pto.vsstb

pto.vsstb is part of the Vector Load Store instruction set.

Summary

Block-strided store for 2D tile access.

Mechanism

pto.vsstb is part of the PTO vector memory/data-movement instruction set. It keeps UB addressing, distribution, mask behavior, and any alignment-state threading explicit in SSA form rather than hiding those details in backend-specific lowering.

Syntax

PTO Assembly Form

vsstb %value, %dest, %offset, %mask

AS Level 1 (SSA)

pto.vsstb %value, %dest, %offset, %mask : !pto.vreg<NxT>, !pto.ptr<T, ub>, i32, !pto.mask<G>

Inputs

%value is the source vector, %dest is the UB base pointer, %offset is the packed stride/control word, and %mask controls block participation.

Expected Outputs

This op writes UB memory and returns no SSA value.

Side Effects

This operation writes UB-visible memory and/or updates streamed alignment state. Stateful unaligned forms expose their evolving state in SSA form, but a trailing flush form may still be required to complete the stream.

Constraints

Constraints

%offset is a control word, not a plain byte displacement. It selects the block-strided store pattern.

Exceptions

Exceptions

  • It is illegal to use addresses outside the required UB-visible space or to violate the alignment/distribution contract of the selected form.
  • Masked-off lanes or inactive blocks do not make an otherwise-illegal address valid unless the operation text explicitly says so.
  • Any additional illegality stated in the constraints section is also part of the contract.

Target-Profile Restrictions

Target-Profile Restrictions
  • A5 is the most detailed concrete profile in the current manual; CPU simulation and A2/A3-class targets may support narrower subsets or emulate the behavior while preserving the visible PTO contract.
  • Code that depends on an instruction-set-specific type list, distribution mode, or fused form should treat that dependency as target-profile-specific unless the PTO manual states cross-target portability explicitly.

Performance

Timing Disclosure

The current public VPTO timing material for PTO micro instructions remains limited. For pto.vsstb, those public sources describe the instruction semantics, operand legality, and pipeline placement, but they do not publish a numeric latency or steady-state throughput.

Metric Status Source Basis
A5 latency Not publicly published Current public VPTO timing material
Steady-state throughput Not publicly published Current public VPTO timing material

If software scheduling or performance modeling depends on the exact cost of pto.vsstb, treat that cost as target-profile-specific and measure it on the concrete backend rather than inferring a manual constant.

Examples

pto.vsstb %value, %dest, %offset, %mask : !pto.vreg<NxT>, !pto.ptr<T, ub>, i32, !pto.mask<G>