clarify
[libreriscv.git] / simple_v_extension.mdwn
1 # Variable-width Variable-packed SIMD / Simple-V / Parallelism Extension Proposal
2
3 Key insight: Simple-V is intended as an abstraction layer to provide
4 a consistent "API" to parallelisation of existing *and future* operations.
5 *Actual* internal hardware-level parallelism is *not* required, such
6 that Simple-V may be viewed as providing a "compact" or "consolidated"
7 means of issuing multiple near-identical arithmetic instructions to an
8 instruction queue (FIFO), pending execution.
9
10 *Actual* parallelism, if added independently of Simple-V in the form
11 of Out-of-order restructuring (including parallel ALU lanes) or VLIW
12 implementations, or SIMD, or anything else, would then benefit *if*
13 Simple-V was added on top.
14
15 [[!toc ]]
16
17 # Introduction
18
19 This proposal exists so as to be able to satisfy several disparate
20 requirements: power-conscious, area-conscious, and performance-conscious
21 designs all pull an ISA and its implementation in different conflicting
22 directions, as do the specific intended uses for any given implementation.
23
24 The existing P (SIMD) proposal and the V (Vector) proposals,
25 whilst each extremely powerful in their own right and clearly desirable,
26 are also:
27
28 * Clearly independent in their origins (Cray and AndesStar v3 respectively)
29 so need work to adapt to the RISC-V ethos and paradigm
30 * Are sufficiently large so as to make adoption (and exploration for
31 analysis and review purposes) prohibitively expensive
32 * Both contain partial duplication of pre-existing RISC-V instructions
33 (an undesirable characteristic)
34 * Both have independent, incompatible and disparate methods for introducing
35 parallelism at the instruction level
36 * Both require that their respective parallelism paradigm be implemented
37 along-side and integral to their respective functionality *or not at all*.
38 * Both independently have methods for introducing parallelism that
39 could, if separated, benefit
40 *other areas of RISC-V not just DSP or Floating-point respectively*.
41
42 There are also key differences between Vectorisation and SIMD (full
43 details outlined in the Appendix), the key points being:
44
45 * SIMD has an extremely seductively compelling ease of implementation argument:
46 each operation is passed to the ALU, which is where the parallelism
47 lies. There is *negligeable* (if any) impact on the rest of the core
48 (with life instead being made hell for compiler writers and applications
49 writers due to extreme ISA proliferation).
50 * By contrast, Vectorisation has quite some complexity (for considerable
51 flexibility, reduction in opcode proliferation and much more).
52 * Vectorisation typically includes much more comprehensive memory load
53 and store schemes (unit stride, constant-stride and indexed), which
54 in turn have ramifications: virtual memory misses (TLB cache misses)
55 and even multiple page-faults... all caused by a *single instruction*,
56 yet with a clear benefit that the regularisation of LOAD/STOREs can
57 be optimised for minimal impact on caches and maximised throughput.
58 * By contrast, SIMD can use "standard" memory load/stores (32-bit aligned
59 to pages), and these load/stores have absolutely nothing to do with the
60 SIMD / ALU engine, no matter how wide the operand. Simplicity but with
61 more impact on instruction and data caches.
62
63 Overall it makes a huge amount of sense to have a means and method
64 of introducing instruction parallelism in a flexible way that provides
65 implementors with the option to choose exactly where they wish to offer
66 performance improvements and where they wish to optimise for power
67 and/or area (and if that can be offered even on a per-operation basis that
68 would provide even more flexibility).
69
70 Additionally it makes sense to *split out* the parallelism inherent within
71 each of P and V, and to see if each of P and V then, in *combination* with
72 a "best-of-both" parallelism extension, could be added on *on top* of
73 this proposal, to topologically provide the exact same functionality of
74 each of P and V. Each of P and V then can focus on providing the best
75 operations possible for their respective target areas, without being
76 hugely concerned about the actual parallelism.
77
78 Furthermore, an additional goal of this proposal is to reduce the number
79 of opcodes utilised by each of P and V as they currently stand, leveraging
80 existing RISC-V opcodes where possible, and also potentially allowing
81 P and V to make use of Compressed Instructions as a result.
82
83 # Analysis and discussion of Vector vs SIMD
84
85 There are six combined areas between the two proposals that help with
86 parallelism (increased performance, reduced power / area) without
87 over-burdening the ISA with a huge proliferation of
88 instructions:
89
90 * Fixed vs variable parallelism (fixed or variable "M" in SIMD)
91 * Implicit vs fixed instruction bit-width (integral to instruction or not)
92 * Implicit vs explicit type-conversion (compounded on bit-width)
93 * Implicit vs explicit inner loops.
94 * Single-instruction LOAD/STORE.
95 * Masks / tagging (selecting/preventing certain indexed elements from execution)
96
97 The pros and cons of each are discussed and analysed below.
98
99 ## Fixed vs variable parallelism length
100
101 In David Patterson and Andrew Waterman's analysis of SIMD and Vector
102 ISAs, the analysis comes out clearly in favour of (effectively) variable
103 length SIMD. As SIMD is a fixed width, typically 4, 8 or in extreme cases
104 16 or 32 simultaneous operations, the setup, teardown and corner-cases of SIMD
105 are extremely burdensome except for applications whose requirements
106 *specifically* match the *precise and exact* depth of the SIMD engine.
107
108 Thus, SIMD, no matter what width is chosen, is never going to be acceptable
109 for general-purpose computation, and in the context of developing a
110 general-purpose ISA, is never going to satisfy 100 percent of implementors.
111
112 To explain this further: for increased workloads over time, as the
113 performance requirements increase for new target markets, implementors
114 choose to extend the SIMD width (so as to again avoid mixing parallelism
115 into the instruction issue phases: the primary "simplicity" benefit of
116 SIMD in the first place), with the result that the entire opcode space
117 effectively doubles with each new SIMD width that's added to the ISA.
118
119 That basically leaves "variable-length vector" as the clear *general-purpose*
120 winner, at least in terms of greatly simplifying the instruction set,
121 reducing the number of instructions required for any given task, and thus
122 reducing power consumption for the same.
123
124 ## Implicit vs fixed instruction bit-width
125
126 SIMD again has a severe disadvantage here, over Vector: huge proliferation
127 of specialist instructions that target 8-bit, 16-bit, 32-bit, 64-bit, and
128 have to then have operations *for each and between each*. It gets very
129 messy, very quickly.
130
131 The V-Extension on the other hand proposes to set the bit-width of
132 future instructions on a per-register basis, such that subsequent instructions
133 involving that register are *implicitly* of that particular bit-width until
134 otherwise changed or reset.
135
136 This has some extremely useful properties, without being particularly
137 burdensome to implementations, given that instruction decode already has
138 to direct the operation to a correctly-sized width ALU engine, anyway.
139
140 Not least: in places where an ISA was previously constrained (due for
141 whatever reason, including limitations of the available operand space),
142 implicit bit-width allows the meaning of certain operations to be
143 type-overloaded *without* pollution or alteration of frozen and immutable
144 instructions, in a fully backwards-compatible fashion.
145
146 ## Implicit and explicit type-conversion
147
148 The Draft 2.3 V-extension proposal has (deprecated) polymorphism to help
149 deal with over-population of instructions, such that type-casting from
150 integer (and floating point) of various sizes is automatically inferred
151 due to "type tagging" that is set with a special instruction. A register
152 will be *specifically* marked as "16-bit Floating-Point" and, if added
153 to an operand that is specifically tagged as "32-bit Integer" an implicit
154 type-conversion will take place *without* requiring that type-conversion
155 to be explicitly done with its own separate instruction.
156
157 However, implicit type-conversion is not only quite burdensome to
158 implement (explosion of inferred type-to-type conversion) but also is
159 never really going to be complete. It gets even worse when bit-widths
160 also have to be taken into consideration. Each new type results in
161 an increased O(N^2) conversion space that, as anyone who has examined
162 python's source code (which has built-in polymorphic type-conversion),
163 knows that the task is more complex than it first seems.
164
165 Overall, type-conversion is generally best to leave to explicit
166 type-conversion instructions, or in definite specific use-cases left to
167 be part of an actual instruction (DSP or FP)
168
169 ## Zero-overhead loops vs explicit loops
170
171 The initial Draft P-SIMD Proposal by Chuanhua Chang of Andes Technology
172 contains an extremely interesting feature: zero-overhead loops. This
173 proposal would basically allow an inner loop of instructions to be
174 repeated indefinitely, a fixed number of times.
175
176 Its specific advantage over explicit loops is that the pipeline in a DSP
177 can potentially be kept completely full *even in an in-order single-issue
178 implementation*. Normally, it requires a superscalar architecture and
179 out-of-order execution capabilities to "pre-process" instructions in
180 order to keep ALU pipelines 100% occupied.
181
182 By bringing that capability in, this proposal could offer a way to increase
183 pipeline activity even in simpler implementations in the one key area
184 which really matters: the inner loop.
185
186 However when looking at much more comprehensive schemes
187 "A portable specification of zero-overhead loop control hardware
188 applied to embedded processors" (ZOLC), optimising only the single
189 inner loop seems inadequate, tending to suggest that ZOLC may be
190 better off being proposed as an entirely separate Extension.
191
192 ## Single-instruction LOAD/STORE
193
194 In traditional Vector Architectures there are instructions which
195 result in multiple register-memory transfer operations resulting
196 from a single instruction. They're complicated to implement in hardware,
197 yet the benefits are a huge consistent regularisation of memory accesses
198 that can be highly optimised with respect to both actual memory and any
199 L1, L2 or other caches. In Hwacha EECS-2015-263 it is explicitly made
200 clear the consequences of getting this architecturally wrong:
201 L2 cache-thrashing at the very least.
202
203 Complications arise when Virtual Memory is involved: TLB cache misses
204 need to be dealt with, as do page faults. Some of the tradeoffs are
205 discussed in <http://people.eecs.berkeley.edu/~krste/thesis.pdf>, Section
206 4.6, and an article by Jeff Bush when faced with some of these issues
207 is particularly enlightening
208 <https://jbush001.github.io/2015/11/03/lost-in-translation.html>
209
210 Interestingly, none of this complexity is faced in SIMD architectures...
211 but then they do not get the opportunity to optimise for highly-streamlined
212 memory accesses either.
