AMDGPU Instructions Notation

Introduction

This is an overview of notation used to describe the syntax of AMDGPU assembler instructions.

This notation looks a lot like the syntax of assembler instructions, except that instead of real operands and modifiers, it uses references to their descriptions.

Instructions

Notation

This is the notation used to describe AMDGPU instructions:

Operands

An instruction may have zero or more operands. They are comma-separated in the description:

The order of operands is fixed. Operands cannot be omitted except for special cases described below.

Notation

An operand is described using the following notation:

<kind><name><tag0><tag1>…

Where:

  • kind is an optional prefix describing operand kind.

  • name is a link to a description of the operand.

  • tags are optional. They are used to indicate special operand properties.

Operand Kinds

Operand kind indicates which values are accepted by the operand.

  • Operands which only accept vector registers are labelled with ‘v’ prefix.

  • Operands which only accept scalar registers and values are labelled with ‘s’ prefix.

  • Operands which accept any registers and values have no prefix.

Examples:

vdata          // operand only accepts vector registers
sdst           // operand only accepts scalar registers
src1           // operand accepts vector registers, scalar registers, and scalar values

Operand Tags

Operand tags indicate special operand properties.

Operand tag

Meaning

:opt

An optional operand.

:m

An operand which may be used with operand modifiers abs, neg or sext.

:dst

An input operand which is also used as a destination if glc modifier is specified.

:fx

This is a f32 or f16 operand, depending on m_op_sel_hi modifier.

:<type>

The operand type differs from the type implied by the opcode name. This tag specifies the actual operand type.

Examples:

src1:m             // src1 operand may be used with operand modifiers
vdata:dst          // vdata operand may be used as both source and destination
vdst:u32           // vdst operand has u32 type

Modifiers

An instruction may have zero or more optional modifiers. They are space-separated in the description:

The order of modifiers is fixed.

Notation

A modifier is described using the following notation:

<name>

Where the name is a link to a description of the modifier.