1//===-- AMDGPUKernelCodeT.h - Print AMDGPU assembly code ---------*- C++ -*-===//
2//
3//                     The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
4//
5// This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source
6// License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
7//
8//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
9/// \file AMDKernelCodeT.h
10//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
11
12#ifndef AMDKERNELCODET_H
13#define AMDKERNELCODET_H
14
15#include "llvm/MC/SubtargetFeature.h"
16
17#include <cstddef>
18#include <cstdint>
19
20#include "llvm/Support/Debug.h"
21//---------------------------------------------------------------------------//
22// AMD Kernel Code, and its dependencies                                     //
23//---------------------------------------------------------------------------//
24
25typedef uint8_t hsa_powertwo8_t;
26typedef uint32_t hsa_ext_code_kind_t;
27typedef uint8_t hsa_ext_brig_profile8_t;
28typedef uint8_t hsa_ext_brig_machine_model8_t;
29typedef uint64_t hsa_ext_control_directive_present64_t;
30typedef uint16_t hsa_ext_exception_kind16_t;
31typedef uint32_t hsa_ext_code_kind32_t;
32
33typedef struct hsa_dim3_s {
34  uint32_t x;
35  uint32_t y;
36  uint32_t z;
37} hsa_dim3_t;
38
39/// The version of the amd_*_code_t struct. Minor versions must be
40/// backward compatible.
41typedef uint32_t amd_code_version32_t;
42enum amd_code_version_t {
43  AMD_CODE_VERSION_MAJOR = 0,
44  AMD_CODE_VERSION_MINOR = 1
45};
46
47/// The values used to define the number of bytes to use for the
48/// swizzle element size.
49enum amd_element_byte_size_t {
50  AMD_ELEMENT_2_BYTES = 0,
51  AMD_ELEMENT_4_BYTES = 1,
52  AMD_ELEMENT_8_BYTES = 2,
53  AMD_ELEMENT_16_BYTES = 3
54};
55
56/// Shader program settings for CS. Contains COMPUTE_PGM_RSRC1 and
57/// COMPUTE_PGM_RSRC2 registers.
58typedef uint64_t amd_compute_pgm_resource_register64_t;
59
60/// Every amd_*_code_t has the following properties, which are composed of
61/// a number of bit fields. Every bit field has a mask (AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_*),
62/// bit width (AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_*_WIDTH, and bit shift amount
63/// (AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_*_SHIFT) for convenient access. Unused bits must be 0.
64///
65/// (Note that bit fields cannot be used as their layout is
66/// implementation defined in the C standard and so cannot be used to
67/// specify an ABI)
68typedef uint32_t amd_code_property32_t;
69enum amd_code_property_mask_t {
70
71  /// Enable the setup of the SGPR user data registers
72  /// (AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_*), see documentation of amd_kernel_code_t
73  /// for initial register state.
74  ///
75  /// The total number of SGPRuser data registers requested must not
76  /// exceed 16. Any requests beyond 16 will be ignored.
77  ///
78  /// Used to set COMPUTE_PGM_RSRC2.USER_SGPR (set to total count of
79  /// SGPR user data registers enabled up to 16).