213
214 With the "bang-per-buck" ratio being so high and the indirect improvement
215 in L1 Instruction Cache usage (reduced instruction count), as well as
216 the opportunity to optimise L1 and L2 cache usage, the case for including
217 Vector LOAD/STORE is compelling.
218
219 ## Mask and Tagging (Predication)
220
221 Tagging (aka Masks aka Predication) is a pseudo-method of implementing
222 simplistic branching in a parallel fashion, by allowing execution on
223 elements of a vector to be switched on or off depending on the results
224 of prior operations in the same array position.
225
226 The reason for considering this is simple: by *definition* it
227 is not possible to perform individual parallel branches in a SIMD
228 (Single-Instruction, **Multiple**-Data) context. Branches (modifying
229 of the Program Counter) will result in *all* parallel data having
230 a different instruction executed on it: that's just the definition of
231 SIMD, and it is simply unavoidable.
232
233 So these are the ways in which conditional execution may be implemented:
234
235 * explicit compare and branch: BNE x, y -> offs would jump offs
236 instructions if x was not equal to y
237 * explicit store of tag condition: CMP x, y -> tagbit
238 * implicit (condition-code) such as ADD results in a carry, carry bit
239 implicitly (or sometimes explicitly) goes into a "tag" (mask) register
240
241 The first of these is a "normal" branch method, which is flat-out impossible
242 to parallelise without look-ahead and effectively rewriting instructions.
243 This would defeat the purpose of RISC.
244
245 The latter two are where parallelism becomes easy to do without complexity:
246 every operation is modified to be "conditionally executed" (in an explicit
247 way directly in the instruction format *or* implicitly).
248
249 RVV (Vector-Extension) proposes to have *explicit* storing of the compare
250 in a tag/mask register, and to *explicitly* have every vector operation
251 *require* that its operation be "predicated" on the bits within an
252 explicitly-named tag/mask register.
253
254 SIMD (P-Extension) has not yet published precise documentation on what its
255 schema is to be: there is however verbal indication at the time of writing
256 that:
257
258 > The "compare" instructions in the DSP/SIMD ISA proposed by Andes will
259 > be executed using the same compare ALU logic for the base ISA with some
260 > minor modifications to handle smaller data types. The function will not
261 > be duplicated.
262
263 This is an *implicit* form of predication as the base RV ISA does not have
264 condition-codes or predication. By adding a CSR it becomes possible
265 to also tag certain registers as "predicated if referenced as a destination".
266 Example:
267
268 // in future operations from now on, if r0 is the destination use r5 as
269 // the PREDICATION register
270 SET_IMPLICIT_CSRPREDICATE r0, r5
271 // store the compares in r5 as the PREDICATION register
272 CMPEQ8 r5, r1, r2
273 // r0 is used here. ah ha! that means it's predicated using r5!
274 ADD8 r0, r1, r3
275
276 With enough registers (and in RISC-V there are enough registers) some fairly
277 complex predication can be set up and yet still execute without significant
278 stalling, even in a simple non-superscalar architecture.
279
280 (For details on how Branch Instructions would be retro-fitted to indirectly
281 predicated equivalents, see Appendix)
282
283 ## Conclusions
284
285 In the above sections the five different ways where parallel instruction
286 execution has closely and loosely inter-related implications for the ISA and
287 for implementors, were outlined. The pluses and minuses came out as
288 follows:
289
290 * Fixed vs variable parallelism: <b>variable</b>
291 * Implicit (indirect) vs fixed (integral) instruction bit-width: <b>indirect</b>
292 * Implicit vs explicit type-conversion: <b>explicit</b>
293 * Implicit vs explicit inner loops: <b>implicit but best done separately</b>
294 * Single-instruction Vector LOAD/STORE: <b>Complex but highly beneficial</b>
295 * Tag or no-tag: <b>Complex but highly beneficial</b>
296
297 In particular:
298
299 * variable-length vectors came out on top because of the high setup, teardown
300 and corner-cases associated with the fixed width of SIMD.
301 * Implicit bit-width helps to extend the ISA to escape from
302 former limitations and restrictions (in a backwards-compatible fashion),
303 whilst also leaving implementors free to simmplify implementations
304 by using actual explicit internal parallelism.
305 * Implicit (zero-overhead) loops provide a means to keep pipelines
306 potentially 100% occupied in a single-issue in-order implementation
307 i.e. *without* requiring a super-scalar or out-of-order architecture,
308 but doing a proper, full job (ZOLC) is an entirely different matter.
309
310 Constructing a SIMD/Simple-Vector proposal based around four of these six
311 requirements would therefore seem to be a logical thing to do.
312
313 # Note on implementation of parallelism
314
315 One extremely important aspect of this proposal is to respect and support
316 implementors desire to focus on power, area or performance. In that regard,
317 it is proposed that implementors be free to choose whether to implement
318 the Vector (or variable-width SIMD) parallelism as sequential operations
319 with a single ALU, fully parallel (if practical) with multiple ALUs, or
320 a hybrid combination of both.
321
322 In Broadcom's Videocore-IV, they chose hybrid, and called it "Virtual
323 Parallelism". They achieve a 16-way SIMD at an **instruction** level
324 by providing a combination of a 4-way parallel ALU *and* an externally
325 transparent loop that feeds 4 sequential sets of data into each of the
326 4 ALUs.
327
328 Also in the same core, it is worth noting that particularly uncommon
329 but essential operations (Reciprocal-Square-Root for example) are
330 *not* part of the 4-way parallel ALU but instead have a *single* ALU.
331 Under the proposed Vector (varible-width SIMD) implementors would
332 be free to do precisely that: i.e. free to choose *on a per operation
333 basis* whether and how much "Virtual Parallelism" to deploy.
334
335 It is absolutely critical to note that it is proposed that such choices MUST
336 be **entirely transparent** to the end-user and the compiler. Whilst
337 a Vector (varible-width SIMD) may not precisely match the width of the
338 parallelism within the implementation, the end-user **should not care**
339 and in this way the performance benefits are gained but the ISA remains
340 straightforward. All that happens at the end of an instruction run is: some
341 parallel units (if there are any) would remain offline, completely
342 transparently to the ISA, the program, and the compiler.
343
344 To make that clear: should an implementor choose a particularly wide
345 SIMD-style ALU, each parallel unit *must* have predication so that
346 the parallel SIMD ALU may emulate variable-length parallel operations.
347 Thus the "SIMD considered harmful" trap of having huge complexity and extra
348 instructions to deal with corner-cases is thus avoided, and implementors
349 get to choose precisely where to focus and target the benefits of their
350 implementation efforts, without "extra baggage".
351
352 In addition, implementors will be free to choose whether to provide an
353 absolute bare minimum level of compliance with the "API" (software-traps
354 when vectorisation is detected), all the way up to full supercomputing
355 level all-hardware parallelism. Options are covered in the Appendix.
356
357 # CSRs <a name="csrs"></a>
358
359 There are a number of CSRs needed, which are used at the instruction
360 decode phase to re-interpret standard RV opcodes (a practice that has
361 precedent in the setting of MISA to enable / disable extensions).
362
363 * Integer Register N is Vector of length M: r(N) -> r(N..N+M-1)
364 * Integer Register N is of implicit bitwidth M (M=default,8,16,32,64)
365 * Floating-point Register N is Vector of length M: r(N) -> r(N..N+M-1)
366 * Floating-point Register N is of implicit bitwidth M (M=default,8,16,32,64)
367 * Integer Register N is a Predication Register (note: a key-value store)
368 * Vector Length CSR (VSETVL, VGETVL)
369
370 Notes:
371
372 * for the purposes of LOAD / STORE, Integer Registers which are
373 marked as a Vector will result in a Vector LOAD / STORE.
374 * Vector Lengths are *not* the same as vsetl but are an integral part
375 of vsetl.
376 * Actual vector length is *multipled* by how many blocks of length
377 "bitwidth" may fit into an XLEN-sized register file.
378 * Predication is a key-value store due to the implicit referencing,
379 as opposed to having the predicate register explicitly in the instruction.
380
381 ## Predication CSR
382
383 The Predication CSR is a key-value store indicating whether, if a given
384 destination register (integer or floating-point) is referred to in an
385 instruction, it is to be predicated. The first entry is whether predication
386 is enabled. The second entry is whether the register index refers to a
387 floating-point or an integer register. The third entry is the index
388 of that register which is to be predicated (if referred to). The fourth entry
389 is the integer register that is treated as a bitfield, indexable by the
390 vector element index.
391
392 | RegNo | 6 | 5 | (4..0) | (4..0) |
393 | ----- | - | - | ------- | ------- |
394 | r0 | pren0 | i/f | regidx | predidx |
395 | r1 | pren1 | i/f | regidx | predidx |
396 | .. | pren.. | i/f | regidx | predidx |
397 | r15 | pren15 | i/f | regidx | predidx |
398
399 The Predication CSR Table is a key-value store, so implementation-wise
400 it will be faster to turn the table around (maintain topologically
401 equivalent state):
402
403 fp_pred_enabled[32];
404 int_pred_enabled[32];
405 for (i = 0; i < 16; i++)
406 if CSRpred[i].pren:
407 idx = CSRpred[i].regidx
408 predidx = CSRpred[i].predidx
409 if CSRpred[i].type == 0: # integer
410 int_pred_enabled[idx] = 1
411 int_pred_reg[idx] = predidx
412 else:
413 fp_pred_enabled[idx] = 1
414 fp_pred_reg[idx] = predidx
415
416 So when an operation is to be predicated, it is the internal state that
417 is used. In Section 6.4.2 of Hwacha's Manual (EECS-2015-262) the following
418 pseudo-code for operations is given, where p is the explicit (direct)
419 reference to the predication register to be used:
420
421 for (int i=0; i<vl; ++i)
422 if ([!]preg[p][i])
423 (d ? vreg[rd][i] : sreg[rd]) =
424 iop(s1 ? vreg[rs1][i] : sreg[rs1],
425 s2 ? vreg[rs2][i] : sreg[rs2]); // for insts with 2 inputs
426
427 This instead becomes an *indirect* reference using the *internal* state
428 table generated from the Predication CSR key-value store:
429
430 if type(iop) == INT:
431 pred_enabled = int_pred_enabled
432 preg = int_pred_reg[rd]
433 else:
434 pred_enabled = fp_pred_enabled
435 preg = fp_pred_reg[rd]
436
437 for (int i=0; i<vl; ++i)
438 if (preg_enabled[rd] && [!]preg[i])
439 (d ? vreg[rd][i] : sreg[rd]) =
440 iop(s1 ? vreg[rs1][i] : sreg[rs1],
441 s2 ? vreg[rs2][i] : sreg[rs2]); // for insts with 2 inputs
442
443 ## MAXVECTORDEPTH
444
445 MAXVECTORDEPTH is the same concept as MVL in RVV. However in Simple-V,
446 given that its primary (base, unextended) purpose is for 3D, Video and
447 other purposes (not requiring supercomputing capability), it makes sense
448 to limit MAXVECTORDEPTH to the regfile bitwidth (32 for RV32, 64 for RV64
449 and so on).
