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RandomX

RandomX is a proof of work (PoW) algorithm which was designed to close the gap between general-purpose CPUs and specialized hardware. The core of the algorithm is a simulation of a virtual CPU.

Table of contents

  1. Definitions
  2. Algorithm description
  3. Custom functions
  4. Virtual Machine
  5. Instruction set
  6. SuperscalarHash
  7. Dataset

1. Definitions

1.1 General definitions

Hash256 and Hash512 refer to the Blake2b hashing function with a 256-bit and 512-bit output size, respectively.

Floating point format refers to the IEEE-754 double precision floating point format with a sign bit, 11-bit exponent and 52-bit fraction.

Argon2d is a tradeoff-resistant variant of Argon2, a memory-hard password derivation function.

AesGenerator refers to an AES-based pseudo-random number generator described in chapter 3.2. It's initialized with a 512-bit seed value and is capable of producing more than 10 bytes per clock cycle.

AesHash refers to an AES-based fingerprinting function described in chapter 3.3. It's capable of processing more than 10 bytes per clock cycle and produces a 512-bit output.

BlakeGenerator refers to a custom pseudo-random number generator described in chapter 3.4. It's based on the Blake2b hashing function.

SuperscalarHash refers to a custom diffusion function designed to run efficiently on superscalar CPUs (see chapter 7). It transforms a 64-byte input value into a 64-byte output value.

Virtual Machine or VM refers to the RandomX virtual machine as described in chapter 4.

Programming the VM refers to the act of loading a program and configuration into the VM. This is described in chapter 4.5.

Executing the VM refers to the act of running the program loop as described in chapter 4.6.

Scratchpad refers to the workspace memory of the VM. The whole scratchpad is structured into 3 levels: L3 -> L2 -> L1 with each lower level being a subset of the higher levels.

Register File refers to a 256-byte sequence formed by concatenating VM registers in little-endian format in the following order: r0-r7, f0-f3, e0-e3 and a0-a3.

Program Buffer refers to the buffer from which the VM reads instructions.

Cache refers to a read-only buffer initialized by Argon2d as described in chapter 7.1.

Dataset refers to a large read-only buffer described in chapter 7. It is constructed from the Cache using the SuperscalarHash function.

1.2 Configurable parameters

RandomX has several configurable parameters that are listed in Table 1.2.1 with their default values.

Table 1.2.1 - Configurable parameters

parameter description default value
RANDOMX_ARGON_MEMORY The number of 1 KiB Argon2 blocks in the Cache 262144
RANDOMX_ARGON_ITERATIONS The number of Argon2d iterations for Cache initialization 3
RANDOMX_ARGON_LANES The number of parallel lanes for Cache initialization 1
RANDOMX_ARGON_SALT Argon2 salt "RandomX\x03"
RANDOMX_CACHE_ACCESSES The number of random Cache accesses per Dataset item 8
RANDOMX_SUPERSCALAR_LATENCY Target latency for SuperscalarHash (in cycles of the reference CPU) 170
RANDOMX_SUPERSCALAR_MAX_SIZE The maximum number of instructions of SuperscalarHash 512
RANDOMX_DATASET_BASE_SIZE Dataset base size in bytes 2147483648
RANDOMX_DATASET_EXTRA_SIZE Dataset extra size in bytes 33554368
RANDOMX_PROGRAM_SIZE The number of instructions in a RandomX program 256
RANDOMX_PROGRAM_ITERATIONS The number of iterations per program 2048
RANDOMX_PROGRAM_COUNT The number of programs per hash 8
RANDOMX_JUMP_BITS Jump condition mask size in bits 8
RANDOMX_JUMP_OFFSET Jump condition mask offset in bits 8
RANDOMX_SCRATCHPAD_L3 Scratchpad L3 size in bytes 2097152
RANDOMX_SCRATCHPAD_L2 Scratchpad L2 size in bytes 262144
RANDOMX_SCRATCHPAD_L1 Scratchpad L1 size in bytes 16384

Instruction frequencies listed in Tables 5.2.1, 5.3.1, 5.4.1 and 5.5.1 are also configurable.