80
81  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_PRIVATE_SEGMENT_BUFFER_SHIFT = 0,
82  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_PRIVATE_SEGMENT_BUFFER_WIDTH = 1,
83  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_PRIVATE_SEGMENT_BUFFER = ((1 << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_PRIVATE_SEGMENT_BUFFER_WIDTH) - 1) << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_PRIVATE_SEGMENT_BUFFER_SHIFT,
84
85  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_DISPATCH_PTR_SHIFT = 1,
86  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_DISPATCH_PTR_WIDTH = 1,
87  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_DISPATCH_PTR = ((1 << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_DISPATCH_PTR_WIDTH) - 1) << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_DISPATCH_PTR_SHIFT,
88
89  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_QUEUE_PTR_SHIFT = 2,
90  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_QUEUE_PTR_WIDTH = 1,
91  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_QUEUE_PTR = ((1 << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_QUEUE_PTR_WIDTH) - 1) << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_QUEUE_PTR_SHIFT,
92
93  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_KERNARG_SEGMENT_PTR_SHIFT = 3,
94  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_KERNARG_SEGMENT_PTR_WIDTH = 1,
95  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_KERNARG_SEGMENT_PTR = ((1 << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_KERNARG_SEGMENT_PTR_WIDTH) - 1) << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_KERNARG_SEGMENT_PTR_SHIFT,
96
97  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_DISPATCH_ID_SHIFT = 4,
98  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_DISPATCH_ID_WIDTH = 1,
99  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_DISPATCH_ID = ((1 << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_DISPATCH_ID_WIDTH) - 1) << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_DISPATCH_ID_SHIFT,
100
101  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_FLAT_SCRATCH_INIT_SHIFT = 5,
102  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_FLAT_SCRATCH_INIT_WIDTH = 1,
103  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_FLAT_SCRATCH_INIT = ((1 << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_FLAT_SCRATCH_INIT_WIDTH) - 1) << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_FLAT_SCRATCH_INIT_SHIFT,
104
105  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_PRIVATE_SEGMENT_SIZE_SHIFT = 6,
106  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_PRIVATE_SEGMENT_SIZE_WIDTH = 1,
107  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_PRIVATE_SEGMENT_SIZE = ((1 << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_PRIVATE_SEGMENT_SIZE_WIDTH) - 1) << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_PRIVATE_SEGMENT_SIZE_SHIFT,
108
109  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_GRID_WORKGROUP_COUNT_X_SHIFT = 7,
110  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_GRID_WORKGROUP_COUNT_X_WIDTH = 1,
111  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_GRID_WORKGROUP_COUNT_X = ((1 << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_GRID_WORKGROUP_COUNT_X_WIDTH) - 1) << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_GRID_WORKGROUP_COUNT_X_SHIFT,
112
113  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_GRID_WORKGROUP_COUNT_Y_SHIFT = 8,
114  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_GRID_WORKGROUP_COUNT_Y_WIDTH = 1,
115  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_GRID_WORKGROUP_COUNT_Y = ((1 << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_GRID_WORKGROUP_COUNT_Y_WIDTH) - 1) << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_GRID_WORKGROUP_COUNT_Y_SHIFT,
116
117  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_GRID_WORKGROUP_COUNT_Z_SHIFT = 9,
118  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_GRID_WORKGROUP_COUNT_Z_WIDTH = 1,
119  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_GRID_WORKGROUP_COUNT_Z = ((1 << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_GRID_WORKGROUP_COUNT_Z_WIDTH) - 1) << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_SGPR_GRID_WORKGROUP_COUNT_Z_SHIFT,
120
121  /// Control wave ID base counter for GDS ordered-append. Used to set
122  /// COMPUTE_DISPATCH_INITIATOR.ORDERED_APPEND_ENBL. (Not sure if
123  /// ORDERED_APPEND_MODE also needs to be settable)
124  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_ORDERED_APPEND_GDS_SHIFT = 10,
125  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_ORDERED_APPEND_GDS_WIDTH = 1,
126  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_ORDERED_APPEND_GDS = ((1 << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_ORDERED_APPEND_GDS_WIDTH) - 1) << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_ENABLE_ORDERED_APPEND_GDS_SHIFT,
127
128  /// The interleave (swizzle) element size in bytes required by the
129  /// code for private memory. This must be 2, 4, 8 or 16. This value
130  /// is provided to the finalizer when it is invoked and is recorded
131  /// here. The hardware will interleave the memory requests of each
132  /// lane of a wavefront by this element size to ensure each
133  /// work-item gets a distinct memory memory location. Therefore, the
134  /// finalizer ensures that all load and store operations done to
135  /// private memory do not exceed this size. For example, if the
136  /// element size is 4 (32-bits or dword) and a 64-bit value must be
137  /// loaded, the finalizer will generate two 32-bit loads. This
138  /// ensures that the interleaving will get the work-item
139  /// specific dword for both halves of the 64-bit value. If it just
140  /// did a 64-bit load then it would get one dword which belonged to
141  /// its own work-item, but the second dword would belong to the
142  /// adjacent lane work-item since the interleaving is in dwords.
143  ///
144  /// The value used must match the value that the runtime configures
145  /// the GPU flat scratch (SH_STATIC_MEM_CONFIG.ELEMENT_SIZE). This
146  /// is generally DWORD.
147  ///
148  /// uSE VALUES FROM THE AMD_ELEMENT_BYTE_SIZE_T ENUM.