450
451 The reason for setting this limit is so that predication registers, when
452 marked as such, may fit into a single register as opposed to fanning out
453 over several registers. This keeps the implementation a little simpler.
454 Note that RVV on top of Simple-V may choose to over-ride this decision.
455
456 ## Vector-length CSRs
457
458 Vector lengths are interpreted as meaning "any instruction referring to
459 r(N) generates implicit identical instructions referring to registers
460 r(N+M-1) where M is the Vector Length". Vector Lengths may be set to
461 use up to 16 registers in the register file.
462
463 One separate CSR table is needed for each of the integer and floating-point
464 register files:
465
466 | RegNo | (3..0) |
467 | ----- | ------ |
468 | r0 | vlen0 |
469 | r1 | vlen1 |
470 | .. | vlen.. |
471 | r31 | vlen31 |
472
473 An array of 32 4-bit CSRs is needed (4 bits per register) to indicate
474 whether a register was, if referred to in any standard instructions,
475 implicitly to be treated as a vector. A vector length of 1 indicates
476 that it is to be treated as a scalar. Vector lengths of 0 are reserved.
477
478 Internally, implementations may choose to use the non-zero vector length
479 to set a bit-field per register, to be used in the instruction decode phase.
480 In this way any standard (current or future) operation involving
481 register operands may detect if the operation is to be vector-vector,
482 vector-scalar or scalar-scalar (standard) simply through a single
483 bit test.
484
485 Note that when using the "vsetl rs1, rs2" instruction (caveat: when the
486 bitwidth is specifically not set) it becomes:
487
488 CSRvlength = MIN(MIN(CSRvectorlen[rs1], MAXVECTORDEPTH), rs2)
489
490 This is in contrast to RVV:
491
492 CSRvlength = MIN(MIN(rs1, MAXVECTORDEPTH), rs2)
493
494 ## Element (SIMD) bitwidth CSRs
495
496 Element bitwidths may be specified with a per-register CSR, and indicate
497 how a register (integer or floating-point) is to be subdivided.
498
499 | RegNo | (2..0) |
500 | ----- | ------ |
501 | r0 | vew0 |
502 | r1 | vew1 |
503 | .. | vew.. |
504 | r31 | vew31 |
505
506 vew may be one of the following (giving a table "bytestable", used below):
507
508 | vew | bitwidth |
509 | --- | -------- |
510 | 000 | default |
511 | 001 | 8 |
512 | 010 | 16 |
513 | 011 | 32 |
514 | 100 | 64 |
515 | 101 | 128 |
516 | 110 | rsvd |
517 | 111 | rsvd |
518
519 Extending this table (with extra bits) is covered in the section
520 "Implementing RVV on top of Simple-V".
521
522 Note that when using the "vsetl rs1, rs2" instruction, taking bitwidth
523 into account, it becomes:
524
525 vew = CSRbitwidth[rs1]
526 if (vew == 0)
527 bytesperreg = (XLEN/8) # or FLEN as appropriate
528 else:
529 bytesperreg = bytestable[vew] # 1 2 4 8 16
530 simdmult = (XLEN/8) / bytesperreg # or FLEN as appropriate
531 vlen = CSRvectorlen[rs1] * simdmult
532 CSRvlength = MIN(MIN(vlen, MAXVECTORDEPTH), rs2)
533
534 The reason for multiplying the vector length by the number of SIMD elements
535 (in each individual register) is so that each SIMD element may optionally be
536 predicated.
537
538 An example of how to subdivide the register file when bitwidth != default
539 is given in the section "Bitwidth Virtual Register Reordering".
540
541 # Instructions
542
543 By being a topological remap of RVV concepts, the following RVV instructions
544 remain exactly the same: VMPOP, VMFIRST, VEXTRACT, VINSERT, VMERGE, VSELECT,
545 VSLIDE, VCLASS and VPOPC. Two instructions, VCLIP and VCLIPI, do not
546 have RV Standard equivalents, so are left out of Simple-V.
547 All other instructions from RVV are topologically re-mapped and retain
548 their complete functionality, intact.
549
550 ## Instruction Format
551
552 The instruction format for Simple-V does not actually have *any* explicit
553 compare operations, *any* arithmetic, floating point or *any*
554 memory instructions.
555 Instead it *overloads* pre-existing branch operations into predicated
556 variants, and implicitly overloads arithmetic operations and LOAD/STORE
557 depending on CSR configurations for vector length, bitwidth and
558 predication. *This includes Compressed instructions* as well as any
559 future instructions and Custom Extensions.
560
561 * For analysis of RVV see [[v_comparative_analysis]] which begins to
562 outline topologically-equivalent mappings of instructions
563 * Also see Appendix "Retro-fitting Predication into branch-explicit ISA"
564 for format of Branch opcodes.
565
566 **TODO**: *analyse and decide whether the implicit nature of predication
567 as proposed is or is not a lot of hassle, and if explicit prefixes are
568 a better idea instead. Parallelism therefore effectively may end up
569 as always being 64-bit opcodes (32 for the prefix, 32 for the instruction)
570 with some opportunities for to use Compressed bringing it down to 48.
571 Also to consider is whether one or both of the last two remaining Compressed
572 instruction codes in Quadrant 1 could be used as a parallelism prefix,
573 bringing parallelised opcodes down to 32-bit (when combined with C)
574 and having the benefit of being explicit.*
575
576 ## Branch Instruction:
577
578 This is the overloaded table for Integer-base Branch operations. Opcode
579 (bits 6..0) is set in all cases to 1100011.
580
581 [[!table data="""
582 31 .. 25 |24 ... 20 | 19 15 | 14 12 | 11 .. 8 | 7 | 6 ... 0 |
583 imm[12,10:5]| rs2 | rs1 | funct3 | imm[4:1] | imm[11] | opcode |
584 7 | 5 | 5 | 3 | 4 | 1 | 7 |
585 reserved | src2 | src1 | BPR | predicate rs3 || BRANCH |
586 reserved | src2 | src1 | 000 | predicate rs3 || BEQ |
587 reserved | src2 | src1 | 001 | predicate rs3 || BNE |
588 reserved | src2 | src1 | 010 | predicate rs3 || rsvd |
589 reserved | src2 | src1 | 011 | predicate rs3 || rsvd |
590 reserved | src2 | src1 | 100 | predicate rs3 || BLE |
591 reserved | src2 | src1 | 101 | predicate rs3 || BGE |
592 reserved | src2 | src1 | 110 | predicate rs3 || BLTU |
593 reserved | src2 | src1 | 111 | predicate rs3 || BGEU |
594 """]]
595
596 Below is the overloaded table for Floating-point Predication operations.
597 Interestingly no change is needed to the instruction format because
598 FP Compare already stores a 1 or a zero in its "rd" integer register
599 target, i.e. it's not actually a Branch at all: it's a compare.
600 The target needs to simply change to be a predication bitfield (done
601 implicitly).
602
603 As with
604 Standard RVF/D/Q, Opcode (bits 6..0) is set in all cases to 1010011.
605 Likewise Single-precision, fmt bits 26..25) is still set to 00.
606 Double-precision is still set to 01, whilst Quad-precision
607 appears not to have a definition in V2.3-Draft (but should be unaffected).
608
609 It is however noted that an entry "FNE" (the opposite of FEQ) is missing,
610 and whilst in ordinary branch code this is fine because the standard
611 RVF compare can always be followed up with an integer BEQ or a BNE (or
612 a compressed comparison to zero or non-zero), in predication terms that
613 becomes more of an impact as an explicit (scalar) instruction is needed
614 to invert the predicate bitmask. An additional encoding funct3=011 is
615 therefore proposed to cater for this.
616
617 [[!table data="""
618 31 .. 27| 26 .. 25 |24 ... 20 | 19 15 | 14 12 | 11 .. 7 | 6 ... 0 |
619 funct5 | fmt | rs2 | rs1 | funct3 | rd | opcode |
620 5 | 2 | 5 | 5 | 3 | 4 | 7 |
621 10100 | 00/01/11 | src2 | src1 | 010 | pred rs3 | FEQ |
622 10100 | 00/01/11 | src2 | src1 | **011**| pred rs3 | FNE |
623 10100 | 00/01/11 | src2 | src1 | 001 | pred rs3 | FLT |
624 10100 | 00/01/11 | src2 | src1 | 000 | pred rs3 | FLE |
625 """]]
626
627 Note (**TBD**): floating-point exceptions will need to be extended
628 to cater for multiple exceptions (and statuses of the same). The
629 usual approach is to have an array of status codes and bit-fields,
630 and one exception, rather than throw separate exceptions for each
631 Vector element.
632
633 In Hwacha EECS-2015-262 Section 6.7.2 the following pseudocode is given
634 for predicated compare operations of function "cmp":
635
636 for (int i=0; i<vl; ++i)
637 if ([!]preg[p][i])
638 preg[pd][i] = cmp(s1 ? vreg[rs1][i] : sreg[rs1],
639 s2 ? vreg[rs2][i] : sreg[rs2]);
640
641 With associated predication, vector-length adjustments and so on,
642 and temporarily ignoring bitwidth (which makes the comparisons more
643 complex), this becomes:
644
645 if I/F == INT: # integer type cmp
646 pred_enabled = int_pred_enabled # TODO: exception if not set!
647 preg = int_pred_reg[rd]
648 reg = int_regfile
649 else:
650 pred_enabled = fp_pred_enabled # TODO: exception if not set!