2. Algorithm description

The RandomX algorithm accepts two input values:

  • String K with a size of 0-60 bytes (key)
  • String H of arbitrary length (the value to be hashed)

and outputs a 256-bit result R.

The algorithm consists of the following steps:

  1. The Dataset is initialized using the key value K (see chapter 7 for details).
  2. 64-byte seed S is calculated as S = Hash512(H).
  3. AesGenerator is initialized with state S.
  4. The Scratchpad is filled with RANDOMX_SCRATCHPAD_L3 random bytes obtained from the AesGenerator.
  5. The value of the VM register fprc is set to 0 (default rounding mode - see chapter 4.3).
  6. The VM is programmed using 128 + 8 * RANDOMX_PROGRAM_SIZE random bytes from the AesGenerator (see chapter 4.5).
  7. The VM is executed (see chapter 4.6).
  8. New 64-byte seed is calculated as S = Hash512(RegisterFile).
  9. AesGenerator is reinitialized with seed S.
  10. Steps 6-9 are performed a total of RANDOMX_PROGRAM_COUNT times. The last iteration skips steps 8 and 9.
  11. Scratchpad fingerprint is calculated as A = AesHash(Scratchpad).
  12. The binary values of the VM registers a0-a3 (4×16 bytes) are set to the value of A.
  13. Result is calculated as R = Hash256(RegisterFile).

3 Custom functions

3.1 Definitions

Two of the custom functions are based on the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES).

AES encryption round refers to the application of the ShiftRows, SubBytes and MixColumns transformations followed by a XOR with the round key.

AES decryption round refers to the application of inverse ShiftRows, inverse SubBytes and inverse MixColumns transformations followed by a XOR with the round key.

3.2 AesGenerator

AesGenerator produces a sequence of pseudo-random bytes.

The internal state of AesGenerator consists of 64 bytes arranged into four columns of 16 bytes each. During each output iteration, every column is decrypted (columns 0, 2) or encrypted (columns 1, 3) with one AES round using the following round keys (one key per column):

key0 = 2d ec ee 84 d5 f6 4f 45 32 91 32 ca e3 a2 20 df
key1 = d0 63 7b 01 78 c5 0f f1 7f 38 d0 fe 71 59 eb 1d
key2 = 52 7a 7d 32 a1 70 2c 2f b4 ce 17 a5 b3 26 c9 df
key3 = d3 77 8d 5c 5e da 17 3d a9 e0 ec a0 1c f3 1c 34

These keys were generated by calculating Blake2b hash with 256-bit output of these ASCII strings (first 128 bits of the hash are used):

"RandomX Generator key0"
"RandomX Generator key1"
"RandomX Generator key2"
"RandomX Generator key3"

Single iteration produces 64 bytes of output which also become the new generator state.

state0 (16 B)    state1 (16 B)    state2 (16 B)    state3 (16 B)
     |                |                |                |
 AES decrypt      AES encrypt      AES decrypt      AES encrypt
   (key0)           (key1)           (key2)           (key3)
     |                |                |                |
     v                v                v                v
  state0'          state1'          state2'          state3'

3.3 AesHash

AesHash calculates a 512-bit fingerprint of its input.

AesHash has a 64-byte internal state, which is arranged into four columns of 16 bytes each. The initial state is:

state0 = 00 8e 77 c4 ab f5 7a 88 67 d1 46 11 fd 26 31 8d
state1 = 4b ef 34 b8 89 af 95 1b 2b 63 da 58 a1 9f fe 19
state2 = 3a dd 42 77 00 3a 28 ab 44 d7 5a c3 74 cd b2 1b
state3 = 9a 44 8b e1 cc 97 5d dc 57 3c 59 49 8a a5 30 bb

The initial state vectors were generated by calculating Blake2b hash with 256-bit output of these ASCII strings (first 128 bits of the hash are used):