149  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_PRIVATE_ELEMENT_SIZE_SHIFT = 11,
150  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_PRIVATE_ELEMENT_SIZE_WIDTH = 2,
151  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_PRIVATE_ELEMENT_SIZE = ((1 << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_PRIVATE_ELEMENT_SIZE_WIDTH) - 1) << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_PRIVATE_ELEMENT_SIZE_SHIFT,
152
153  /// Are global memory addresses 64 bits. Must match
154  /// amd_kernel_code_t.hsail_machine_model ==
155  /// HSA_MACHINE_LARGE. Must also match
156  /// SH_MEM_CONFIG.PTR32 (GFX6 (SI)/GFX7 (CI)),
157  /// SH_MEM_CONFIG.ADDRESS_MODE (GFX8 (VI)+).
158  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_IS_PTR64_SHIFT = 13,
159  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_IS_PTR64_WIDTH = 1,
160  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_IS_PTR64 = ((1 << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_IS_PTR64_WIDTH) - 1) << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_IS_PTR64_SHIFT,
161
162  /// Indicate if the generated ISA is using a dynamically sized call
163  /// stack. This can happen if calls are implemented using a call
164  /// stack and recursion, alloca or calls to indirect functions are
165  /// present. In these cases the Finalizer cannot compute the total
166  /// private segment size at compile time. In this case the
167  /// workitem_private_segment_byte_size only specifies the statically
168  /// know private segment size, and additional space must be added
169  /// for the call stack.
170  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_IS_DYNAMIC_CALLSTACK_SHIFT = 14,
171  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_IS_DYNAMIC_CALLSTACK_WIDTH = 1,
172  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_IS_DYNAMIC_CALLSTACK = ((1 << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_IS_DYNAMIC_CALLSTACK_WIDTH) - 1) << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_IS_DYNAMIC_CALLSTACK_SHIFT,
173
174  /// Indicate if code generated has support for debugging.
175  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_IS_DEBUG_SUPPORTED_SHIFT = 15,
176  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_IS_DEBUG_SUPPORTED_WIDTH = 1,
177  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_IS_DEBUG_SUPPORTED = ((1 << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_IS_DEBUG_SUPPORTED_WIDTH) - 1) << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_IS_DEBUG_SUPPORTED_SHIFT,
178
179  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_IS_XNACK_SUPPORTED_SHIFT = 15,
180  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_IS_XNACK_SUPPORTED_WIDTH = 1,
181  AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_IS_XNACK_SUPPORTED = ((1 << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_IS_XNACK_SUPPORTED_WIDTH) - 1) << AMD_CODE_PROPERTY_IS_XNACK_SUPPORTED_SHIFT
182};
183
184/// @brief The hsa_ext_control_directives_t specifies the values for the HSAIL
185/// control directives. These control how the finalizer generates code. This
186/// struct is used both as an argument to hsaFinalizeKernel to specify values for
187/// the control directives, and is used in HsaKernelCode to record the values of
188/// the control directives that the finalize used when generating the code which
189/// either came from the finalizer argument or explicit HSAIL control
190/// directives. See the definition of the control directives in HSA Programmer's
191/// Reference Manual which also defines how the values specified as finalizer
192/// arguments have to agree with the control directives in the HSAIL code.
193typedef struct hsa_ext_control_directives_s {
194  /// This is a bit set indicating which control directives have been
195  /// specified. If the value is 0 then there are no control directives specified
196  /// and the rest of the fields can be ignored. The bits are accessed using the
197  /// hsa_ext_control_directives_present_mask_t. Any control directive that is not
198  /// enabled in this bit set must have the value of all 0s.
199  hsa_ext_control_directive_present64_t enabled_control_directives;
200
201  /// If enableBreakExceptions is not enabled then must be 0, otherwise must be
202  /// non-0 and specifies the set of HSAIL exceptions that must have the BREAK
203  /// policy enabled. If this set is not empty then the generated code may have
204  /// lower performance than if the set is empty. If the kernel being finalized
205  /// has any enablebreakexceptions control directives, then the values specified
206  /// by this argument are unioned with the values in these control
207  /// directives. If any of the functions the kernel calls have an
208  /// enablebreakexceptions control directive, then they must be equal or a
209  /// subset of, this union.
210  hsa_ext_exception_kind16_t enable_break_exceptions;
211
212  /// If enableDetectExceptions is not enabled then must be 0, otherwise must be
213  /// non-0 and specifies the set of HSAIL exceptions that must have the DETECT
214  /// policy enabled. If this set is not empty then the generated code may have
215  /// lower performance than if the set is empty. However, an implementation
216  /// should endeavour to make the performance impact small. If the kernel being
217  /// finalized has any enabledetectexceptions control directives, then the
218  /// values specified by this argument are unioned with the values in these
219  /// control directives. If any of the functions the kernel calls have an
220  /// enabledetectexceptions control directive, then they must be equal or a
221  /// subset of, this union.