651 preg = fp_pred_reg[rd]
652 reg = fp_regfile
653
654 s1 = CSRvectorlen[src1] > 1;
655 s2 = CSRvectorlen[src2] > 1;
656 for (int i=0; i<vl; ++i)
657 preg[rs3][i] = cmp(s1 ? reg[src1+i] : reg[src1],
658 s2 ? reg[src2+i] : reg[src2]);
659
660 Notes:
661
662 * Predicated SIMD comparisons would break src1 and src2 further down
663 into bitwidth-sized chunks (see Appendix "Bitwidth Virtual Register
664 Reordering") setting Vector-Length times (number of SIMD elements) bits
665 in Predicate Register rs3 as opposed to just Vector-Length bits.
666 * Predicated Branches do not actually have an adjustment to the Program
667 Counter, so all of bits 25 through 30 in every case are not needed.
668 * There are plenty of reserved opcodes for which bits 25 through 30 could
669 be put to good use if there is a suitable use-case.
670 * FEQ and FNE (and BEQ and BNE) are included in order to save one
671 instruction having to invert the resultant predicate bitfield.
672 FLT and FLE may be inverted to FGT and FGE if needed by swapping
673 src1 and src2 (likewise the integer counterparts).
674
675 ## Compressed Branch Instruction:
676
677 [[!table data="""
678 15..13 | 12...10 | 9..7 | 6..5 | 4..2 | 1..0 | name |
679 funct3 | imm | rs10 | imm | | op | |
680 3 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 3 | 2 | |
681 C.BPR | pred rs3 | src1 | I/F B | src2 | C1 | |
682 110 | pred rs3 | src1 | I/F 0 | src2 | C1 | P.EQ |
683 111 | pred rs3 | src1 | I/F 0 | src2 | C1 | P.NE |
684 110 | pred rs3 | src1 | I/F 1 | src2 | C1 | P.LT |
685 111 | pred rs3 | src1 | I/F 1 | src2 | C1 | P.LE |
686 """]]
687
688 Notes:
689
690 * Bits 5 13 14 and 15 make up the comparator type
691 * Bit 6 indicates whether to use integer or floating-point comparisons
692 * In both floating-point and integer cases there are four predication
693 comparators: EQ/NEQ/LT/LE (with GT and GE being synthesised by inverting
694 src1 and src2).
695
696 ## LOAD / STORE Instructions
697
698 For full analysis of topological adaptation of RVV LOAD/STORE
699 see [[v_comparative_analysis]]. All three types (LD, LD.S and LD.X)
700 may be implicitly overloaded into the one base RV LOAD instruction,
701 and likewise for STORE.
702
703 Revised LOAD:
704
705 [[!table data="""
706 31 | 30 | 29 25 | 24 20 | 19 15 | 14 12 | 11 7 | 6 0 |
707 imm[11:0] |||| rs1 | funct3 | rd | opcode |
708 1 | 1 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 3 | 5 | 7 |
709 ? | s | rs2 | imm[4:0] | base | width | dest | LOAD |
710 """]]
711
712 The exact same corresponding adaptation is also carried out on the single,
713 double and quad precision floating-point LOAD-FP and STORE-FP operations,
714 which fit the exact same instruction format. Thus all three types
715 (unit, stride and indexed) may be fitted into FLW, FLD and FLQ,
716 as well as FSW, FSD and FSQ.
717
718 Notes:
719
720 * LOAD remains functionally (topologically) identical to RVV LOAD
721 (for both integer and floating-point variants).
722 * Predication CSR-marking register is not explicitly shown in instruction, it's
723 implicit based on the CSR predicate state for the rd (destination) register
724 * rs2, the source, may *also be marked as a vector*, which implicitly
725 is taken to indicate "Indexed Load" (LD.X)
726 * Bit 30 indicates "element stride" or "constant-stride" (LD or LD.S)
727 * Bit 31 is reserved (ideas under consideration: auto-increment)
728 * **TODO**: include CSR SIMD bitwidth in the pseudo-code below.
729 * **TODO**: clarify where width maps to elsize
730
731 Pseudo-code (excludes CSR SIMD bitwidth for simplicity):
732
733 if (unit-strided) stride = elsize;
734 else stride = areg[as2]; // constant-strided
735
736 pred_enabled = int_pred_enabled
737 preg = int_pred_reg[rd]
738
739 for (int i=0; i<vl; ++i)
740 if (preg_enabled[rd] && [!]preg[i])
741 for (int j=0; j<seglen+1; j++)
742 {
743 if CSRvectorised[rs2])
744 offs = vreg[rs2][i]
745 else
746 offs = i*(seglen+1)*stride;
747 vreg[rd+j][i] = mem[sreg[base] + offs + j*stride];
748 }
749
750 Taking CSR (SIMD) bitwidth into account involves using the vector
751 length and register encoding according to the "Bitwidth Virtual Register
752 Reordering" scheme shown in the Appendix (see function "regoffs").
753
754 A similar instruction exists for STORE, with identical topological
755 translation of all features. **TODO**
756
757 ## Compressed LOAD / STORE Instructions
758
759 Compressed LOAD and STORE are of the same format, where bits 2-4 are
760 a src register instead of dest:
761
762 [[!table data="""
763 15 13 | 12 10 | 9 7 | 6 5 | 4 2 | 1 0 |
764 funct3 | imm | rs10 | imm | rd0 | op |
765 3 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 3 | 2 |
766 C.LW | offset[5:3] | base | offset[2|6] | dest | C0 |
767 """]]
768
769 Unfortunately it is not possible to fit the full functionality
770 of vectorised LOAD / STORE into C.LD / C.ST: the "X" variants (Indexed)
771 require another operand (rs2) in addition to the operand width
772 (which is also missing), offset, base, and src/dest.
773
774 However a close approximation may be achieved by taking the top bit
775 of the offset in each of the five types of LD (and ST), reducing the
776 offset to 4 bits and utilising the 5th bit to indicate whether "stride"
777 is to be enabled. In this way it is at least possible to introduce
778 that functionality.
779
780 (**TODO**: *assess whether the loss of one bit from offset is worth having
781 "stride" capability.*)
782
783 We also assume (including for the "stride" variant) that the "width"
784 parameter, which is missing, is derived and implicit, just as it is
785 with the standard Compressed LOAD/STORE instructions. For C.LW, C.LD
786 and C.LQ, the width is implicitly 4, 8 and 16 respectively, whilst for
787 C.FLW and C.FLD the width is implicitly 4 and 8 respectively.
788
789 Interestingly we note that the Vectorised Simple-V variant of
790 LOAD/STORE (Compressed and otherwise), due to it effectively using the
791 standard register file(s), is the direct functional equivalent of
792 standard load-multiple and store-multiple instructions found in other
793 processors.
794
795 In Section 12.3 riscv-isa manual V2.3-draft it is noted the comments on
796 page 76, "For virtual memory systems some data accesses could be resident
797 in physical memory and some not". The interesting question then arises:
798 how does RVV deal with the exact same scenario?
799 Expired U.S. Patent 5895501 (Filing Date Sep 3 1996) describes a method
800 of detecting early page / segmentation faults and adjusting the TLB
801 in advance, accordingly: other strategies are explored in the Appendix
802 Section "Virtual Memory Page Faults".
803
804 # Exceptions
805
806 > What does an ADD of two different-sized vectors do in simple-V?
807
808 * if the two source operands are not the same, throw an exception.
809 * if the destination operand is also a vector, and the source is longer
810 than the destination, throw an exception.
811
812 > And what about instructions like JALR? 
813 > What does jumping to a vector do?
814
815 * Throw an exception. Whether that actually results in spawning threads
816 as part of the trap-handling remains to be seen.
817
818 # Impementing V on top of Simple-V
819
820 With Simple-V converting the original RVV draft concept-for-concept
821 from explicit opcodes to implicit overloading of existing RV Standard
822 Extensions, certain features were (deliberately) excluded that need
823 to be added back in for RVV to reach its full potential. This is
824 made slightly complicated by the fact that RVV itself has two
825 levels: Base and reserved future functionality.
826
827 * Representation Encoding is entirely left out of Simple-V in favour of
828 implicitly taking the exact (explicit) meaning from RV Standard Extensions.
829 * VCLIP and VCLIPI do not have corresponding RV Standard Extension
830 opcodes (and are the only such operations).
831 * Extended Element bitwidths (1 through to 24576 bits) were left out
832 of Simple-V as, again, there is no corresponding RV Standard Extension
833 that covers anything even below 32-bit operands.
834 * Polymorphism was entirely left out of Simple-V due to the inherent
835 complexity of automatic type-conversion.
836 * Vector Register files were specifically left out of Simple-V in favour
837 of fitting on top of the integer and floating-point files. An
838 "RVV re-retro-fit" needs to be able to mark (implicitly marked)
839 registers as being actually in a separate *vector* register file.
840 * Fortunately in RVV (Draft 0.4, V2.3-Draft), the "base" vector
841 register file size is 5 bits (32 registers), whilst the "Extended"
842 variant of RVV specifies 8 bits (256 registers) and has yet to
843 be published.
844 * One big difference: Sections 17.12 and 17.17, there are only two possible
845 predication registers in RVV "Base". Through the "indirect" method,
846 Simple-V provides a key-value CSR table that allows (arbitrarily)
847 up to 16 (TBD) of either the floating-point or integer registers to
848 be marked as "predicated" (key), and if so, which integer register to
849 use as the predication mask (value).
850
851 **TODO**
852
853 # Implementing P (renamed to DSP) on top of Simple-V
854
855 * Implementors indicate chosen bitwidth support in Vector-bitwidth CSR
856 (caveat: anything not specified drops through to software-emulation / traps)
857 * TODO
858
859 # Appendix
860
861 ## V-Extension to Simple-V Comparative Analysis
862
863 This section has been moved to its own page [[v_comparative_analysis]]
864
865 ## P-Ext ISA
866
867 This section has been moved to its own page [[p_comparative_analysis]]
868
869 ## Comparison of "Traditional" SIMD, Alt-RVP, Simple-V and RVV Proposals <a name="parallelism_comparisons"></a>
870
871 This section compares the various parallelism proposals as they stand,
872 including traditional SIMD, in terms of features, ease of implementation,
873 complexity, flexibility, and die area.
