User Guide for SPIR-V Target

Introduction

The SPIR-V target provides code generation for the SPIR-V binary format described in the official SPIR-V specification.

Usage

The SPIR-V backend can be invoked either from LLVM’s Static Compiler (llc) or Clang, allowing developers to compile LLVM intermediate language (IL) files or OpenCL kernel sources directly to SPIR-V. This section outlines the usage of various commands to leverage the SPIR-V backend for different purposes.

Static Compiler Commands

  1. Basic SPIR-V Compilation Command: llc -mtriple=spirv32-unknown-unknown input.ll -o output.spvt Description: This command compiles an LLVM IL file (input.ll) to a SPIR-V binary (output.spvt) for a 32-bit architecture.
  2. Compilation with Extensions and Optimization Command: llc -O1 -mtriple=spirv64-unknown-unknown –spirv-ext=+SPV_INTEL_arbitrary_precision_integers input.ll -o output.spvt Description: Compiles an LLVM IL file to SPIR-V with (-O1) optimizations, targeting a 64-bit architecture. It enables the SPV_INTEL_arbitrary_precision_integers extension.
  3. Compilation with experimental NonSemantic.Shader.DebugInfo.100 support Command: llc –spv-emit-nonsemantic-debug-info –spirv-ext=+SPV_KHR_non_semantic_info input.ll -o output.spvt Description: Compiles an LLVM IL file to SPIR-V with additional NonSemantic.Shader.DebugInfo.100 instructions. It enables the required SPV_KHR_non_semantic_info extension.
  4. SPIR-V Binary Generation Command: llc -O0 -mtriple=spirv64-unknown-unknown -filetype=obj input.ll -o output.spvt Description: Generates a SPIR-V object file (output.spvt) from an LLVM module, targeting a 64-bit SPIR-V architecture with no optimizations.

Clang Commands

  1. SPIR-V Generation Command: clang –target=spirv64 input.cl Description: Generates a SPIR-V file directly from an OpenCL kernel source file (input.cl).

Compiler Options

Target Triples

For cross-compilation into SPIR-V use option

-target <Architecture><Subarchitecture>-<Vendor>-<OS>-<Environment>

to specify the target triple:

Table 117 SPIR-V Architectures
Architecture Description
spirv32 SPIR-V with 32-bit pointer width.
spirv64 SPIR-V with 64-bit pointer width.
spirv SPIR-V with logical memory layout.
Table 118 SPIR-V Subarchitectures
Subarchitecture Description
<empty> SPIR-V version deduced by backend based on the input.
v1.0 SPIR-V version 1.0.
v1.1 SPIR-V version 1.1.
v1.2 SPIR-V version 1.2.
v1.3 SPIR-V version 1.3.
v1.4 SPIR-V version 1.4.
v1.5 SPIR-V version 1.5.
v1.6 SPIR-V version 1.6.
Table 119 SPIR-V Vendors
Vendor Description
<empty>/unknown Generic SPIR-V target without any vendor-specific settings.
amd AMDGCN SPIR-V target, with support for target specific builtins and ASM, meant to be consumed by AMDGCN toolchains.
Table 120 Operating Systems
OS Description
<empty>/unknown Defaults to the OpenCL runtime.
vulkan Vulkan shader runtime.
vulkan1.2 Vulkan 1.2 runtime, corresponding to SPIR-V 1.5.
vulkan1.3 Vulkan 1.3 runtime, corresponding to SPIR-V 1.6.
amdhsa AMDHSA runtime, meant to be used on HSA compatible runtimes, corresponding to SPIR-V 1.6.
Table 121 SPIR-V Environments
Environment Description
<empty>/unknown OpenCL environment or deduced by backend based on the input.

Example:

-target spirv64v1.0 can be used to compile for SPIR-V version 1.0 with 64-bit pointer width.

-target spirv64-amd-amdhsa can be used to compile for AMDGCN flavoured SPIR-V with 64-bit pointer width.