222  hsa_ext_exception_kind16_t enable_detect_exceptions;
223
224  /// If maxDynamicGroupSize is not enabled then must be 0, and any amount of
225  /// dynamic group segment can be allocated for a dispatch, otherwise the value
226  /// specifies the maximum number of bytes of dynamic group segment that can be
227  /// allocated for a dispatch. If the kernel being finalized has any
228  /// maxdynamicsize control directives, then the values must be the same, and
229  /// must be the same as this argument if it is enabled. This value can be used
230  /// by the finalizer to determine the maximum number of bytes of group memory
231  /// used by each work-group by adding this value to the group memory required
232  /// for all group segment variables used by the kernel and all functions it
233  /// calls, and group memory used to implement other HSAIL features such as
234  /// fbarriers and the detect exception operations. This can allow the finalizer
235  /// to determine the expected number of work-groups that can be executed by a
236  /// compute unit and allow more resources to be allocated to the work-items if
237  /// it is known that fewer work-groups can be executed due to group memory
238  /// limitations.
239  uint32_t max_dynamic_group_size;
240
241  /// If maxFlatGridSize is not enabled then must be 0, otherwise must be greater
242  /// than 0. See HSA Programmer's Reference Manual description of
243  /// maxflatgridsize control directive.
244  uint32_t max_flat_grid_size;
245
246  /// If maxFlatWorkgroupSize is not enabled then must be 0, otherwise must be
247  /// greater than 0. See HSA Programmer's Reference Manual description of
248  /// maxflatworkgroupsize control directive.
249  uint32_t max_flat_workgroup_size;
250
251  /// If requestedWorkgroupsPerCu is not enabled then must be 0, and the
252  /// finalizer is free to generate ISA that may result in any number of
253  /// work-groups executing on a single compute unit. Otherwise, the finalizer
254  /// should attempt to generate ISA that will allow the specified number of
255  /// work-groups to execute on a single compute unit. This is only a hint and
256  /// can be ignored by the finalizer. If the kernel being finalized, or any of
257  /// the functions it calls, has a requested control directive, then the values
258  /// must be the same. This can be used to determine the number of resources
259  /// that should be allocated to a single work-group and work-item. For example,
260  /// a low value may allow more resources to be allocated, resulting in higher
261  /// per work-item performance, as it is known there will never be more than the
262  /// specified number of work-groups actually executing on the compute
263  /// unit. Conversely, a high value may allocate fewer resources, resulting in
264  /// lower per work-item performance, which is offset by the fact it allows more
265  /// work-groups to actually execute on the compute unit.
266  uint32_t requested_workgroups_per_cu;
267
268  /// If not enabled then all elements for Dim3 must be 0, otherwise every
269  /// element must be greater than 0. See HSA Programmer's Reference Manual
270  /// description of requiredgridsize control directive.
271  hsa_dim3_t required_grid_size;
272
273  /// If requiredWorkgroupSize is not enabled then all elements for Dim3 must be
274  /// 0, and the produced code can be dispatched with any legal work-group range
275  /// consistent with the dispatch dimensions. Otherwise, the code produced must
276  /// always be dispatched with the specified work-group range. No element of the
277  /// specified range must be 0. It must be consistent with required_dimensions
278  /// and max_flat_workgroup_size. If the kernel being finalized, or any of the
279  /// functions it calls, has a requiredworkgroupsize control directive, then the
280  /// values must be the same. Specifying a value can allow the finalizer to
281  /// optimize work-group id operations, and if the number of work-items in the
282  /// work-group is less than the WAVESIZE then barrier operations can be
283  /// optimized to just a memory fence.
284  hsa_dim3_t required_workgroup_size;
285
286  /// If requiredDim is not enabled then must be 0 and the produced kernel code
287  /// can be dispatched with 1, 2 or 3 dimensions. If enabled then the value is
288  /// 1..3 and the code produced must only be dispatched with a dimension that
289  /// matches. Other values are illegal. If the kernel being finalized, or any of
290  /// the functions it calls, has a requireddimsize control directive, then the
291  /// values must be the same. This can be used to optimize the code generated to
292  /// compute the absolute and flat work-group and work-item id, and the dim
293  /// HSAIL operations.