874
875 ### [[alt_rvp]]
876
877 Primary benefit of Alt-RVP is the simplicity with which parallelism
878 may be introduced (effective multiplication of regfiles and associated ALUs).
879
880 * plus: the simplicity of the lanes (combined with the regularity of
881 allocating identical opcodes multiple independent registers) meaning
882 that SRAM or 2R1W can be used for entire regfile (potentially).
883 * minus: a more complex instruction set where the parallelism is much
884 more explicitly directly specified in the instruction and
885 * minus: if you *don't* have an explicit instruction (opcode) and you
886 need one, the only place it can be added is... in the vector unit and
887 * minus: opcode functions (and associated ALUs) duplicated in Alt-RVP are
888 not useable or accessible in other Extensions.
889 * plus-and-minus: Lanes may be utilised for high-speed context-switching
890 but with the down-side that they're an all-or-nothing part of the Extension.
891 No Alt-RVP: no fast register-bank switching.
892 * plus: Lane-switching would mean that complex operations not suited to
893 parallelisation can be carried out, followed by further parallel Lane-based
894 work, without moving register contents down to memory (and back)
895 * minus: Access to registers across multiple lanes is challenging. "Solution"
896 is to drop data into memory and immediately back in again (like MMX).
897
898 ### Simple-V
899
900 Primary benefit of Simple-V is the OO abstraction of parallel principles
901 from actual (internal) parallel hardware. It's an API in effect that's
902 designed to be slotted in to an existing implementation (just after
903 instruction decode) with minimum disruption and effort.
904
905 * minus: the complexity of having to use register renames, OoO, VLIW,
906 register file cacheing, all of which has been done before but is a
907 pain
908 * plus: transparent re-use of existing opcodes as-is just indirectly
909 saying "this register's now a vector" which
910 * plus: means that future instructions also get to be inherently
911 parallelised because there's no "separate vector opcodes"
912 * plus: Compressed instructions may also be (indirectly) parallelised
913 * minus: the indirect nature of Simple-V means that setup (setting
914 a CSR register to indicate vector length, a separate one to indicate
915 that it is a predicate register and so on) means a little more setup
916 time than Alt-RVP or RVV's "direct and within the (longer) instruction"
917 approach.
918 * plus: shared register file meaning that, like Alt-RVP, complex
919 operations not suited to parallelisation may be carried out interleaved
920 between parallelised instructions *without* requiring data to be dropped
921 down to memory and back (into a separate vectorised register engine).
922 * plus-and-maybe-minus: re-use of integer and floating-point 32-wide register
923 files means that huge parallel workloads would use up considerable
924 chunks of the register file. However in the case of RV64 and 32-bit
925 operations, that effectively means 64 slots are available for parallel
926 operations.
927 * plus: inherent parallelism (actual parallel ALUs) doesn't actually need to
928 be added, yet the instruction opcodes remain unchanged (and still appear
929 to be parallel). consistent "API" regardless of actual internal parallelism:
930 even an in-order single-issue implementation with a single ALU would still
931 appear to have parallel vectoristion.
932 * hard-to-judge: if actual inherent underlying ALU parallelism is added it's
933 hard to say if there would be pluses or minuses (on die area). At worse it
934 would be "no worse" than existing register renaming, OoO, VLIW and register
935 file cacheing schemes.
936
937 ### RVV (as it stands, Draft 0.4 Section 17, RISC-V ISA V2.3-Draft)
938
939 RVV is extremely well-designed and has some amazing features, including
940 2D reorganisation of memory through LOAD/STORE "strides".
941
942 * plus: regular predictable workload means that implementations may
943 streamline effects on L1/L2 Cache.
944 * plus: regular and clear parallel workload also means that lanes
945 (similar to Alt-RVP) may be used as an implementation detail,
946 using either SRAM or 2R1W registers.
947 * plus: separate engine with no impact on the rest of an implementation
948 * minus: separate *complex* engine with no RTL (ALUs, Pipeline stages) reuse
949 really feasible.
950 * minus: no ISA abstraction or re-use either: additions to other Extensions
951 do not gain parallelism, resulting in prolific duplication of functionality
952 inside RVV *and out*.
953 * minus: when operations require a different approach (scalar operations
954 using the standard integer or FP regfile) an entire vector must be
955 transferred out to memory, into standard regfiles, then back to memory,
956 then back to the vector unit, this to occur potentially multiple times.
957 * minus: will never fit into Compressed instruction space (as-is. May
958 be able to do so if "indirect" features of Simple-V are partially adopted).
959 * plus-and-slight-minus: extended variants may address up to 256
960 vectorised registers (requires 48/64-bit opcodes to do it).
961 * minus-and-partial-plus: separate engine plus complexity increases
962 implementation time and die area, meaning that adoption is likely only
963 to be in high-performance specialist supercomputing (where it will
964 be absolutely superb).
965
966 ### Traditional SIMD
967
968 The only really good things about SIMD are how easy it is to implement and
969 get good performance. Unfortunately that makes it quite seductive...
970
971 * plus: really straightforward, ALU basically does several packed operations
972 at once. Parallelism is inherent at the ALU, making the addition of
973 SIMD-style parallelism an easy decision that has zero significant impact
974 on the rest of any given architectural design and layout.
975 * plus (continuation): SIMD in simple in-order single-issue designs can
976 therefore result in superb throughput, easily achieved even with a very
977 simple execution model.
978 * minus: ridiculously complex setup and corner-cases that disproportionately
979 increase instruction count on what would otherwise be a "simple loop",
980 should the number of elements in an array not happen to exactly match
981 the SIMD group width.
982 * minus: getting data usefully out of registers (if separate regfiles
983 are used) means outputting to memory and back.
984 * minus: quite a lot of supplementary instructions for bit-level manipulation
985 are needed in order to efficiently extract (or prepare) SIMD operands.
986 * minus: MASSIVE proliferation of ISA both in terms of opcodes in one
987 dimension and parallelism (width): an at least O(N^2) and quite probably
988 O(N^3) ISA proliferation that often results in several thousand
989 separate instructions. all requiring separate and distinct corner-case
990 algorithms!
991 * minus: EVEN BIGGER proliferation of SIMD ISA if the functionality of
992 8, 16, 32 or 64-bit reordering is built-in to the SIMD instruction.
993 For example: add (high|low) 16-bits of r1 to (low|high) of r2 requires
994 four separate and distinct instructions: one for (r1:low r2:high),
995 one for (r1:high r2:low), one for (r1:high r2:high) and one for
996 (r1:low r2:low) *per function*.
997 * minus: EVEN BIGGER proliferation of SIMD ISA if there is a mismatch
998 between operand and result bit-widths. In combination with high/low
999 proliferation the situation is made even worse.
1000 * minor-saving-grace: some implementations *may* have predication masks
1001 that allow control over individual elements within the SIMD block.
1002
1003 ## Comparison *to* Traditional SIMD: Alt-RVP, Simple-V and RVV Proposals <a name="simd_comparison"></a>
1004
1005 This section compares the various parallelism proposals as they stand,
1006 *against* traditional SIMD as opposed to *alongside* SIMD. In other words,
1007 the question is asked "How can each of the proposals effectively implement
1008 (or replace) SIMD, and how effective would they be"?
1009
1010 ### [[alt_rvp]]
1011
1012 * Alt-RVP would not actually replace SIMD but would augment it: just as with
1013 a SIMD architecture where the ALU becomes responsible for the parallelism,
1014 Alt-RVP ALUs would likewise be so responsible... with *additional*
1015 (lane-based) parallelism on top.
1016 * Thus at least some of the downsides of SIMD ISA O(N^3) proliferation by
1017 at least one dimension are avoided (architectural upgrades introducing
1018 128-bit then 256-bit then 512-bit variants of the exact same 64-bit
1019 SIMD block)
1020 * Thus, unfortunately, Alt-RVP would suffer the same inherent proliferation
1021 of instructions as SIMD, albeit not quite as badly (due to Lanes).
1022 * In the same discussion for Alt-RVP, an additional proposal was made to
1023 be able to subdivide the bits of each register lane (columns) down into
1024 arbitrary bit-lengths (RGB 565 for example).
1025 * A recommendation was given instead to make the subdivisions down to 32-bit,
1026 16-bit or even 8-bit, effectively dividing the registerfile into
1027 Lane0(H), Lane0(L), Lane1(H) ... LaneN(L) or further. If inter-lane
1028 "swapping" instructions were then introduced, some of the disadvantages
1029 of SIMD could be mitigated.
1030
1031 ### RVV
1032
1033 * RVV is designed to replace SIMD with a better paradigm: arbitrary-length
1034 parallelism.
1035 * However whilst SIMD is usually designed for single-issue in-order simple
1036 DSPs with a focus on Multimedia (Audio, Video and Image processing),
1037 RVV's primary focus appears to be on Supercomputing: optimisation of
1038 mathematical operations that fit into the OpenCL space.
1039 * Adding functions (operations) that would normally fit (in parallel)
1040 into a SIMD instruction requires an equivalent to be added to the
1041 RVV Extension, if one does not exist. Given the specialist nature of
1042 some SIMD instructions (8-bit or 16-bit saturated or halving add),
1043 this possibility seems extremely unlikely to occur, even if the
1044 implementation overhead of RVV were acceptable (compared to
1045 normal SIMD/DSP-style single-issue in-order simplicity).
1046
1047 ### Simple-V
1048
1049 * Simple-V borrows hugely from RVV as it is intended to be easy to
1050 topologically transplant every single instruction from RVV (as
1051 designed) into Simple-V equivalents, with *zero loss of functionality
1052 or capability*.
1053 * With the "parallelism" abstracted out, a hypothetical SIMD-less "DSP"
1054 Extension which contained the basic primitives (non-parallelised
1055 8, 16 or 32-bit SIMD operations) inherently *become* parallel,
1056 automatically.
1057 * Additionally, standard operations (ADD, MUL) that would normally have
1058 to have special SIMD-parallel opcodes added need no longer have *any*
1059 of the length-dependent variants (2of 32-bit ADDs in a 64-bit register,
1060 4of 32-bit ADDs in a 128-bit register) because Simple-V takes the
1061 *standard* RV opcodes (present and future) and automatically parallelises
1062 them.