Extensions

The SPIR-V backend supports a variety of extensions that enable or enhance features beyond the core SPIR-V specification. These extensions can be enabled using the -spirv-extensions option followed by the name of the extension(s) you wish to enable. Below is a list of supported SPIR-V extensions, sorted alphabetically by their extension names:

Table 122 Supported SPIR-V Extensions
Extension Name Description
SPV_EXT_shader_atomic_float16_add Extends the SPV_EXT_shader_atomic_float_add extension to support atomically adding to 16-bit floating-point numbers in memory.
SPV_EXT_shader_atomic_float_add Adds atomic add instruction on floating-point numbers.
SPV_EXT_shader_atomic_float_min_max Adds atomic min and max instruction on floating-point numbers.
SPV_EXT_arithmetic_fence Adds an instruction that prevents fast-math optimizations between its argument and the expression that contains it.
SPV_INTEL_arbitrary_precision_integers Allows generating arbitrary width integer types.
SPV_INTEL_bfloat16_conversion Adds instructions to convert between single-precision 32-bit floating-point values and 16-bit bfloat16 values.
SPV_INTEL_cache_controls Allows cache control information to be applied to memory access instructions.
SPV_INTEL_function_pointers Allows translation of function pointers.
SPV_INTEL_inline_assembly Allows to use inline assembly.
SPV_INTEL_global_variable_host_access Adds decorations that can be applied to global (module scope) variables.
SPV_INTEL_global_variable_fpga_decorations Adds decorations that can be applied to global (module scope) variables to help code generation for FPGA devices.
SPV_INTEL_optnone Adds OptNoneINTEL value for Function Control mask that indicates a request to not optimize the function.
SPV_INTEL_split_barrier Adds SPIR-V instructions to split a control barrier into two separate operations: the first indicates that an invocation has “arrived” at the barrier but should continue executing, and the second indicates that an invocation should “wait” for other invocations to arrive at the barrier before executing further.
SPV_INTEL_subgroups Allows work items in a subgroup to share data without the use of local memory and work group barriers, and to utilize specialized hardware to load and store blocks of data from images or buffers.
SPV_INTEL_usm_storage_classes Introduces two new storage classes that are subclasses of the CrossWorkgroup storage class that provides additional information that can enable optimization.
SPV_INTEL_variable_length_array Allows to allocate local arrays whose number of elements is unknown at compile time.
SPV_KHR_bit_instructions Enables bit instructions to be used by SPIR-V modules without requiring the Shader capability.
SPV_KHR_expect_assume Provides additional information to a compiler, similar to the llvm.assume and llvm.expect intrinsics.
SPV_KHR_float_controls Provides new execution modes to control floating-point computations by overriding an implementation’s default behavior for rounding modes, denormals, signed zero, and infinities.
SPV_KHR_integer_dot_product Adds instructions for dot product operations on integer vectors with optional accumulation. Integer vectors includes 4-component vector of 8 bit integers and 4-component vectors of 8 bit integers packed into 32-bit integers.
SPV_KHR_linkonce_odr Allows to use the LinkOnceODR linkage type that lets a function or global variable to be merged with other functions or global variables of the same name when linkage occurs.
SPV_KHR_no_integer_wrap_decoration Adds decorations to indicate that a given instruction does not cause integer wrapping.
SPV_KHR_shader_clock Adds the extension cl_khr_kernel_clock that adds the ability for a kernel to sample the value from clocks provided by compute units.
SPV_KHR_subgroup_rotate Adds a new instruction that enables rotating values across invocations within a subgroup.
SPV_KHR_uniform_group_instructions Allows support for additional group operations within uniform control flow.
SPV_KHR_non_semantic_info Adds the ability to declare extended instruction sets that have no semantic impact and can be safely removed from a module.

To enable multiple extensions, list them separated by spaces. For example, to enable support for atomic operations on floating-point numbers and arbitrary precision integers, use:

-spirv-ext=+SPV_EXT_shader_atomic_float_add,+SPV_INTEL_arbitrary_precision_integers

To enable all extensions, use the following option: -spirv-ext=all

To enable all extensions except specified, specify all followed by a list of disallowed extensions. For example: -spirv-ext=all,-SPV_INTEL_arbitrary_precision_integers

SPIR-V representation in LLVM IR

SPIR-V is intentionally designed for seamless integration with various Intermediate Representations (IRs), including LLVM IR, facilitating straightforward mappings for most of its entities. The development of the SPIR-V backend has been guided by a principle of compatibility with the Khronos Group SPIR-V LLVM Translator. Consequently, the input representation accepted by the SPIR-V backend aligns closely with that detailed in the SPIR-V Representation in LLVM document. This document, along with the sections that follow, delineate the main points and focus on any differences between the LLVM IR that this backend processes and the conventions used by other tools.

