximate priority order**
64
65 * 6 - SVP64 Management [[ls008]] [[ls009]] [[ls010]]
66 * 5 - CR weirds [[sv/cr_int_predication]]
67 * 4 - INT<->FP mv [[ls006]]
68 * 19 - GPR LD/ST-PostIncrement-Update (saves hugely in hot-loops) [[ls011]]
69 * ~12 - FPR LD/ST-PostIncrement-Update (ditto) [[ls011]]
70 * 2 - Float-Load-Immediate (always saves one LD L1/2/3 D-Cache op) [[ls002]]
71 * 5 - Big-Integer Chained 3-in 2-out (64-bit Carry) [[sv/biginteger]]
72 * 6 - Bitmanip LUT2/3 operations. high cost high reward [[sv/bitmanip]]
73 * 1 - fclass (Scalar variant of xvtstdcsp) [[sv/fclass]]
74 * 5 - Audio-Video [[sv/av_opcodes]]
75 * 2 - Shift-and-Add (mitigates LD-ST-Shift; Cryptography e.g. twofish) [[ls004]]
76 * 2 - BMI group [[sv/vector_ops]]
77 * 2 - GPU swizzle [[sv/mv.swizzle]]
78 * 9 - FP DCT/FFT Butterfly (2/3-in 2-out)
79 * ~9 Integer DCT/FFT Butterfly <https://bugs.libre-soc.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1028>
80 * 18 - Trigonometric (1-arg) [[openpower/transcendentals]]
81 * 15 - Transcendentals (1-arg) [[openpower/transcendentals]]
82 * 25 - Transcendentals (2-arg) [[openpower/transcendentals]]
83
84 Summary tables are created below by different sort categories. Additional
85 columns as necessary can be requested to be added as part of update revisions
86 to this RFC.
87
88 # Target Area summaries
89
90 ## SVP64 Management instructions
91
92 These without question have to go in EXT0xx. Future extended variants,
93 bringing even more powerful capabilities, can be followed up later with
94 EXT1xx prefixed variants, which is not possible if placed in EXT2xx.
95 *Only `svstep` is actually Vectoriseable*, all other Management
96 instructions are UnVectoriseane. PO1-Prefixed examples include adding
97 psvshape in order to support both Inner and Outer Product Matrix
98 Schedules, by providing the option to directly reverse the order of the
99 triple loops. Outer is used for standard Matrix Multiply, but Inner is
100 required for Warshall Transitive Closure (on top of a cumulatively-applied
101 max instruction).
102
103 The Management Instructions themselves are all Scalar Operations, so
104 PO1-Prefixing is perfecly reasonable. SVP64 Management instructions of
105 which there are only 6 are all 5 or 6 bit XO, meaning that the opcode
106 space they take up in EXT0xx is not alarmingly high for their intrinsic
107 strategic value.
108
109 ## Transcendentals
110
111 Found at [[openpower/transcendentals]] these subdivide into high
112 priority for accelerating general-purpose and High-Performance Compute,
113 specialist 3D GPU operations suited to 3D visualisation, and low-priority
114 less common instructions where IEEE754 full bit-accuracy is paramount.
115 In 3D GPU scenarios for example even 12-bit accuracy can be overkill,
116 but for HPC Scientific scenarios 12-bit would be disastrous.
117
118 There are a **lot** of operations here, and they also bring Power
119 ISA up-to-date to IEEE754-2019. Fortunately the number of critical
120 instructions is quite low, but the caveat is that if those operations
121 are utilised to synthesise other IEEE754 operations (divide by `pi` for
122 example) full bitlevel accuracy (a hard requirement for IEEE754) is lost.
123
124 Also worth noting that the Khronos Group defines minimum acceptable
125 bit-accuracy levels for 3D Graphics: these are **nowhere near** the full
126 accuracy demanded by IEEE754, the reason for the Khronos definitions is
127 a massive reduction often four-fold in power consumption and gate count
128 when 3D Graphics simply has no need for full accuracy.
129
130 *For 3D GPU markets this definitely needs addressing*
131
132 ## Audio/Video
133
134 Found at [[sv/av_opcodes]] these do not require Saturated variants
135 because Saturation is added via [[sv/svp64]] (Vector Prefixing) and via
136 [[sv/svp64_single]] Scalar Prefixing. This is important to note for
137 Opcode Allocation because placing these operations in the UnVectoriseble
138 areas would irrediemably damage their value. Unlike PackedSIMD ISAs
139 the actual number of AV Opcodes is remarkably small once the usual
140 cascading-option-multipliers (SIMD width, bitwidth, saturation,
141 HI/LO) are abstracted out to RISC-paradigm Prefixing, leaving just
142 absolute-diff-accumulate, min-max, average-add etc. as "basic primitives".