1063 * By inheriting the RVV feature of arbitrary vector-length, then just as
1064 with RVV the corner-cases and ISA proliferation of SIMD is avoided.
1065 * Whilst not entirely finalised, registers are expected to be
1066 capable of being subdivided down to an implementor-chosen bitwidth
1067 in the underlying hardware (r1 becomes r1[31..24] r1[23..16] r1[15..8]
1068 and r1[7..0], or just r1[31..16] r1[15..0]) where implementors can
1069 choose to have separate independent 8-bit ALUs or dual-SIMD 16-bit
1070 ALUs that perform twin 8-bit operations as they see fit, or anything
1071 else including no subdivisions at all.
1072 * Even though implementors have that choice even to have full 64-bit
1073 (with RV64) SIMD, they *must* provide predication that transparently
1074 switches off appropriate units on the last loop, thus neatly fitting
1075 underlying SIMD ALU implementations *into* the arbitrary vector-length
1076 RVV paradigm, keeping the uniform consistent API that is a key strategic
1077 feature of Simple-V.
1078 * With Simple-V fitting into the standard register files, certain classes
1079 of SIMD operations such as High/Low arithmetic (r1[31..16] + r2[15..0])
1080 can be done by applying *Parallelised* Bit-manipulation operations
1081 followed by parallelised *straight* versions of element-to-element
1082 arithmetic operations, even if the bit-manipulation operations require
1083 changing the bitwidth of the "vectors" to do so. Predication can
1084 be utilised to skip high words (or low words) in source or destination.
1085 * In essence, the key downside of SIMD - massive duplication of
1086 identical functions over time as an architecture evolves from 32-bit
1087 wide SIMD all the way up to 512-bit, is avoided with Simple-V, through
1088 vector-style parallelism being dropped on top of 8-bit or 16-bit
1089 operations, all the while keeping a consistent ISA-level "API" irrespective
1090 of implementor design choices (or indeed actual implementations).
1091
1092 ### Example Instruction translation: <a name="example_translation"></a>
1093
1094 Instructions "ADD r2 r4 r4" would result in three instructions being
1095 generated and placed into the FIFO:
1096
1097 * ADD r2 r4 r4
1098 * ADD r2 r5 r5
1099 * ADD r2 r6 r6
1100
1101 ## Example of vector / vector, vector / scalar, scalar / scalar => vector add
1102
1103 register CSRvectorlen[XLEN][4]; # not quite decided yet about this one...
1104 register CSRpredicate[XLEN][4]; # 2^4 is max vector length
1105 register CSRreg_is_vectorised[XLEN]; # just for fun support scalars as well
1106 register x[32][XLEN];
1107
1108 function op_add(rd, rs1, rs2, predr)
1109 {
1110    /* note that this is ADD, not PADD */
1111    int i, id, irs1, irs2;
1112    # checks CSRvectorlen[rd] == CSRvectorlen[rs] etc. ignored
1113    # also destination makes no sense as a scalar but what the hell...
1114    for (i = 0, id=0, irs1=0, irs2=0; i<CSRvectorlen[rd]; i++)
1115       if (CSRpredicate[predr][i]) # i *think* this is right...
1116          x[rd+id] <= x[rs1+irs1] + x[rs2+irs2];
1117       # now increment the idxs
1118       if (CSRreg_is_vectorised[rd]) # bitfield check rd, scalar/vector?
1119          id += 1;
1120       if (CSRreg_is_vectorised[rs1]) # bitfield check rs1, scalar/vector?
1121          irs1 += 1;
1122       if (CSRreg_is_vectorised[rs2]) # bitfield check rs2, scalar/vector?
1123          irs2 += 1;
1124 }
1125
1126 ## Retro-fitting Predication into branch-explicit ISA <a name="predication_retrofit"></a>
1127
1128 One of the goals of this parallelism proposal is to avoid instruction
1129 duplication. However, with the base ISA having been designed explictly
1130 to *avoid* condition-codes entirely, shoe-horning predication into it
1131 bcomes quite challenging.
1132
1133 However what if all branch instructions, if referencing a vectorised
1134 register, were instead given *completely new analogous meanings* that
1135 resulted in a parallel bit-wise predication register being set? This
1136 would have to be done for both C.BEQZ and C.BNEZ, as well as BEQ, BNE,
1137 BLT and BGE.
1138
1139 We might imagine that FEQ, FLT and FLT would also need to be converted,
1140 however these are effectively *already* in the precise form needed and
1141 do not need to be converted *at all*! The difference is that FEQ, FLT
1142 and FLE *specifically* write a 1 to an integer register if the condition
1143 holds, and 0 if not. All that needs to be done here is to say, "if
1144 the integer register is tagged with a bit that says it is a predication
1145 register, the **bit** in the integer register is set based on the
1146 current vector index" instead.
1147
1148 There is, in the standard Conditional Branch instruction, more than
1149 adequate space to interpret it in a similar fashion:
1150
1151 [[!table data="""
1152 31 |30 ..... 25 |24 ... 20 | 19 ... 15 | 14 ...... 12 | 11 ....... 8 | 7 | 6 ....... 0 |
1153 imm[12] | imm[10:5] | rs2 | rs1 | funct3 | imm[4:1] | imm[11] | opcode |
1154 1 | 6 | 5 | 5 | 3 | 4 | 1 | 7 |
1155 offset[12,10:5] || src2 | src1 | BEQ | offset[11,4:1] || BRANCH |
1156 """]]
1157
1158 This would become:
1159
1160 [[!table data="""
1161 31 | 30 .. 25 |24 ... 20 | 19 15 | 14 12 | 11 .. 8 | 7 | 6 ... 0 |
1162 imm[12] | imm[10:5]| rs2 | rs1 | funct3 | imm[4:1] | imm[11] | opcode |
1163 1 | 6 | 5 | 5 | 3 | 4 | 1 | 7 |
1164 reserved || src2 | src1 | BEQ | predicate rs3 || BRANCH |
1165 """]]
1166
1167 Similarly the C.BEQZ and C.BNEZ instruction format may be retro-fitted,
1168 with the interesting side-effect that there is space within what is presently
1169 the "immediate offset" field to reinterpret that to add in not only a bit
1170 field to distinguish between floating-point compare and integer compare,
1171 not only to add in a second source register, but also use some of the bits as
1172 a predication target as well.
1173
1174 [[!table data="""
1175 15 ...... 13 | 12 ........... 10 | 9..... 7 | 6 ................. 2 | 1 .. 0 |
1176 funct3 | imm | rs10 | imm | op |
1177 3 | 3 | 3 | 5 | 2 |
1178 C.BEQZ | offset[8,4:3] | src | offset[7:6,2:1,5] | C1 |
1179 """]]
1180
1181 Now uses the CS format:
1182
1183 [[!table data="""
1184 15 ...... 13 | 12 ........... 10 | 9..... 7 | 6 .. 5 | 4......... 2 | 1 .. 0 |
1185 funct3 | imm | rs10 | imm | | op |
1186 3 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 3 | 2 |
1187 C.BEQZ | predicate rs3 | src1 | I/F B | src2 | C1 |
1188 """]]
1189
1190 Bit 6 would be decoded as "operation refers to Integer or Float" including
1191 interpreting src1 and src2 accordingly as outlined in Table 12.2 of the
1192 "C" Standard, version 2.0,
1193 whilst Bit 5 would allow the operation to be extended, in combination with
1194 funct3 = 110 or 111: a combination of four distinct (predicated) comparison
1195 operators. In both floating-point and integer cases those could be
1196 EQ/NEQ/LT/LE (with GT and GE being synthesised by inverting src1 and src2).
1197
1198 ## Register reordering <a name="register_reordering"></a>
1199
1200 ### Register File
1201
1202 | Reg Num | Bits |
1203 | ------- | ---- |
1204 | r0 | (32..0) |
1205 | r1 | (32..0) |
1206 | r2 | (32..0) |
1207 | r3 | (32..0) |
1208 | r4 | (32..0) |
1209 | r5 | (32..0) |
1210 | r6 | (32..0) |
1211 | r7 | (32..0) |
1212 | .. | (32..0) |
1213 | r31| (32..0) |
1214
1215 ### Vectorised CSR
1216
1217 May not be an actual CSR: may be generated from Vector Length CSR:
1218 single-bit is less burdensome on instruction decode phase.
1219
1220 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
1221 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
1222 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
1223
1224 ### Vector Length CSR
1225
1226 | Reg Num | (3..0) |
1227 | ------- | ---- |
1228 | r0 | 2 |
1229 | r1 | 0 |
1230 | r2 | 1 |
1231 | r3 | 1 |
1232 | r4 | 3 |
1233 | r5 | 0 |
1234 | r6 | 0 |
1235 | r7 | 1 |
1236
1237 ### Virtual Register Reordering
1238
1239 This example assumes the above Vector Length CSR table
1240
1241 | Reg Num | Bits (0) | Bits (1) | Bits (2) |
1242 | ------- | -------- | -------- | -------- |
1243 | r0 | (32..0) | (32..0) |
1244 | r2 | (32..0) |
1245 | r3 | (32..0) |
1246 | r4 | (32..0) | (32..0) | (32..0) |
1247 | r7 | (32..0) |
1248
1249 ### Bitwidth Virtual Register Reordering
1250
1251 This example goes a little further and illustrates the effect that a
1252 bitwidth CSR has been set on a register. Preconditions:
1253
1254 * RV32 assumed
1255 * CSRintbitwidth[2] = 010 # integer r2 is 16-bit
1256 * CSRintvlength[2] = 3 # integer r2 is a vector of length 3
1257 * vsetl rs1, 5 # set the vector length to 5
1258
1259 This is interpreted as follows:
1260
1261 * Given that the context is RV32, ELEN=32.
1262 * With ELEN=32 and bitwidth=16, the number of SIMD elements is 2
1263 * Therefore the actual vector length is up to *six* elements
1264 * However vsetl sets a length 5 therefore the last "element" is skipped
1265
1266 So when using an operation that uses r2 as a source (or destination)
1267 the operation is carried out as follows:
1268
1269 * 16-bit operation on r2(15..0) - vector element index 0
1270 * 16-bit operation on r2(31..16) - vector element index 1
1271 * 16-bit operation on r3(15..0) - vector element index 2
1272 * 16-bit operation on r3(31..16) - vector element index 3
1273 * 16-bit operation on r4(15..0) - vector element index 4
1274 * 16-bit operation on r4(31..16) **NOT** carried out due to length being 5
1275
1276 Predication has been left out of the above example for simplicity, however
1277 predication is ANDed with the latter stages (vsetl not equal to maximum
1278 capacity).