Special types

SPIR-V specifies several kinds of opaque types. These types are represented using target extension types and are represented as follows:

Table 123 SPIR-V Opaque Types
SPIR-V Type LLVM type name LLVM type arguments
OpTypeImage spirv.Image sampled type, dimensionality, depth, arrayed, MS, sampled, image format, [access qualifier]
OpTypeSampler spirv.Sampler (none)
OpTypeSampledImage spirv.SampledImage sampled type, dimensionality, depth, arrayed, MS, sampled, image format, [access qualifier]
OpTypeEvent spirv.Event (none)
OpTypeDeviceEvent spirv.DeviceEvent (none)
OpTypeReserveId spirv.ReserveId (none)
OpTypeQueue spirv.Queue (none)
OpTypePipe spirv.Pipe access qualifier
OpTypePipeStorage spirv.PipeStorage (none)

All integer arguments take the same value as they do in their corresponding SPIR-V instruction. For example, the OpenCL type image2d_depth_ro_t would be represented in SPIR-V IR as target("spirv.Image", void, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0), with its dimensionality parameter as 1 meaning 2D. Sampled image types include the parameters of its underlying image type, so that a sampled image for the previous type has the representation target("spirv.SampledImage, void, 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0).

Target Intrinsics

The SPIR-V backend employs several LLVM IR intrinsics that facilitate various low-level operations essential for generating correct and efficient SPIR-V code. These intrinsics cover a range of functionalities from type assignment and memory management to control flow and atomic operations. Below is a detailed table of selected intrinsics used in the SPIR-V backend, along with their descriptions and argument details.

Table 124 LLVM IR Intrinsics for SPIR-V
Intrinsic ID Return Type Argument Types Description
int_spv_assign_type None [Type, Metadata] Associates a type with metadata, crucial for maintaining type information in SPIR-V structures. Not emitted directly but supports the type system internally.
int_spv_assign_ptr_type None [Type, Metadata, Integer] Similar to int_spv_assign_type, but for pointer types with an additional integer specifying the storage class. Supports SPIR-V’s detailed pointer type system. Not emitted directly.
int_spv_assign_name None [Type, Vararg] Assigns names to types or values, enhancing readability and debuggability of SPIR-V code. Not emitted directly but used for metadata enrichment.
int_spv_value_md None [Metadata] Assigns a set of attributes (such as name and data type) to a value that is the argument of the associated llvm.fake.use intrinsic call. The latter is used as a mean to map virtual registers created by IRTranslator to the original value.
int_spv_assign_decoration None [Type, Metadata] Assigns decoration to values by associating them with metadatas. Not emitted directly but used to support SPIR-V representation in LLVM IR.
int_spv_track_constant Type [Type, Metadata] Tracks constants in the SPIR-V module. Essential for optimizing and reducing redundancy. Emitted for internal use only.
int_spv_init_global None [Type, Type] Initializes global variables, a necessary step for ensuring correct global state management in SPIR-V. Emitted for internal use only.
int_spv_unref_global None [Type] Manages the lifetime of global variables by marking them as unreferenced, thus enabling optimizations related to global variable usage. Emitted for internal use only.
int_spv_gep Pointer [Boolean, Type, Vararg] Computes the address of a sub-element of an aggregate type. Critical for accessing array elements and structure fields. Supports conditionally addressing elements in a generic way.
int_spv_load 32-bit Integer [Pointer, 16-bit Integer, 8-bit Integer] Loads a value from a memory location. The additional integers specify memory access and alignment details, vital for ensuring correct and efficient memory operations.
int_spv_store None [Type, Pointer, 16-bit Integer, 8-bit Integer] Stores a value to a memory location. Like int_spv_load, it includes specifications for memory access and alignment, essential for memory operations.
int_spv_extractv Type [32-bit Integer, Vararg] Extracts a value from a vector, allowing for vector operations within SPIR-V. Enables manipulation of vector components.
int_spv_insertv 32-bit Integer [32-bit Integer, Type, Vararg] Inserts a value into a vector. Complementary to int_spv_extractv, it facilitates the construction and manipulation of vectors.
int_spv_extractelt Type [Type, Any Integer] Extracts an element from an aggregate type based on an index. Essential for operations on arrays and vectors.
int_spv_insertelt Type [Type, Type, Any Integer] Inserts an element into an aggregate type at a specified index. Allows for building and modifying arrays and vectors.
int_spv_const_composite Type [Vararg] Constructs a composite type from given elements. Key for creating arrays, structs, and vectors from individual components.
int_spv_bitcast Type [Type] Performs a bit-wise cast between types. Critical for type conversions that do not change the bit representation.
int_spv_ptrcast Type [Type, Metadata, Integer] Casts pointers between different types. Similar to int_spv_bitcast but specifically for pointers, taking into account SPIR-V’s strict type system.
int_spv_switch None [Type, Vararg] Implements a multi-way branch based on a value. Enables complex control flow structures, similar to the switch statement in high-level languages.
int_spv_cmpxchg 32-bit Integer [Type, Vararg] Performs an atomic compare-and-exchange operation. Crucial for synchronization and concurrency control in compute shaders.
int_spv_unreachable None [] Marks a point in the code that should never be reached, enabling optimizations by indicating unreachable code paths.
int_spv_alloca Type [] Allocates memory on the stack. Fundamental for local variable storage in functions.
int_spv_alloca_array Type [Any Integer] Allocates an array on the stack. Extends int_spv_alloca to support array allocations, essential for temporary arrays.
int_spv_undef 32-bit Integer [] Generates an undefined value. Useful for optimizations and indicating uninitialized variables.
int_spv_inline_asm None [Metadata, Metadata, Vararg] Associates inline assembly features to inline assembly call instances by creating metadatas and preserving original arguments. Not emitted directly but used to support SPIR-V representation in LLVM IR.
int_spv_assume None [1-bit Integer] Provides hints to the optimizer about assumptions that can be made about program state. Improves optimization potential.
int_spv_expect Any Integer Type [Type, Type] Guides branch prediction by indicating expected branch paths. Enhances performance by optimizing common code paths.
int_spv_thread_id 32-bit Integer [32-bit Integer] Retrieves the thread ID within a workgroup. Essential for identifying execution context in parallel compute operations.
int_spv_create_handle Pointer [8-bit Integer] Creates a resource handle for graphics or compute resources. Facilitates the management and use of resources in shaders.
int_spv_handle_fromBinding spirv.Image [32-bit Integer set, 32-bit Integer binding, 32-bit Integer arraySize, 32-bit Integer index, bool isUniformIndex] Returns the handle for the resource at the given set and binding.If arraySize > 1, then the binding represents an array of resourcesof the given size, and the handle for the resource at the given index is returned.If the index is possibly non-uniform, then isUniformIndex must get set to true.