294  uint8_t required_dim;
295
296  /// Reserved. Must be 0.
297  uint8_t reserved[75];
298} hsa_ext_control_directives_t;
299
300/// AMD Kernel Code Object (amd_kernel_code_t). GPU CP uses the AMD Kernel
301/// Code Object to set up the hardware to execute the kernel dispatch.
302///
303/// Initial Kernel Register State.
304///
305/// Initial kernel register state will be set up by CP/SPI prior to the start
306/// of execution of every wavefront. This is limited by the constraints of the
307/// current hardware.
308///
309/// The order of the SGPR registers is defined, but the Finalizer can specify
310/// which ones are actually setup in the amd_kernel_code_t object using the
311/// enable_sgpr_* bit fields. The register numbers used for enabled registers
312/// are dense starting at SGPR0: the first enabled register is SGPR0, the next
313/// enabled register is SGPR1 etc.; disabled registers do not have an SGPR
314/// number.
315///
316/// The initial SGPRs comprise up to 16 User SRGPs that are set up by CP and
317/// apply to all waves of the grid. It is possible to specify more than 16 User
318/// SGPRs using the enable_sgpr_* bit fields, in which case only the first 16
319/// are actually initialized. These are then immediately followed by the System
320/// SGPRs that are set up by ADC/SPI and can have different values for each wave
321/// of the grid dispatch.
322///
323/// SGPR register initial state is defined as follows:
324///
325/// Private Segment Buffer (enable_sgpr_private_segment_buffer):
326///   Number of User SGPR registers: 4. V# that can be used, together with
327///   Scratch Wave Offset as an offset, to access the Private/Spill/Arg
328///   segments using a segment address. It must be set as follows:
329///     - Base address: of the scratch memory area used by the dispatch. It
330///       does not include the scratch wave offset. It will be the per process
331///       SH_HIDDEN_PRIVATE_BASE_VMID plus any offset from this dispatch (for
332///       example there may be a per pipe offset, or per AQL Queue offset).
333///     - Stride + data_format: Element Size * Index Stride (???)
334///     - Cache swizzle: ???
335///     - Swizzle enable: SH_STATIC_MEM_CONFIG.SWIZZLE_ENABLE (must be 1 for
336///       scratch)
337///     - Num records: Flat Scratch Work Item Size / Element Size (???)
338///     - Dst_sel_*: ???
339///     - Num_format: ???
340///     - Element_size: SH_STATIC_MEM_CONFIG.ELEMENT_SIZE (will be DWORD, must
341///       agree with amd_kernel_code_t.privateElementSize)
342///     - Index_stride: SH_STATIC_MEM_CONFIG.INDEX_STRIDE (will be 64 as must
343///       be number of wavefront lanes for scratch, must agree with
344///       amd_kernel_code_t.wavefrontSize)
345///     - Add tid enable: 1
346///     - ATC: from SH_MEM_CONFIG.PRIVATE_ATC,
347///     - Hash_enable: ???
348///     - Heap: ???
349///     - Mtype: from SH_STATIC_MEM_CONFIG.PRIVATE_MTYPE
350///     - Type: 0 (a buffer) (???)
351///
352/// Dispatch Ptr (enable_sgpr_dispatch_ptr):
353///   Number of User SGPR registers: 2. 64 bit address of AQL dispatch packet
354///   for kernel actually executing.
355///
356/// Queue Ptr (enable_sgpr_queue_ptr):
357///   Number of User SGPR registers: 2. 64 bit address of AmdQueue object for
358///   AQL queue on which the dispatch packet was queued.
359///
360/// Kernarg Segment Ptr (enable_sgpr_kernarg_segment_ptr):
361///   Number of User SGPR registers: 2. 64 bit address of Kernarg segment. This
362///   is directly copied from the kernargPtr in the dispatch packet. Having CP
363///   load it once avoids loading it at the beginning of every wavefront.
364///
365/// Dispatch Id (enable_sgpr_dispatch_id):
366///   Number of User SGPR registers: 2. 64 bit Dispatch ID of the dispatch
367///   packet being executed.
368///
369/// Flat Scratch Init (enable_sgpr_flat_scratch_init):
370///   Number of User SGPR registers: 2. This is 2 SGPRs.