1279
1280 Note also that it is entirely an implementor's choice as to whether to have
1281 actual separate ALUs down to the minimum bitwidth, or whether to have something
1282 more akin to traditional SIMD (at any level of subdivision: 8-bit SIMD
1283 operations carried out 32-bits at a time is perfectly acceptable, as is
1284 8-bit SIMD operations carried out 16-bits at a time requiring two ALUs).
1285 Regardless of the internal parallelism choice, *predication must
1286 still be respected*, making Simple-V in effect the "consistent public API".
1287
1288 vew may be one of the following (giving a table "bytestable", used below):
1289
1290 | vew | bitwidth |
1291 | --- | -------- |
1292 | 000 | default |
1293 | 001 | 8 |
1294 | 010 | 16 |
1295 | 011 | 32 |
1296 | 100 | 64 |
1297 | 101 | 128 |
1298 | 110 | rsvd |
1299 | 111 | rsvd |
1300
1301 Pseudocode for vector length taking CSR SIMD-bitwidth into account:
1302
1303 vew = CSRbitwidth[rs1]
1304 if (vew == 0)
1305 bytesperreg = (XLEN/8) # or FLEN as appropriate
1306 else:
1307 bytesperreg = bytestable[vew] # 1 2 4 8 16
1308 simdmult = (XLEN/8) / bytesperreg # or FLEN as appropriate
1309 vlen = CSRvectorlen[rs1] * simdmult
1310
1311 To index an element in a register rnum where the vector element index is i:
1312
1313 function regoffs(rnum, i):
1314 regidx = floor(i / simdmult) # integer-div rounded down
1315 byteidx = i % simdmult # integer-remainder
1316 return rnum + regidx, # actual real register
1317 byteidx * 8, # low
1318 byteidx * 8 + (vew-1), # high
1319
1320 ### Insights
1321
1322 SIMD register file splitting still to consider. For RV64, benefits of doubling
1323 (quadrupling in the case of Half-Precision IEEE754 FP) the apparent
1324 size of the floating point register file to 64 (128 in the case of HP)
1325 seem pretty clear and worth the complexity.
1326
1327 64 virtual 32-bit F.P. registers and given that 32-bit FP operations are
1328 done on 64-bit registers it's not so conceptually difficult.  May even
1329 be achieved by *actually* splitting the regfile into 64 virtual 32-bit
1330 registers such that a 64-bit FP scalar operation is dropped into (r0.H
1331 r0.L) tuples.  Implementation therefore hidden through register renaming.
1332
1333 Implementations intending to introduce VLIW, OoO and parallelism
1334 (even without Simple-V) would then find that the instructions are
1335 generated quicker (or in a more compact fashion that is less heavy
1336 on caches). Interestingly we observe then that Simple-V is about
1337 "consolidation of instruction generation", where actual parallelism
1338 of underlying hardware is an implementor-choice that could just as
1339 equally be applied *without* Simple-V even being implemented.
1340
1341 ## Analysis of CSR decoding on latency <a name="csr_decoding_analysis"></a>
1342
1343 It could indeed have been logically deduced (or expected), that there
1344 would be additional decode latency in this proposal, because if
1345 overloading the opcodes to have different meanings, there is guaranteed
1346 to be some state, some-where, directly related to registers.
1347
1348 There are several cases:
1349
1350 * All operands vector-length=1 (scalars), all operands
1351 packed-bitwidth="default": instructions are passed through direct as if
1352 Simple-V did not exist.  Simple-V is, in effect, completely disabled.
1353 * At least one operand vector-length > 1, all operands
1354 packed-bitwidth="default": any parallel vector ALUs placed on "alert",
1355 virtual parallelism looping may be activated.
1356 * All operands vector-length=1 (scalars), at least one
1357 operand packed-bitwidth != default: degenerate case of SIMD,
1358 implementation-specific complexity here (packed decode before ALUs or
1359 *IN* ALUs)
1360 * At least one operand vector-length > 1, at least one operand
1361 packed-bitwidth != default: parallel vector ALUs (if any)
1362 placed on "alert", virtual parallelsim looping may be activated,
1363 implementation-specific SIMD complexity kicks in (packed decode before
1364 ALUs or *IN* ALUs).
1365
1366 Bear in mind that the proposal includes that the decision whether
1367 to parallelise in hardware or whether to virtual-parallelise (to
1368 dramatically simplify compilers and also not to run into the SIMD
1369 instruction proliferation nightmare) *or* a transprent combination
1370 of both, be done on a *per-operand basis*, so that implementors can
1371 specifically choose to create an application-optimised implementation
1372 that they believe (or know) will sell extremely well, without having
1373 "Extra Standards-Mandated Baggage" that would otherwise blow their area
1374 or power budget completely out the window.
1375
1376 Additionally, two possible CSR schemes have been proposed, in order to
1377 greatly reduce CSR space:
1378
1379 * per-register CSRs (vector-length and packed-bitwidth)
1380 * a smaller number of CSRs with the same information but with an *INDEX*
1381 specifying WHICH register in one of three regfiles (vector, fp, int)
1382 the length and bitwidth applies to.
1383
1384 (See "CSR vector-length and CSR SIMD packed-bitwidth" section for details)
1385
1386 In addition, LOAD/STORE has its own associated proposed CSRs that
1387 mirror the STRIDE (but not yet STRIDE-SEGMENT?) functionality of
1388 V (and Hwacha).
1389
1390 Also bear in mind that, for reasons of simplicity for implementors,
1391 I was coming round to the idea of permitting implementors to choose
1392 exactly which bitwidths they would like to support in hardware and which
1393 to allow to fall through to software-trap emulation.
1394
1395 So the question boils down to:
1396
1397 * whether either (or both) of those two CSR schemes have significant
1398 latency that could even potentially require an extra pipeline decode stage
1399 * whether there are implementations that can be thought of which do *not*
1400 introduce significant latency
1401 * whether it is possible to explicitly (through quite simply
1402 disabling Simple-V-Ext) or implicitly (detect the case all-vlens=1,
1403 all-simd-bitwidths=default) switch OFF any decoding, perhaps even to
1404 the extreme of skipping an entire pipeline stage (if one is needed)
1405 * whether packed bitwidth and associated regfile splitting is so complex
1406 that it should definitely, definitely be made mandatory that implementors
1407 move regfile splitting into the ALU, and what are the implications of that
1408 * whether even if that *is* made mandatory, is software-trapped
1409 "unsupported bitwidths" still desirable, on the basis that SIMD is such
1410 a complete nightmare that *even* having a software implementation is
1411 better, making Simple-V have more in common with a software API than
1412 anything else.
1413
1414 Whilst the above may seem to be severe minuses, there are some strong
1415 pluses:
1416
1417 * Significant reduction of V's opcode space: over 85%.
1418 * Smaller reduction of P's opcode space: around 10%.
1419 * The potential to use Compressed instructions in both Vector and SIMD
1420 due to the overloading of register meaning (implicit vectorisation,
1421 implicit packing)
1422 * Not only present but also future extensions automatically gain parallelism.
1423 * Already mentioned but worth emphasising: the simplification to compiler
1424 writers and assembly-level writers of having the same consistent ISA
1425 regardless of whether the internal level of parallelism (number of
1426 parallel ALUs) is only equal to one ("virtual" parallelism), or is
1427 greater than one, should not be underestimated.
1428
1429 ## Reducing Register Bank porting
1430
1431 This looks quite reasonable.
1432 <https://www.princeton.edu/~rblee/ELE572Papers/MultiBankRegFile_ISCA2000.pdf>
1433
1434 The main details are outlined on page 4.  They propose a 2-level register
1435 cache hierarchy, note that registers are typically only read once, that
1436 you never write back from upper to lower cache level but always go in a
1437 cycle lower -> upper -> ALU -> lower, and at the top of page 5 propose
1438 a scheme where you look ahead by only 2 instructions to determine which
1439 registers to bring into the cache.
1440
1441 The nice thing about a vector architecture is that you *know* that
1442 *even more* registers are going to be pulled in: Hwacha uses this fact
1443 to optimise L1/L2 cache-line usage (avoid thrashing), strangely enough
1444 by *introducing* deliberate latency into the execution phase.
1445
1446 ## Overflow registers in combination with predication
1447
1448 **TODO**: propose overflow registers be actually one of the integer regs
1449 (flowing to multiple regs).
1450
1451 **TODO**: propose "mask" (predication) registers likewise. combination with
1452 standard RV instructions and overflow registers extremely powerful, see
1453 Aspex ASP.
1454
1455 When integer overflow is stored in an easily-accessible bit (or another
1456 register), parallelisation turns this into a group of bits which can
1457 potentially be interacted with in predication, in interesting and powerful
1458 ways. For example, by taking the integer-overflow result as a predication
1459 field and shifting it by one, a predicated vectorised "add one" can emulate
1460 "carry" on arbitrary (unlimited) length addition.
1461
1462 However despite RVV having made room for floating-point exceptions, neither
1463 RVV nor base RV have taken integer-overflow (carry) into account, which
1464 makes proposing it quite challenging given that the relevant (Base) RV
1465 sections are frozen. Consequently it makes sense to forgo this feature.
1466
1467 ## Virtual Memory page-faults on LOAD/STORE
1468
1469
1470 ### Notes from conversations
1471
1472 > I was going through the C.LOAD / C.STORE section 12.3 of V2.3-Draft
1473 > riscv-isa-manual in order to work out how to re-map RVV onto the standard
1474 > ISA, and came across an interesting comments at the bottom of pages 75
1475 > and 76:
1476
1477 > " A common mechanism used in other ISAs to further reduce save/restore
1478 > code size is load- multiple and store-multiple instructions. "
1479
1480 > Fascinatingly, due to Simple-V proposing to use the *standard* register
1481 > file, both C.LOAD / C.STORE *and* LOAD / STORE would in effect be exactly
1482 > that: load-multiple and store-multiple instructions. Which brings us
1483 > on to this comment:
1484
1485 > "For virtual memory systems, some data accesses could be resident in
1486 > physical memory and
1487 > some could not, which requires a new restart mechanism for partially
1488 > executed instructions."