Builtin Functions

The following section highlights the representation of SPIR-V builtins in LLVM IR, emphasizing builtins that do not have direct counterparts in LLVM.

Instructions as Function Calls

SPIR-V builtins without direct LLVM counterparts are represented as LLVM function calls. These functions, termed SPIR-V builtin functions, follow an IA64 mangling scheme with SPIR-V-specific extensions. Parsing non-mangled calls to builtins is supported in some cases, but not tested extensively. The general format is:

__spirv_{OpCodeName}{_OptionalPostfixes}

Where {OpCodeName} is the SPIR-V opcode name sans the “Op” prefix, and {OptionalPostfixes} are decoration-specific postfixes, if any. The mangling and postfixes allow for the representation of SPIR-V’s rich instruction set within LLVM’s framework.

Extended Instruction Sets

SPIR-V defines several extended instruction sets for additional functionalities, such as OpenCL-specific operations. In LLVM IR, these are represented by function calls to mangled builtins and selected based on the environment. For example:

acos_f32

represents the acos function from the OpenCL extended instruction set for a float32 input.

Builtin Variables

SPIR-V builtin variables, which provide access to special hardware or execution model properties, are mapped to either LLVM function calls or LLVM global variables. The representation follows the naming convention:

__spirv_BuiltIn{VariableName}

For instance, the SPIR-V builtin GlobalInvocationId is accessible in LLVM IR as __spirv_BuiltInGlobalInvocationId.

Vector Load and Store Builtins

SPIR-V’s capabilities for loading and storing vectors are represented in LLVM IR using functions that mimic the SPIR-V instructions. These builtins handle cases that LLVM’s native instructions do not directly support, enabling fine-grained control over memory operations.

Atomic Operations

SPIR-V’s atomic operations, especially those operating on floating-point data, are represented in LLVM IR with corresponding function calls. These builtins ensure atomicity in operations where LLVM might not have direct support, essential for parallel execution and synchronization.

Image Operations

SPIR-V provides extensive support for image and sampler operations, which LLVM represents through function calls to builtins. These include image reads, writes, and queries, allowing detailed manipulation of image data and parameters.

Group and Subgroup Operations

For workgroup and subgroup operations, LLVM uses function calls to represent SPIR-V’s group-based instructions. These builtins facilitate group synchronization, data sharing, and collective operations essential for efficient parallel computation.