This invention relates to branch instructions.
Parallel processing is an efficient form of information processing of concurrent events in a computing process. Parallel processing demands concurrent execution of many programs in a computer. Sequential processing or serial processing has all tasks performed sequentially at a single station whereas, pipelined processing has tasks performed at specialized stations. Computer code whether executed in parallel processing, pipelined or sequential processing machines involves branches in which an instruction stream may execute in a sequence and branch from the sequence to a different sequence of instructions.
Referring to
The hardware-based multithreaded processor 12 also includes a central controller 20 that assists in loading microcode control for other resources of the hardware-based multithreaded processor 12 and performs other general purpose computer type functions such as handling protocols, exceptions, extra support for packet processing where the microengines pass the packets off for more detailed processing such as in boundary conditions. In one embodiment, the processor 20 is a Strong Arm® (Arm is a trademark of ARM Limited, United Kingdom) based architecture. The general purpose microprocessor 20 has an operating system. Through the operating system the processor 20 can call functions to operate on microengines 22a–22f. The processor 20 can use any supported operating system preferably a real time operating system. For the core processor implemented as a Strong Arm architecture, operating systems such as, MicrosoftNT® real time, VXWorks and μCUS, a freeware operating system available over the Internet, can be used.
The hardware-based multithreaded processor 12 also includes a plurality of function microengines 22a–22f. Functional microengines (microengines) 22a–22f each maintain a plurality of program counters in hardware and states associated with the program counters. Effectively, a corresponding plurality of sets of threads can be simultaneously active on each of the microengines 22a–22f while only one is actually operating at any one time.
Microengines 22a–22f each have capabilities for processing four hardware threads. The microengines 22a–22f operate with shared resources including memory system 16 and bus interfaces 24 and 28. The memory system 16 includes a Synchronous Dynamic Random Access Memory (SDRAM) controller 26a and a Static Random Access Memory (SRAM) controller 26b. SDRAM memory 16a and SDRAM controller 26a are typically used for processing large volumes of data, e.g., processing of network payloads from network packets. The SRAM controller 26b and SRAM memory 16b are used in, e.g., networking packet processing, postscript processor, or as a processor for a storage subsystem, i.e., RAID disk storage, or for low latency, fast access tasks, e.g., accessing look-up tables, memory for the core processor 20, and so forth.
The processor 12 includes a bus interface 28 that couples the processor to the second bus 18. Bus interface 28 in one embodiment couples the processor 12 to the so-called FBUS 18 (FIFO bus). The processor 12 includes a second interface e.g., a PCI bus interface 24 that couples other system components that reside on the PCI 14 bus to the processor 12. The PCI bus interface 24, provides a high speed data path 24a to the SDRAM memory 16a. Through that path data can be moved quickly from the SDRAM 16a through the PCI bus 14, via direct memory access (DMA) transfers.
Each of the functional units are coupled to one or more internal buses. The internal buses are dual, 32 bit buses (i.e., one bus for read and one for write). The hardware-based multithreaded processor 12 also is constructed such that the sum of the bandwidths of the internal buses in the processor 12 exceed the bandwidth of external buses coupled to the processor 12. The processor 12 includes an internal core processor bus 32, e.g., an ASB bus (Advanced System Bus) that couples the processor core 20 to the memory controller 26a, 26c and to an ASB translator 30 described below. The ASB bus is a subset of the so called AMBA bus that is used with the Strong Arm processor core. The processor 12 also includes a private bus 34 that couples the microengine units to SRAM controller 26b, ASB translator 30 and FBUS interface 28. A memory bus 38 couples the memory controller 26a, 26b to the bus interfaces 24 and 28 and memory system 16 including flashrom 16c used for boot operations and so forth.
Referring to
The core processor 20 accesses the shared resources. The core processor 20 has a direct communication to the SDRAM controller 26a to the bus interface 24 and to SRAM controller 26b via bus 32. However, to access the microengines 22a–22f and transfer registers located at any of the microengines 22a–22f, the core processor 20 access the microengines 22a–22f via the ASB Translator 30 over bus 34. The ASB translator 30 can physically reside in the FBUS interface 28, but logically is distinct. The ASB Translator 30 performs an address translation between FBUS microengine transfer register locations and core processor addresses (i.e., ASB bus) so that the core processor 20 can access registers belonging to the microengines 22a–22c.
Although microengines 22 can use the register set to exchange data as described below, a scratchpad memory 27 is also provided to permit microengines to write data out to the memory for other microengines to read. The scratchpad 27 is coupled to bus 34.