"RandomX Finalizer state0"
"RandomX Finalizer state1"
"RandomX Finalizer state2"
"RandomX Finalizer state3"

The input is processed in 64-byte blocks. Each input block is considered to be a set of four AES round keys key0, key1, key2, key3. Each state column is encrypted (columns 0, 2) or decrypted (columns 1, 3) with one AES round using the corresponding round key:

state0 (16 B)    state1 (16 B)    state2 (16 B)    state3 (16 B)
     |                |                |                |
 AES encrypt      AES decrypt      AES encrypt      AES decrypt
   (key0)           (key1)           (key2)           (key3)
     |                |                |                |
     v                v                v                v
  state0'          state1'          state2'          state3'

When all input bytes have been processed, the state is processed with two additional AES rounds with the following extra keys (one key per round, same pair of keys for all columns):

xkey0 = 47 f2 cb 11 9c 92 5a 2a 3d 59 c5 e4 83 12 95 83
xkey1 = 95 6c 81 ce 0b ef 7b 47 23 25 bc ab b2 5b 21 ff

The extra keys were generated by calculating Blake2b hash with 256-bit output of these ASCII strings (first 128 bits of the hash are used):

"RandomX Finalizer xkey0"
"RandomX Finalizer xkey1"
state0 (16 B)    state1 (16 B)    state2 (16 B)    state3 (16 B)
     |                |                |                |
 AES encrypt      AES decrypt      AES encrypt      AES decrypt
   (xkey0)          (xkey0)          (xkey0)          (xkey0)
     |                |                |                |
     v                v                v                v
 AES encrypt      AES decrypt      AES encrypt      AES decrypt
   (xkey1)          (xkey1)          (xkey1)          (xkey1)
     |                |                |                |
     v                v                v                v
finalState0      finalState1      finalState2      finalState3 

The final state is the output of the function.

3.4 BlakeGenerator

BlakeGenerator is a simple pseudo-random number generator based on the Blake2b hashing function. It has a 64-byte internal state S.

3.4.1 Initialization

The internal state is initialized from a seed value K (0-60 bytes long). The seed value is written into the internal state and padded with zeroes. Then the internal state is initialized as S = Hash512(S).

3.4.2 Random number generation

The generator can generate 1 byte or 4 bytes at a time by supplying data from its internal state S. If there are not enough unused bytes left, the internal state is reinitialized as S = Hash512(S).

4. Virtual Machine

The components of the RandomX virtual machine are summarized in Fig. 4.1.

Figure 4.1 - Virtual Machine

Imgur

The VM is a complex instruction set computer (CISC). All data are loaded and stored in little-endian byte order. Signed integer numbers are represented using two's complement.

4.1 Dataset

Dataset is described in detail in chapter 7. It's a large read-only buffer. Its size is equal to RANDOMX_DATASET_BASE_SIZE + RANDOMX_DATASET_EXTRA_SIZE bytes. Each program uses only a random subset of the Dataset of size RANDOMX_DATASET_BASE_SIZE. All Dataset accesses read an aligned 64-byte item.

4.2 Scratchpad

Scratchpad represents the workspace memory of the VM. Its size is RANDOMX_SCRATCHPAD_L3 bytes and it's divided into 3 "levels":

  • The whole scratchpad is the third level "L3".
  • The first RANDOMX_SCRATCHPAD_L2 bytes of the scratchpad is the second level "L2".
  • The first RANDOMX_SCRATCHPAD_L1 bytes of the scratchpad is the first level "L1".

The scratchpad levels are inclusive, i.e. L3 contains both L2 and L1 and L2 contains L1.

To access a particular scratchpad level, bitwise AND with a mask according to table 4.2.1 is applied to the memory address.

