60 8-bit (E4M3) Floating Point Multiplier

60 : 8-bit (E4M3) Floating Point Multiplier

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  • Author: Clive Chan
  • Description: 8-bit (E4M3) Floating Point Multiplier
  • GitHub repository
  • Clock: 0 Hz

How it works

A small mux in front to fill up two 8-bit buffers in halves, which feed the actual 8-bit multiplier. When ctrl0 is 0, you can clock in 4 bits from data[3:0] into the upper or lower halves of two buffers according to the values of ctrl[1] and ctrl[2]: - 00 STORE 1 LOWER - 01 STORE 1 UPPER - 10 STORE 2 LOWER - 11 STORE 2 UPPER The clock is intended for manual use instead of actually being driven by a clock, but it probably can work. The 8 bits in each of the two buffers are interpreted as an 8-bit floating point number. From MSB to LSB: - sign bit - exponent[3:0] - mantissa[2:0] These are interpreted according to an approximation of IEEE 754, i.e. (-1)sign * 2(exponent - EXP_BIAS) * 1.mantissa with the following implementation details / differences: - EXP_BIAS = 7, analogous to 2**(exp-1) - 1 for all IEEE-defined formats - Denormals (i.e. exponent == 0) are flushed to zero on input and output - exponent = 0b1111 is interpreted as more normal numbers instead of NaN/inf, and overflows saturate to the largest representable number (0bx1111111 = +/- 480.0)

  • Negative zero is interpreted as NaN instead. - Round to nearest even is implemented. The output 8 bits will always display the results of the multiplication of the two FP8's in the buffers, regardless of the clock. The module has been verified over all possible pairs of 8-bit inputs.

How to test

cd src && make

IO

#InputOutput
0clocksign
1ctrl0exponent
2ctrl1exponent
3ctrl2exponent
4data0exponent
5data1mantissa
6data2mantissa
7data3mantissa