The processor core 20 includes a RISC core 50 implemented in a five stage pipeline performing a single cycle shift of one operand or two operands in a single cycle, provides multiplication support and 32 bit barrel shift support. This RISC core 50 is a standard Strong Arm® architecture but it is implemented with a five stage pipeline for performance reasons. The processor core 20 also includes a 16 kilobyte instruction cache 52, an 8 kilobyte data cache 54 and a prefetch stream buffer 56. The core processor 20 performs arithmetic operations in parallel with memory writes and instruction fetches. The core processor 20 interfaces with other functional units via the ARM defined ASB bus. The ASB bus is a 32-bit bi-directional bus 32.
Referring to
In addition to event signals that are local to an executing thread, the microengines 22 employ signaling states that are global. With signaling states, an executing thread can broadcast a signal state to all microengines 22. Receive Request or Available signal, any and all threads in the microengines can branch on these signaling states. These signaling states can be used to determine availability of a resource or whether a resource is due for servicing.
The context event logic 74 has arbitration for the four (4) threads. In one embodiment, the arbitration is a round robin mechanism. Other techniques could be used including priority queuing or weighted fair queuing. The microengine 22f also includes an execution box (EBOX) data path 76 that includes an arithmetic logic unit 76a and general purpose register set 76b. The arithmetic logic unit 76a performs arithmetic and logical functions as well as shift functions. The arithmetic logic unit includes condition code bits that are used by instructions described below. The registers set 76b has a relatively large number of general purpose registers that are windowed as will be described so that they are relatively and absolutely addressable. The microengine 22f also includes a write transfer register stack 78 and a read transfer stack 80. These registers are also windowed so that they are relatively and absolutely addressable. Write transfer register stack 78 is where write data to a resource is located. Similarly, read register stack 80 is for return data from a shared resource. Subsequent to or concurrent with data arrival, an event signal from the respective shared resource e.g., the SRAM controller 26a, SDRAM controller 26b or core processor 20 will be provided to context event arbiter 74 which will then alert the thread that the data is available or has been sent. Both transfer register banks 78 and 80 are connected to the execution box (EBOX) 76 through a data path.
Referring to
The instruction set supported in the microengines 22a–22f support conditional branches. The worst case conditional branch latency (not including jumps) occurs when the branch decision is a result of condition codes being set by the previous microcontrol instruction. The latency is shown below in Table 1:
As shown in Table 1, it is not until cycle 4 that the condition codes of n1 are set, and the branch decision can be made (which in this case causes the branch path to be looked up in cycle 5). The microengine 22f incurs a 2-cycle branch latency penalty because it must abort operations n2 and n3 (the 2 microwords directly after the branch) in the pipe, before the branch path begins to fill the pipe with operation b1. If the branch is not taken, no microwords are aborted and execution continues normally. The microengines have several mechanisms to reduce or eliminate the effective branch latency.
The microengines support selectable deferred branches. Selectable deferring branches are when a microengine allows 1 or 2 micro instructions after the branch to execute before the branch takes effect (i.e. the effect of the branch is “deferred” in time). Thus, if useful work can be found to fill the wasted cycles after the branch microword, then the branch latency can be hidden. A 1-cycle deferred branch is shown below in Table 2 where n2 is allowed to execute after cb, but before b1:
A 2-cycle deferred branch is shown in TABLE 3 where n2 and n3 are both allowed to complete before the branch to b1 occurs. Note that a 2-cycle branch deferment is only allowed when the condition codes are set on the microword preceding the branch.
The microengines also support condition code evaluation. If the condition codes upon which a branch decision are made are set 2 or more microwords before the branch, then 1 cycle of branch latency can be eliminated because the branch decision can be made 1 cycle earlier as in Table 4.
In this example, n1 sets the condition codes and n2 does not set the conditions codes. Therefore, the branch decision can be made at cycle 4 (rather than 5), to eliminate 1 cycle of branch latency. In the example in Table 5 the 1-cycle branch deferment and early setting of condition codes are combined to completely hide the branch latency. That is, the condition codes (cc's) are set 2 cycles before a 1-cycle deferred branch.
In the case where the condition codes cannot be set early (i.e. they are set in the microword preceding the branch), the microengine supports branch guessing which attempts to reduce the 1 cycle of exposed branch latency that remains. By “guessing” the branch path or the sequential path, the microsequencer pre-fetches the guessed path 1 cycle before it definitely knows what path to execute. If it guessed correctly, 1 cycle of branch latency is eliminated as shown in Table 6.
If the microcode guessed a branch taken incorrectly, the microengine still only wastes 1 cycle as in TABLE 7
However, the latency penalty is distributed differently when microcode guesses a branch is not taken. For guess branch NOT taken/branch is NOT taken there are no wasted cycles as in Table 8.