371///
372///   For CI/VI:
373///     The first SGPR is a 32 bit byte offset from SH_MEM_HIDDEN_PRIVATE_BASE
374///     to base of memory for scratch for this dispatch. This is the same offset
375///     used in computing the Scratch Segment Buffer base address. The value of
376///     Scratch Wave Offset must be added by the kernel code and moved to
377///     SGPRn-4 for use as the FLAT SCRATCH BASE in flat memory instructions.
378///
379///     The second SGPR is 32 bit byte size of a single work-item's scratch
380///     memory usage. This is directly loaded from the dispatch packet Private
381///     Segment Byte Size and rounded up to a multiple of DWORD.
382///
383///     \todo [Does CP need to round this to >4 byte alignment?]
384///
385///     The kernel code must move to SGPRn-3 for use as the FLAT SCRATCH SIZE in
386///     flat memory instructions. Having CP load it once avoids loading it at
387///     the beginning of every wavefront.
388///
389///   For PI:
390///     This is the 64 bit base address of the scratch backing memory for
391///     allocated by CP for this dispatch.
392///
393/// Private Segment Size (enable_sgpr_private_segment_size):
394///   Number of User SGPR registers: 1. The 32 bit byte size of a single
395///   work-item's scratch memory allocation. This is the value from the dispatch
396///   packet. Private Segment Byte Size rounded up by CP to a multiple of DWORD.
397///
398///   \todo [Does CP need to round this to >4 byte alignment?]
399///
400///   Having CP load it once avoids loading it at the beginning of every
401///   wavefront.
402///
403///   \todo [This will not be used for CI/VI since it is the same value as
404///   the second SGPR of Flat Scratch Init. However, it is need for PI which
405///   changes meaning of Flat Scratchg Init..]
406///
407/// Grid Work-Group Count X (enable_sgpr_grid_workgroup_count_x):
408///   Number of User SGPR registers: 1. 32 bit count of the number of
409///   work-groups in the X dimension for the grid being executed. Computed from
410///   the fields in the HsaDispatchPacket as
411///   ((gridSize.x+workgroupSize.x-1)/workgroupSize.x).
412///
413/// Grid Work-Group Count Y (enable_sgpr_grid_workgroup_count_y):
414///   Number of User SGPR registers: 1. 32 bit count of the number of
415///   work-groups in the Y dimension for the grid being executed. Computed from
416///   the fields in the HsaDispatchPacket as
417///   ((gridSize.y+workgroupSize.y-1)/workgroupSize.y).
418///
419///   Only initialized if <16 previous SGPRs initialized.
420///
421/// Grid Work-Group Count Z (enable_sgpr_grid_workgroup_count_z):
422///   Number of User SGPR registers: 1. 32 bit count of the number of
423///   work-groups in the Z dimension for the grid being executed. Computed
424///   from the fields in the HsaDispatchPacket as
425///   ((gridSize.z+workgroupSize.z-1)/workgroupSize.z).
426///
427///   Only initialized if <16 previous SGPRs initialized.
428///
429/// Work-Group Id X (enable_sgpr_workgroup_id_x):
430///   Number of System SGPR registers: 1. 32 bit work group id in X dimension
431///   of grid for wavefront. Always present.
432///
433/// Work-Group Id Y (enable_sgpr_workgroup_id_y):
434///   Number of System SGPR registers: 1. 32 bit work group id in Y dimension
435///   of grid for wavefront.
436///
437/// Work-Group Id Z (enable_sgpr_workgroup_id_z):
438///   Number of System SGPR registers: 1. 32 bit work group id in Z dimension
439///   of grid for wavefront. If present then Work-group Id Y will also be
440///   present
441///
442/// Work-Group Info (enable_sgpr_workgroup_info):
443///   Number of System SGPR registers: 1. {first_wave, 14'b0000,
444///   ordered_append_term[10:0], threadgroup_size_in_waves[5:0]}
445///
446/// Private Segment Wave Byte Offset
447/// (enable_sgpr_private_segment_wave_byte_offset):
448///   Number of System SGPR registers: 1. 32 bit byte offset from base of
449///   dispatch scratch base. Must be used as an offset with Private/Spill/Arg
450///   segment address when using Scratch Segment Buffer. It must be added to
451///   Flat Scratch Offset if setting up FLAT SCRATCH for flat addressing.
452///
453///
454/// The order of the VGPR registers is defined, but the Finalizer can specify
455/// which ones are actually setup in the amd_kernel_code_t object using the
456/// enableVgpr*  bit fields. The register numbers used for enabled registers
457/// are dense starting at VGPR0: the first enabled register is VGPR0, the next
458/// enabled register is VGPR1 etc.; disabled registers do not have an VGPR
459/// number.