Table 4.2.1: Scratchpad access masks

Level 8-byte aligned mask 64-byte aligned mask
L1 (RANDOMX_SCRATCHPAD_L1 - 1) & ~7 -
L2 (RANDOMX_SCRATCHPAD_L2 - 1) & ~7 -
L3 (RANDOMX_SCRATCHPAD_L3 - 1) & ~7 (RANDOMX_SCRATCHPAD_L3 - 1) & ~63

4.3 Registers

The VM has 8 integer registers r0-r7 (group R) and a total of 12 floating point registers split into 3 groups: f0-f3 (group F), e0-e3 (group E) and a0-a3 (group A). Integer registers are 64 bits wide, while floating point registers are 128 bits wide and contain a pair of numbers in floating point format. The lower and upper half of floating point registers are not separately addressable.

Additionally, there are 3 internal registers ma, mx and fprc.

Integer registers r0-r7 can be the source or the destination operands of integer instructions or may be used as address registers for accessing the Scratchpad.

Floating point registers a0-a3 are read-only and their value is fixed for a given VM program. They can be the source operand of any floating point instruction. The value of these registers is restricted to the interval [1, 4294967296).

Floating point registers f0-f3 are the "additive" registers, which can be the destination of floating point addition and subtraction instructions. The absolute value of these registers will not exceed 1.0e+12.

Floating point registers e0-e3 are the "multiplicative" registers, which can be the destination of floating point multiplication, division and square root instructions. Their value is always positive.

ma and mx are the memory registers. Both are 32 bits wide. ma contains the memory address of the next Dataset read and mx contains the address of the next Dataset prefetch.

The 2-bit fprc register determines the rounding mode of all floating point operations according to Table 4.3.1. The four rounding modes are defined by the IEEE 754 standard.

Table 4.3.1: Rounding modes

fprc rounding mode
0 roundTiesToEven
1 roundTowardNegative
2 roundTowardPositive
3 roundTowardZero

4.3.1 Group F register conversion

When an 8-byte value read from the memory is to be converted to an F group register value or operand, it is interpreted as a pair of 32-bit signed integers (in little endian, two's complement format) and converted to floating point format. This conversion is exact and doesn't need rounding because only 30 bits of the fraction significand are needed to represent the integer value.

4.3.2 Group E register conversion

When an 8-byte value read from the memory is to be converted to an E group register value or operand, the same conversion procedure is applied as for F group registers (see 4.3.1) with additional post-processing steps for each of the two floating point values:

  1. The sign bit is set to 0.
  2. Bits 0-2 of the exponent are set to the constant value of 0112.
  3. Bits 3-6 of the exponent are set to the value of the exponent mask described in chapter 4.5.6. This value is fixed for a given VM program.
  4. The bottom 22 bits of the fraction significand are set to the value of the fraction mask described in chapter 4.5.6. This value is fixed for a given VM program.

4.4 Program buffer

The Program buffer stores the program to be executed by the VM. The program consists of RANDOMX_PROGRAM_SIZE instructions. Each instruction is encoded by an 8-byte word. The instruction set is described in chapter 5.

4.5 VM programming

The VM requires 128 + 8 * RANDOMX_PROGRAM_SIZE bytes to be programmed. This is split into two parts:

  • 128 bytes of configuration data = 16 quadwords (16×8 bytes), used according to Table 4.5.1
  • 8 * RANDOMX_PROGRAM_SIZE bytes of program data, copied directly into the Program Buffer

Table 4.5.1 - Configuration data

quadword description
0 initialize low half of register a0
1 initialize high half of register a0
2 initialize low half of register a1
3 initialize high half of register a1
4 initialize low half of register a2
5 initialize high half of register a2
6 initialize low half of register a3
7 initialize high half of register a3
8 initialize register ma
9 (reserved)
10 initialize register mx
11 (reserved)
12 select address registers
13 select Dataset offset
14 initialize register masks for low half of group E registers
15 initialize register masks for high half of group E registers

4.5.2 Group A register initialization

The values of the floating point registers a0-a3 are initialized using configuration quadwords 0-7 to have the following value:

+1.fraction x 2exponent

The fraction has full 52 bits of precision and the exponent value ranges from 0 to 31. These values are obtained from the initialization quadword (in little endian format) according to Table 4.5.2.