However for guess branch NOT taken /branch is taken there are 2 wasted cycles as in Table 9.
The microengine can combine branch guessing with 1-cycle branch deferment to improve the result further. For guess branch taken with 1-cycle deferred branch/branch is taken is in Table 10.
In the case above, the 2 cycles of branch latency are hidden by the execution of n2, and by correctly guessing the branch direction.
If microcode guesses incorrectly, 1 cycle of branch latency remains exposed as in Table 11 (guess branch taken with 1-cycle deferred branch/branch is NOT taken).
If microcode correctly guesses a branch NOT taken, then the pipeline flows sequentially in the normal unperturbed case. If microcode incorrectly guesses branch NOT taken, the microengine again exposes 1 cycle of unproductive execution as shown in Table 12.
In the case of a jump instruction, 3 extra cycles of latency are incurred because the branch address is not known until the end of the cycle in which the jump is in the ALU stage (Table 13).
Referring to
Usually branch instruction requires that the processor shift bits into a control path where the processor has condition codes from an ALU and then performs the branch operation. This branch instruction allows observability of branch codes. Thus, rather than having the processor push the branch codes out into the control path the branches can be controlled from the data path of the processor.
BR_BCLR, BR_BSET are branch instructions that branch to an instruction at a specified label when a specified bit of a register specified by the instruction is cleared or set. These instructions set the condition codes.
The field reg A is an address of a context-relative transfer register or general-purpose register that holds the operand. The field bit_position A is a number that specifies a bit position in a longword. Bit 0 is the least significant bit. Valid bit_position values are 0 through 31. The field label# is a symbolic label corresponding to the address of an instruction to branch to. The value optional_token can have several values. The value is selected by the programmer based on programming considerations. The tokens can be:
Defer 1 which execute the instruction following the branch instruction before performing the branch operation.
Defer 2 which executes two instructions following the branch instruction before performing the branch operation. (In some implementations this may not be allowed with guess_branch.)
Defer 3 which executes three instructions following the branch instruction before performing the branch operation. (In some implementations this may not be allowed with guess_branch.)
Another token can be “guess_branch” which causes the branch instruction to prefetche the instruction for the “branch taken” condition rather than the next sequential instruction. This token guess_branch can be used with the defer token, e.g., defer 1 to improve performance. In some architectures this might not be allowed with defer 2 or defer 3.
Referring to
Across banks A and B, the register set 76b is also organized into four windows 76b0–76b3 of 32 registers that are relatively addressable per thread. Thus, thread_0 will find its register 0 at 77a (register 0), the thread_1 will find its register_0 at 77b (register 32), thread_2 will find its register_0 at 77c (register 64), and thread 3 at 77d (register 96). Relative addressing is supported so that multiple threads can use the exact same control store and locations but access different windows of register and perform different functions. The use of register window addressing and bank addressing provide the requisite read bandwidth while using only dual ported RAMS in the microengine 22f.
These windowed registers do not have to save data from context switch to context switch so that the normal push and pop of a context swap file or stack is eliminated. Context switching here has a 0 cycle overhead for changing from one context to another. Relative register addressing divides the register banks into windows across the address width of the general purpose register set. Relative addressing allows access any of the windows relative to the starting point of the window. Absolute addressing is also supported in this architecture where any one of the absolute registers may be accessed by any of the threads by providing the exact address of the register.
Addressing of general purpose registers 78 can occur in 2 modes depending on the microword format. The two modes are absolute and relative. In absolute mode, addressing of a register address is directly specified in 7-bit source field (a6–a0 or b6–b0), as shown in Table 14:
register address directly specified in 8-bit dest field (d7–d0) Table 15:
If <a6:a5>=1,1, <b6:b5>=1,1, or <d7:d6>=1,1 then the lower bits are interpreted as a context-relative address field (described below). When a non-relative A or B source address is specified in the A, B absolute field, only the lower half of the SRAM/ASB and SDRAM address spaces can be addressed. Effectively, reading absolute SRAM/SDRAM devices has the effective address space; however, since this restriction does not apply to the dest field, writing the SRAM/SDRAM still uses the full address space.
In relative mode, addresses a specified address is offset within context space as defined by a 5-bit source field (a4–a0 or b4–b0) Table 16:
or as defined by the 6-bit dest field (d5–d0) Table 17:
If <d5:d4>=1,1, then the destination address does not address a valid register, thus, no dest operand is written back.
Other embodiments are within the scope of the appended claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US00/23994 | 8/31/2000 | WO | 00 | 11/7/2002 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO01/16722 | 3/8/2001 | WO | A |
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