460///
461/// VGPR register initial state is defined as follows:
462///
463/// Work-Item Id X (always initialized):
464///   Number of registers: 1. 32 bit work item id in X dimension of work-group
465///   for wavefront lane.
466///
467/// Work-Item Id X (enable_vgpr_workitem_id > 0):
468///   Number of registers: 1. 32 bit work item id in Y dimension of work-group
469///   for wavefront lane.
470///
471/// Work-Item Id X (enable_vgpr_workitem_id > 0):
472///   Number of registers: 1. 32 bit work item id in Z dimension of work-group
473///   for wavefront lane.
474///
475///
476/// The setting of registers is being done by existing GPU hardware as follows:
477///   1) SGPRs before the Work-Group Ids are set by CP using the 16 User Data
478///      registers.
479///   2) Work-group Id registers X, Y, Z are set by SPI which supports any
480///      combination including none.
481///   3) Scratch Wave Offset is also set by SPI which is why its value cannot
482///      be added into the value Flat Scratch Offset which would avoid the
483///      Finalizer generated prolog having to do the add.
484///   4) The VGPRs are set by SPI which only supports specifying either (X),
485///      (X, Y) or (X, Y, Z).
486///
487/// Flat Scratch Dispatch Offset and Flat Scratch Size are adjacent SGRRs so
488/// they can be moved as a 64 bit value to the hardware required SGPRn-3 and
489/// SGPRn-4 respectively using the Finalizer ?FLAT_SCRATCH? Register.
490///
491/// The global segment can be accessed either using flat operations or buffer
492/// operations. If buffer operations are used then the Global Buffer used to
493/// access HSAIL Global/Readonly/Kernarg (which are combine) segments using a
494/// segment address is not passed into the kernel code by CP since its base
495/// address is always 0. Instead the Finalizer generates prolog code to
496/// initialize 4 SGPRs with a V# that has the following properties, and then
497/// uses that in the buffer instructions:
498///   - base address of 0
499///   - no swizzle
500///   - ATC=1
501///   - MTYPE set to support memory coherence specified in
502///     amd_kernel_code_t.globalMemoryCoherence
503///
504/// When the Global Buffer is used to access the Kernarg segment, must add the
505/// dispatch packet kernArgPtr to a kernarg segment address before using this V#.
506/// Alternatively scalar loads can be used if the kernarg offset is uniform, as
507/// the kernarg segment is constant for the duration of the kernel execution.
508///
509
510typedef struct amd_kernel_code_s {
511  uint32_t amd_kernel_code_version_major;
512  uint32_t amd_kernel_code_version_minor;
513  uint16_t amd_machine_kind;
514  uint16_t amd_machine_version_major;
515  uint16_t amd_machine_version_minor;
516  uint16_t amd_machine_version_stepping;
517
518  /// Byte offset (possibly negative) from start of amd_kernel_code_t
519  /// object to kernel's entry point instruction. The actual code for
520  /// the kernel is required to be 256 byte aligned to match hardware
521  /// requirements (SQ cache line is 16). The code must be position
522  /// independent code (PIC) for AMD devices to give runtime the
523  /// option of copying code to discrete GPU memory or APU L2
524  /// cache. The Finalizer should endeavour to allocate all kernel
525  /// machine code in contiguous memory pages so that a device
526  /// pre-fetcher will tend to only pre-fetch Kernel Code objects,
527  /// improving cache performance.
528  int64_t kernel_code_entry_byte_offset;
529
530  /// Range of bytes to consider prefetching expressed as an offset
531  /// and size. The offset is from the start (possibly negative) of
532  /// amd_kernel_code_t object. Set both to 0 if no prefetch
533  /// information is available.
534  int64_t kernel_code_prefetch_byte_offset;
535  uint64_t kernel_code_prefetch_byte_size;
536
537  /// Number of bytes of scratch backing memory required for full
538  /// occupancy of target chip. This takes into account the number of
539  /// bytes of scratch per work-item, the wavefront size, the maximum
540  /// number of wavefronts per CU, and the number of CUs. This is an
541  /// upper limit on scratch. If the grid being dispatched is small it
542  /// may only need less than this. If the kernel uses no scratch, or
543  /// the Finalizer has not computed this value, it must be 0.