143
144 ## Twin-Butterfly FFT/DCT/DFT for DSP/HPC/AI/AV
145
146 The number of uses in Computer Science for DCT, NTT, FFT and DFT,
147 is astonishing. The wikipedia page lists over a hundred separate and
148 distinct areas: Audio, Video, Radar, Baseband processing, AI, Solomon-Reed
149 Error Correction, the list goes on and on. ARM has special dedicated
150 Integer Twin-butterfly instructions. TI's MSP Series DSPs have had FFT
151 Inner loop support for over 30 years. Qualcomm's Hexagon VLIW Baseband
152 DSP can do full FFT triple loops in one VLIW group.
153
154 It should be pretty clear this is high priority.
155
156 With SVP64 [[sv/remap]] providing the Loop Schedules it falls to
157 the Scalar side of the ISA to add the prerequisite "Twin Butterfly"
158 operations, typically performing for example one multiply but in-place
159 subtracting that product from one operand and adding it to the other.
160 The *in-place* aspect is strategically extremely important for significant
161 reductions in Vectorised register usage, particularly for DCT.
162
163 ## CR Weird group
164
165 Outlined in [[sv/cr_int_predication]] these instructions massively save
166 on CR-Field instruction count. Multi-bit to single-bit and vice-versa
167 normally requiring several CR-ops (crand, crxor) are done in one single
168 instruction. The reason for their addition is down to SVP64 overloading
169 CR Fields as Vector Predicate Masks. Reducing instruction count in
170 hot-loops is considered high priority.
171
172 An additional need is to do popcount on CR Field bit vectors but adding
173 such instructions to the *Condition Register* side was deemed to be far
174 too much. Therefore, priority was giiven instead to transferring several
175 CR Field bits into GPRs, whereupon the full set of tandard Scalar GPR
176 Logical Operations may be used. This strategy has the side-effect of
177 keeping the CRweird group down to only five instructions.
178
179 ## Big-integer Math
180
181 [[sv/biginteger]] has always been a high priority area for commercial
182 applications, privacy, Banking, as well as HPC Numerical Accuracy:
183 libgmp as well as cryptographic uses in Asymmetric Ciphers. poly1305
184 and ec25519 are finding their way into everyday use via OpenSSL.
185
186 A very early variant of the Power ISA had a 32-bit Carry-in Carry-out
187 SPR. Its removal from subsequent revisions is regrettable. An alternative
188 concept is to add six explicit 3-in 2-out operations that, on close
189 inspection, always turn out to be supersets of *existing Scalar
190 operations* that discard upper or lower DWords, or parts thereof.
191
192 *Thus it is critical to note that not one single one of these operations
193 expands the bitwidth of any existing Scalar pipelines*.
194
195 The `dsld` instruction for example merely places additional LSBs into the
196 64-bit shift (64-bit carry-in), and then places the (normally discarded)
197 MSBs into the second output register (64-bit carry-out). It does **not**
198 require a 128-bit shifter to replace the existing Scalar Power ISA
199 64-bit shifters.
200
201 The reduction in instruction count these operations bring, in critical
202 hotloops, is remarkably high, to the extent where a Scalar-to-Vector
203 operation of *arbitrary length* becomes just the one Vector-Prefixed
204 instruction.
205
206 Whilst these are 5-6 bit XO their utility is considered high strategic
207 value and as such are strongly advocated to be in EXT04. The alternative
208 is to bring back a 64-bit Carry SPR but how it is retrospectively
209 applicable to pre-existing Scalar Power ISA mutiply, divide, and shift
210 operations at this late stage of maturity of the Power ISA is an entire
211 area of research on its own deemed unlikely to be achievable.
212
213 ## fclass and GPR-FPR moves
214
215 [[sv/fclass]] - just one instruction. With SFFS being locked down to
216 exclude VSX, and there being no desire within the nascent OpenPOWER
217 ecosystem outside of IBM to implement the VSX PackedSIMD paradigm, it
218 becomes necessary to upgrade SFFS such that it is stand-alone capable. One
219 omission based on the assumption that VSX would always be present is an
220 equivalent to `xvtstdcsp`.
