Load-Store-Unit (LSU)

The Load-Store Unit (LSU) of the core takes care of accessing the data memory. Load and stores on words (32 bit), half words (16 bit) and bytes (8 bit) are supported.

Table 6 describes the signals that are used by the LSU.

Table 6 LSU interface signals

Signal

Direction

Description

data_req_o

output

Request valid, will stay high until data_gnt_i is high for one cycle

data_gnt_i

input

The other side accepted the request. data_addr_o, data_atop_o, data_be_o, data_memtype_o[2:0], data_prot_o, data_wdata_o, data_we_o may change in the next cycle.

data_addr_o[31:0]

output

Address, sent together with data_req_o.

data_atop_o[5:0]

output

Atomic attributes, sent together with data_req_o.

data_be_o[3:0]

output

Byte Enable. Is set for the bytes to write/read, sent together with data_req_o.

data_memtype_o[1:0]

output

Memory Type attributes (cacheable, bufferable), sent together with data_req_o.

data_prot_o[2:0]

output

Protection attributes, sent together with data_req_o.

data_dbg_o

output

Debug mode access, sent together with data_req_o.

data_wdata_o[31:0]

output

Data to be written to memory, sent together with data_req_o.

data_we_o

output

Write Enable, high for writes, low for reads. Sent together with data_req_o.

data_rvalid_i

input

data_rvalid_i will be high for exactly one cycle to signal the end of the response phase of for both read and write transactions. For a read transaction data_rdata_i holds valid data when data_rvalid_i is high.

data_rdata_i[31:0]

input

Data read from memory. Only valid when data_rvalid_i is high.

data_err_i

input

A data interface error occurred. Only valid when data_rvalid_i is high.

data_exokay_i

input

Exclusive transaction status. Only valid when data_rvalid_i is high.

Misaligned Accesses

Misaligned transaction are supported in hardware for Main memory regions, see Physical Memory Attribution (PMA). For loads and stores in Main memory where the effective address is not naturally aligned to the referenced datatype (i.e., on a four-byte boundary for word accesses, and a two-byte boundary for halfword accesses) the load/store is performed as two bus transactions in case that the data item crosses a word boundary. A single load/store instruction is therefore performed as two bus transactions for the following scenarios:

  • Load/store of a word for a non-word-aligned address

  • Load/store of a halfword crossing a word address boundary

In both cases the transfer corresponding to the lowest address is performed first. All other scenarios can be handled with a single bus transaction.

Misaligned transactions are not supported in I/O regions and will result in an exception trap when attempted, see Exceptions and Interrupts.

Protocol

The data bus interface is compliant to the OBI protocol (see [OPENHW-OBI] for detailed signal and protocol descriptions). The CV32E40X data interface does not implement the following optional OBI signals: auser, wuser, aid, rready, ruser, rid. These signals can be thought of as being tied off as specified in the OBI specification. The CV32E40X data interface can cause up to two outstanding transactions.

The OBI protocol that is used by the LSU to communicate with a memory works as follows.

The LSU provides a valid address on data_addr_o, control information on data_we_o, data_be_o (as well as write data on data_wdata_o in case of a store) and sets data_req_o high. The memory sets data_gnt_i high as soon as it is ready to serve the request. This may happen at any time, even before the request was sent. After a request has been granted the address phase signals (data_addr_o, data_we_o, data_be_o and data_wdata_o) may be changed in the next cycle by the LSU as the memory is assumed to already have processed and stored that information. After granting a request, the memory answers with a data_rvalid_i set high if data_rdata_i is valid. This may happen one or more cycles after the request has been granted. Note that data_rvalid_i must also be set high to signal the end of the response phase for a write transaction (although the data_rdata_i has no meaning in that case). When multiple granted requests are outstanding, it is assumed that the memory requests will be kept in-order and one data_rvalid_i will be signalled for each of them, in the order they were issued.

Figure 7, Figure 8, Figure 9 and Figure 10 show example timing diagrams of the protocol.

Figure 7 Basic Memory Transaction

Figure 8 Back-to-back Memory Transactions

Figure 9 Slow Response Memory Transaction

Figure 10 Multiple Outstanding Memory Transactions

Write buffer

CV32E40X contains a a single entry write buffer that is used for bufferable transfers. A bufferable transfer is a write transfer originating from a store instruction, where the write address is inside a bufferable region defined by the PMA (Physical Memory Attribution (PMA)). Note that Store Conditional (SC) and Atomic Memory Operation (AMO) instructions will not utilize the write buffer.

The write buffer (when not full) allows CV32E40X to proceed executing instructions without having to wait for data_gnt_i = 1 and data_rvalid_i = 1 for these bufferable transers.

Note

On the OBI interface data_gnt_i = 1 and data_rvalid_i = 1 still need to be signaled for every transfer (as specified in [OPENHW-OBI]), also for bufferable transfers.

Bus transfers will occur in program order, no matter if transfers are bufferable and non-bufferable. Transactions in the write buffer must be completed before the CV32E40X is able to:

  • Retire a fence instruction

  • Enter SLEEP mode