544  uint64_t max_scratch_backing_memory_byte_size;
545
546  /// Shader program settings for CS. Contains COMPUTE_PGM_RSRC1 and
547  /// COMPUTE_PGM_RSRC2 registers.
548  uint64_t compute_pgm_resource_registers;
549
550  /// Code properties. See amd_code_property_mask_t for a full list of
551  /// properties.
552  uint32_t code_properties;
553
554  /// The amount of memory required for the combined private, spill
555  /// and arg segments for a work-item in bytes. If
556  /// is_dynamic_callstack is 1 then additional space must be added to
557  /// this value for the call stack.
558  uint32_t workitem_private_segment_byte_size;
559
560  /// The amount of group segment memory required by a work-group in
561  /// bytes. This does not include any dynamically allocated group
562  /// segment memory that may be added when the kernel is
563  /// dispatched.
564  uint32_t workgroup_group_segment_byte_size;
565
566  /// Number of byte of GDS required by kernel dispatch. Must be 0 if
567  /// not using GDS.
568  uint32_t gds_segment_byte_size;
569
570  /// The size in bytes of the kernarg segment that holds the values
571  /// of the arguments to the kernel. This could be used by CP to
572  /// prefetch the kernarg segment pointed to by the dispatch packet.
573  uint64_t kernarg_segment_byte_size;
574
575  /// Number of fbarrier's used in the kernel and all functions it
576  /// calls. If the implementation uses group memory to allocate the
577  /// fbarriers then that amount must already be included in the
578  /// workgroup_group_segment_byte_size total.
579  uint32_t workgroup_fbarrier_count;
580
581  /// Number of scalar registers used by a wavefront. This includes
582  /// the special SGPRs for VCC, Flat Scratch Base, Flat Scratch Size
583  /// and XNACK (for GFX8 (VI)). It does not include the 16 SGPR added if a
584  /// trap handler is enabled. Used to set COMPUTE_PGM_RSRC1.SGPRS.
585  uint16_t wavefront_sgpr_count;
586
587  /// Number of vector registers used by each work-item. Used to set
588  /// COMPUTE_PGM_RSRC1.VGPRS.
589  uint16_t workitem_vgpr_count;
590
591  /// If reserved_vgpr_count is 0 then must be 0. Otherwise, this is the
592  /// first fixed VGPR number reserved.
593  uint16_t reserved_vgpr_first;
594
595  /// The number of consecutive VGPRs reserved by the client. If
596  /// is_debug_supported then this count includes VGPRs reserved
597  /// for debugger use.
598  uint16_t reserved_vgpr_count;
599
600  /// If reserved_sgpr_count is 0 then must be 0. Otherwise, this is the
601  /// first fixed SGPR number reserved.
602  uint16_t reserved_sgpr_first;
603
604  /// The number of consecutive SGPRs reserved by the client. If
605  /// is_debug_supported then this count includes SGPRs reserved
606  /// for debugger use.
607  uint16_t reserved_sgpr_count;
608
609  /// If is_debug_supported is 0 then must be 0. Otherwise, this is the
610  /// fixed SGPR number used to hold the wave scratch offset for the
611  /// entire kernel execution, or uint16_t(-1) if the register is not
612  /// used or not known.
613  uint16_t debug_wavefront_private_segment_offset_sgpr;
614
615  /// If is_debug_supported is 0 then must be 0. Otherwise, this is the
616  /// fixed SGPR number of the first of 4 SGPRs used to hold the
617  /// scratch V# used for the entire kernel execution, or uint16_t(-1)
618  /// if the registers are not used or not known.
619  uint16_t debug_private_segment_buffer_sgpr;
620
621  /// The maximum byte alignment of variables used by the kernel in
622  /// the specified memory segment. Expressed as a power of two. Must
623  /// be at least HSA_POWERTWO_16.
624  uint8_t kernarg_segment_alignment;
625  uint8_t group_segment_alignment;
626  uint8_t private_segment_alignment;
627
628  /// Wavefront size expressed as a power of two. Must be a power of 2
629  /// in range 1..64 inclusive. Used to support runtime query that
630  /// obtains wavefront size, which may be used by application to
631  /// allocated dynamic group memory and set the dispatch work-group
632  /// size.
633  uint8_t wavefront_size;
634
635  int32_t call_convention;
636  uint8_t reserved3[12];
637  uint64_t runtime_loader_kernel_symbol;
638  uint64_t control_directives[16];
639} amd_kernel_code_t;
640
641#endif // AMDKERNELCODET_H
642