221
222 Similar arguments apply to the GPR-INT move operations, proposed in
223 [[ls006]], with the opportunity taken to add rounding modes present
224 in other ISAs that Power ISA VSX PackedSIMD does not have. Javascript
225 rounding, one of the worst offenders of Computer Science, requires a
226 phenomental 35 instructions with *six branches* to emulate in Power
227 ISA! For desktop as well as Server HTML/JS back-end execution of
228 javascript this becomes an obvious priority, recognised already by ARM
229 as just one example.
230
231 ## Bitmanip LUT2/3
232
233 These LUT2/3 operations are high cost high reward. Outlined in
234 [[sv/bitmanip]], the simplest ones already exist in PackedSIMD VSX:
235 `xxeval`. The same reasoning applies as to fclass: SFFS needs to be
236 stand-alone on its own merits and not "punished" should an implementor
237 choose not to implement any aspect of PackedSIMD VSX.
238
239 With Predication being such a high priority in GPUs and HPC, CR Field
240 variants of Ternary and Binary LUT instructions were considered high
241 priority, and again just like in the CRweird group the opportunity was
242 taken to work on *all* bits of a CR Field rather than just one bit as
243 is done with the existing CR operations crand, cror etc.
244
245 The other high strategic value instruction is `grevlut` (and `grevluti`
246 which can generate a remarkably large number of regular-patterned magic
247 constants). The grevlut set require of the order of 20,000 gates but
248 provide an astonishing plethora of innovative bit-permuting instructions
249 never seen in any other ISA.
250
251 The downside of all of these instructions is the extremely low XO bit
252 requirements: 2-3 bit XO due to the large immediates *and* the number of
253 operands required. The LUT3 instructions are already compacted down to
254 "Overwrite" variants. (By contrast the Float-Load-Immediate instructions
255 are a much larger XO because despite having 16-bit immediate only one
256 Register Operand is needed).
257
258 Realistically these high-value instructions should be proposed in EXT2xx
259 where their XO cost does not overwhelm EXT0xx.
260
261
262 ## (f)mv.swizzle
263
264 [[sv/mv.swizzle]] is dicey. It is a 2-in 2-out operation whose value
265 as a Scalar instruction is limited *except* if combined with `cmpi` and
266 SVP64Single Predication, whereupon the end result is the RISC-synthesis
267 of Compare-and-Swap, in two instructions.
268
269 Where this instruction comes into its full value is when Vectorised.
270 3D GPU and HPC numerical workloads astonishingly contain between 10 to 15%
271 swizzle operations: access to YYZ, XY, of an XYZW Quaternion, performing
272 balancing of ARGB pixel data. The usage is so high that 3D GPU ISAs make
273 Swizzle a first-class priority in their VLIW words. Even 64-bit Embedded
274 GPU ISAs have a staggering 24-bits dedicated to 2-operand Swizzle.
275
276 So as not to radicalise the Power ISA the Libre-SOC team decided to
277 introduce mv Swizzle operations, which can always be Macro-op fused
278 in exactly the same way that ARM SVE predicated-move extends 3-operand
279 "overwrite" opcodes to full independent 3-in 1-out.
280
281 # BMI (bitmanipulation) group.
282
283 Whilst the [[sv/vector_ops]] instructions are only two in number, in
284 reality the `bmask` instruction has a Mode field allowing it to cover
285 **24** instructions, more than have been added to any other CPUs by
286 ARM, Intel or AMD. Analyis of the BMI sets of these CPUs shows simple
287 patterns that can greatly simplify both Decode and implementation. These
288 are sufficiently commonly used, saving instruction count regularly,
289 that they justify going into EXT0xx.
290
291 The other instruction is `cprop` - Carry-Propagation - which takes
292 the P and Q from carry-propagation algorithms and generates carry
293 look-ahead. Greatly increases the efficiency of arbitrary-precision
294 integer arithmetic by combining what would otherwise be half a dozen
295 instructions into one. However it is still not a huge priority unlike
296 `bmask` so is probably best placed in EXT2xx.
297
298 ## Float-Load-Immediate
299
300 Very easily justified. As explained in [[ls002]] these always saves one
301 LD L1/2/3 D-Cache memory-lookup operation, by virtue of the Immediate
302 FP value being in the I-Cache side. It is such a high priority that
303 these instuctions are easily justifiable adding into EXT0xx, despite
304 requiring a 16-bit immediate. By designing the second-half instruction
305 as a Read-Modify-Write it saves on XO bitlength (only 5 bits), and can be
306 macro-op fused with its first-half to store a full IEEE754 FP32 immediate
307 into a register.