1489
1490 > Which then of course brings us to the interesting question: how does RVV
1491 > cope with the scenario when, particularly with LD.X (Indexed / indirect
1492 > loads), part-way through the loading a page fault occurs?
1493
1494 > Has this been noted or discussed before?
1495
1496 For applications-class platforms, the RVV exception model is
1497 element-precise (that is, if an exception occurs on element j of a
1498 vector instruction, elements 0..j-1 have completed execution and elements
1499 j+1..vl-1 have not executed).
1500
1501 Certain classes of embedded platforms where exceptions are always fatal
1502 might choose to offer resumable/swappable interrupts but not precise
1503 exceptions.
1504
1505
1506 > Is RVV designed in any way to be re-entrant?
1507
1508 Yes.
1509
1510
1511 > What would the implications be for instructions that were in a FIFO at
1512 > the time, in out-of-order and VLIW implementations, where partial decode
1513 > had taken place?
1514
1515 The usual bag of tricks for maintaining precise exceptions applies to
1516 vector machines as well. Register renaming makes the job easier, and
1517 it's relatively cheaper for vectors, since the control cost is amortized
1518 over longer registers.
1519
1520
1521 > Would it be reasonable at least to say *bypass* (and freeze) the
1522 > instruction FIFO (drop down to a single-issue execution model temporarily)
1523 > for the purposes of executing the instructions in the interrupt (whilst
1524 > setting up the VM page), then re-continue the instruction with all
1525 > state intact?
1526
1527 This approach has been done successfully, but it's desirable to be
1528 able to swap out the vector unit state to support context switches on
1529 exceptions that result in long-latency I/O.
1530
1531
1532 > Or would it be better to switch to an entirely separate secondary
1533 > hyperthread context?
1534
1535 > Does anyone have any ideas or know if there is any academic literature
1536 > on solutions to this problem?
1537
1538 The Vector VAX offered imprecise but restartable and swappable exceptions:
1539 http://mprc.pku.edu.cn/~liuxianhua/chn/corpus/Notes/articles/isca/1990/VAX%20vector%20architecture.pdf
1540
1541 Sec. 4.6 of Krste's dissertation assesses some of
1542 the tradeoffs and references a bunch of related work:
1543 http://people.eecs.berkeley.edu/~krste/thesis.pdf
1544
1545
1546 ----
1547
1548 Started reading section 4.6 of Krste's thesis, noted the "IEE85 F.P
1549 exceptions" and thought, "hmmm that could go into a CSR, must re-read
1550 the section on FP state CSRs in RVV 0.4-Draft again" then i suddenly
1551 thought, "ah ha! what if the memory exceptions were, instead of having
1552 an immediate exception thrown, were simply stored in a type of predication
1553 bit-field with a flag "error this element failed"?
1554
1555 Then, *after* the vector load (or store, or even operation) was
1556 performed, you could *then* raise an exception, at which point it
1557 would be possible (yes in software... I know....) to go "hmmm, these
1558 indexed operations didn't work, let's get them into memory by triggering
1559 page-loads", then *re-run the entire instruction* but this time with a
1560 "memory-predication CSR" that stops the already-performed operations
1561 (whether they be loads, stores or an arithmetic / FP operation) from
1562 being carried out a second time.
1563
1564 This theoretically could end up being done multiple times in an SMP
1565 environment, and also for LD.X there would be the remote outside annoying
1566 possibility that the indexed memory address could end up being modified.
1567
1568 The advantage would be that the order of execution need not be
1569 sequential, which potentially could have some big advantages.
1570 Am still thinking through the implications as any dependent operations
1571 (particularly ones already decoded and moved into the execution FIFO)
1572 would still be there (and stalled). hmmm.
1573
1574 ----
1575
1576 > > # assume internal parallelism of 8 and MAXVECTORLEN of 8
1577 > > VSETL r0, 8
1578 > > FADD x1, x2, x3
1579 >
1580 > > x3[0]: ok
1581 > > x3[1]: exception
1582 > > x3[2]: ok
1583 > > ...
1584 > > ...
1585 > > x3[7]: ok
1586 >
1587 > > what happens to result elements 2-7?  those may be *big* results
1588 > > (RV128)
1589 > > or in the RVV-Extended may be arbitrary bit-widths far greater.
1590 >
1591 >  (you replied:)
1592 >
1593 > Thrown away.
1594
1595 discussion then led to the question of OoO architectures
1596
1597 > The costs of the imprecise-exception model are greater than the benefit.
1598 > Software doesn't want to cope with it.  It's hard to debug.  You can't
1599 > migrate state between different microarchitectures--unless you force all
1600 > implementations to support the same imprecise-exception model, which would
1601 > greatly limit implementation flexibility.  (Less important, but still
1602 > relevant, is that the imprecise model increases the size of the context
1603 > structure, as the microarchitectural guts have to be spilled to memory.)
1604
1605
1606 ## Implementation Paradigms
1607
1608 TODO: assess various implementation paradigms. These are listed roughly
1609 in order of simplicity (minimum compliance, for ultra-light-weight
1610 embedded systems or to reduce design complexity and the burden of
1611 design implementation and compliance, in non-critical areas), right the
1612 way to high-performance systems.
1613
1614 * Full (or partial) software-emulated (via traps): full support for CSRs
1615 required, however when a register is used that is detected (in hardware)
1616 to be vectorised, an exception is thrown.
1617 * Single-issue In-order, reduced pipeline depth (traditional SIMD / DSP)
1618 * In-order 5+ stage pipelines with instruction FIFOs and mild register-renaming
1619 * Out-of-order with instruction FIFOs and aggressive register-renaming
1620 * VLIW
1621
1622 Also to be taken into consideration:
1623
1624 * "Virtual" vectorisation: single-issue loop, no internal ALU parallelism
1625 * Comphrensive vectorisation: FIFOs and internal parallelism
1626 * Hybrid Parallelism
1627
1628 # TODO Research
1629
1630 > For great floating point DSPs check TI’s C3x, C4X, and C6xx DSPs
1631
1632 Idea: basic simple butterfly swap on a few element indices, primarily targetted
1633 at SIMD / DSP. High-byte low-byte swapping, high-word low-word swapping,
1634 perhaps allow reindexing of permutations up to 4 elements? 8? Reason:
1635 such operations are less costly than a full indexed-shuffle, which requires
1636 a separate instruction cycle.
1637
1638 Predication "all zeros" needs to be "leave alone". Detection of
1639 ADD r1, rs1, rs0 cases result in nop on predication index 0, whereas
1640 ADD r0, rs1, rs2 is actually a desirable copy from r2 into r0.
1641 Destruction of destination indices requires a copy of the entire vector
1642 in advance to avoid.
1643
1644 # References
1645
1646 * SIMD considered harmful <https://www.sigarch.org/simd-instructions-considered-harmful/>
1647 * Link to first proposal <https://groups.google.com/a/groups.riscv.org/forum/#!topic/isa-dev/GuukrSjgBH8>
1648 * Recommendation by Jacob Bachmeyer to make zero-overhead loop an
1649 "implicit program-counter" <https://groups.google.com/a/groups.riscv.org/d/msg/isa-dev/vYVi95gF2Mo/SHz6a4_lAgAJ>
1650 * Re-continuing P-Extension proposal <https://groups.google.com/a/groups.riscv.org/forum/#!msg/isa-dev/IkLkQn3HvXQ/SEMyC9IlAgAJ>
1651 * First Draft P-SIMD (DSP) proposal <https://groups.google.com/a/groups.riscv.org/forum/#!topic/isa-dev/vYVi95gF2Mo>
1652 * B-Extension discussion <https://groups.google.com/a/groups.riscv.org/forum/#!topic/isa-dev/zi_7B15kj6s>
1653 * Broadcom VideoCore-IV <https://docs.broadcom.com/docs/12358545>
1654 Figure 2 P17 and Section 3 on P16.
1655 * Hwacha <https://www2.eecs.berkeley.edu/Pubs/TechRpts/2015/EECS-2015-262.html>
1656 * Hwacha <https://www2.eecs.berkeley.edu/Pubs/TechRpts/2015/EECS-2015-263.html>
1657 * Vector Workshop <http://riscv.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/riscv-vector-workshop-june2015.pdf>
1658 * Predication <https://groups.google.com/a/groups.riscv.org/forum/#!topic/isa-dev/XoP4BfYSLXA>
1659 * Branch Divergence <https://jbush001.github.io/2014/12/07/branch-divergence-in-parallel-kernels.html>
1660 * Life of Triangles (3D) <https://jbush001.github.io/2016/02/27/life-of-triangle.html>
1661 * Videocore-IV <https://github.com/hermanhermitage/videocoreiv/wiki/VideoCore-IV-3d-Graphics-Pipeline>
1662 * Discussion proposing CSRs that change ISA definition
1663 <https://groups.google.com/a/groups.riscv.org/forum/#!topic/isa-dev/InzQ1wr_3Ak>
1664 * Zero-overhead loops <https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/dbaa/66985cc730d4b44d79f519e96ec9c43ab5b7.pdf>
1665 * Multi-ported VLIW Register File Implementation <https://ce-publications.et.tudelft.nl/publications/1517_multiple_contexts_in_a_multiported_vliw_register_file_impl.pdf>
1666 * Fast context save/restore proposal <https://groups.google.com/a/groups.riscv.org/d/msgid/isa-dev/57F823FA.6030701%40gmail.com>
1667 * Register File Bank Cacheing <https://www.princeton.edu/~rblee/ELE572Papers/MultiBankRegFile_ISCA2000.pdf>
1668 * Expired Patent on Vector Virtual Memory solutions
1669 <https://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/fc/f6/e2/2cbee92fcd8743/US5895501.pdf>
1670 * Discussion on RVV "re-entrant" capabilities allowing operations to be
1671 restarted if an exception occurs (VM page-table miss)
1672 <https://groups.google.com/a/groups.riscv.org/d/msg/isa-dev/IuNFitTw9fM/CCKBUlzsAAAJ>
1673 * Dot Product Vector <https://people.eecs.berkeley.edu/~biancolin/papers/arith17.pdf>