308
309 There is little point in putting these instructions into EXT2xx. Their
310 very benefit and inherent value *is* as 32-bit instructions, not 64-bit
311 ones. Likewise there is less value in taking up EXT1xx Enoding space
312 because EXT1xx only brings an additional 16 bits (approx) to the table,
313 and that is provided already by the second-half instuction.
314
315 Thus they qualify as both high priority and also EXT0xx candidates.
316
317 ## FPR/GPR LD/ST-PostIncrement-Update
318
319 These instruction, outlined in [[ls011]], save hugely in hot-loops.
320 Early ISAs such as PDP-8, PDP-11, which inspired the iconic Motorola
321 68000, 88100, Mitch Alsup's MyISA 66000, and can even be traced back to
322 the iconic ultra-RISC CDC 6600, all had both pre- and post- increment
323 Addressing Modes.
324
325 The reason is very simple: it is a direct recognition of the practice
326 in c to frequently utilise both `*p++` and `*++p` which itself stems
327 from common need in Computer Science algorithms.
328
329 The problem for the Power ISA is - was - that the opcode space needed
330 to support both was far too great, and the decision was made to go with
331 pre-increment, on the basis that outside the loop a "pre-subtraction"
332 may be performed.
333
334 Whilst this is a "solution" it is less than ideal, and the opportunity
335 exists now with the EXT2xx Primary Opcodes to correct this and bring
336 Power ISA up a level.
337
338 ## Shift-and-add
339
340 Shift-and-Add are proposed in [[ls004]]. They mitigate the need to add
341 LD-ST-Shift instructions which are a high-priority aspect of both x86
342 and ARM. LD-ST-Shift is normally just the one instruction: Shift-and-add
343 brings that down to two, where Power ISA presently requires three.
344 Cryptography e.g. twofish also makes use of Integer double-and-add,
345 so the value of these instructions is not limited to Effective Address
346 computation. They will also have value in Audio DSP.
347
348 Being a 10-bit XO it would be somewhat punitive to place these in EXT2xx
349 when their whole purpose and value is to reduce binary size in Address
350 offset computation, thus they are best placed in EXT0xx.
351
352
353 # Tables
354
355 The original tables are available publicly as as CSV file at
356 <https://git.libre-soc.org/?p=libreriscv.git;a=blob;f=openpower/sv/rfc/ls012/optable.csv;hb=HEAD>.
357 A python program auto-generates the tables in the following sections
358 by sorting into different useful priorities.
359
360 The key to headings and sections are as follows:
361
362 * **Area** - Target Area as described in above sections
363 * **XO Cost** - the number of bits required in the XO Field. whilst not
364 the full picture it is a good indicator as to how costly in terms
365 of Opcode Allocation a given instruction will be. Lower number is
366 a higher cost for the Power ISA's precious remaining Opcode space
367 * **rfc** the Libre-SOC External RFC resource,
368 <https://libre-soc.org/openpower/sv/rfc/> where advance notice of
369 upcoming RFCs in development may be found.
370 *Reading advance Draft RFCs and providing feedback strongly advised*,
371 it saves time and effort for the OPF ISA Workgroup.
372 * **SVP64** - Vectoriseable (SVP64-Prefixable) - also implies that
373 SVP64Single is also permitted (required).
374 * **page** - Libre-SOC wiki page at which further information can
375 be found. Again: **advance reading strongly advised due to the
376 sheer volume of information**.
377 * **PO1** - the instruction is capable of being PO1-Prefixed
378 (given an EXT1xx Opcode Allocation). Bear in mind that this option
379 is **mutually exclusively incompatible** with Vectorisation.
380 * **group** - the Primary Opcode Group recommended for this instruction.
381 Options are EXT0xx (EXT000-EXT063), EXT1xx and EXT2xx. A third area,
382 EXT3xx, was available in an early Draft RFC but has been made "RESERVED"
383 instead. see [[sv/po9_encoding]].
384
385 [[!inline pages="openpower/sv/rfc/ls012/areas.mdwn" raw=yes ]]
386 [[!inline pages="openpower/sv/rfc/ls012/xo_cost.mdwn" raw=yes ]]
387
388 [[!tag opf_rfc]]