Table 4.5.2 - Group A register initialization

bits description
0-51 fraction
52-58 (reserved)
59-63 exponent

4.5.3 Memory registers

Registers ma and mx are initialized using the low 32 bits of quadwords 8 and 10 in little endian format.

4.5.4 Address registers

Bits 0-3 of quadword 12 are used to select 4 address registers for program execution. Each bit chooses one register from a pair of integer registers according to Table 4.5.3.

Table 4.5.3 - Address registers

address register (bit) value = 0 value = 1
readReg0 (0) r0 r1
readReg1 (1) r2 r3
readReg2 (2) r4 r5
readReg3 (3) r6 r7

4.5.5 Dataset offset

The datasetOffset is calculated by bitwise AND of quadword 13 and the value RANDOMX_DATASET_EXTRA_SIZE / 64. The result is multiplied by 64. This offset is used when reading values from the Dataset.

4.5.6 Group E register masks

These masks are used for the conversion of group E registers (see 4.3.2). The low and high halves each have their own masks initialized from quadwords 14 and 15. The fraction mask is given by bits 0-21 and the exponent mask by bits 60-63 of the initialization quadword.

4.6 VM execution

During VM execution, 3 additional temporary registers are used: ic, spAddr0 and spAddr1. Program execution consists of initialization and loop execution.

4.6.1 Initialization

  1. ic register is set to RANDOMX_PROGRAM_ITERATIONS.
  2. spAddr0 is set to the value of mx.
  3. spAddr1 is set to the value of ma.
  4. The values of all integer registers r0-r7 are set to zero.

4.6.2 Loop execution

The loop described below is repeated until the value of the ic register reaches zero.

  1. XOR of registers readReg0 and readReg1 (see Table 4.5.3) is calculated and spAddr0 is XORed with the low 32 bits of the result and spAddr1 with the high 32 bits.
  2. spAddr0 is used to perform a 64-byte aligned read from Scratchpad level 3 (using mask from Table 4.2.1). The 64 bytes are XORed with all integer registers in order r0-r7.
  3. spAddr1 is used to perform a 64-byte aligned read from Scratchpad level 3 (using mask from Table 4.2.1). Each floating point register f0-f3 and e0-e3 is initialized using an 8-byte value according to the conversion rules from chapters 4.3.1 and 4.3.2.
  4. The 256 instructions stored in the Program Buffer are executed.
  5. The mx register is XORed with the low 32 bits of registers readReg2 and readReg3 (see Table 4.5.3).
  6. A 64-byte Dataset item at address datasetOffset + mx % RANDOMX_DATASET_BASE_SIZE is prefetched from the Dataset (it will be used during the next iteration).
  7. A 64-byte Dataset item at address datasetOffset + ma % RANDOMX_DATASET_BASE_SIZE is loaded from the Dataset. The 64 bytes are XORed with all integer registers in order r0-r7.
  8. The values of registers mx and ma are swapped.
  9. The values of all integer registers r0-r7 are written to the Scratchpad (L3) at address spAddr1 (64-byte aligned).
  10. Register f0 is XORed with register e0 and the result is stored in register f0. Register f1 is XORed with register e1 and the result is stored in register f1. Register f2 is XORed with register e2 and the result is stored in register f2. Register f3 is XORed with register e3 and the result is stored in register f3.
  11. The values of registers f0-f3 are written to the Scratchpad (L3) at address spAddr0 (64-byte aligned).
  12. spAddr0 and spAddr1 are both set to zero.
  13. ic is decreased by 1.

5. Instruction set

The VM executes programs in a special instruction set, which was designed in such way that any random 8-byte word is a valid instruction and any sequence of valid instructions is a valid program. Because there are no "syntax" rules, generating a random program is as easy as filling the program buffer with random data.

5.1 Instruction encoding

Each instruction word is 64 bits long. Instruction fields are encoded as shown in Fig. 5.1.

Figure 5.1 - Instruction encoding

Imgur

5.1.1 opcode

There are 256 opcodes, which are distributed between 29 distinct instructions. Each instruction can be encoded using multiple opcodes (the number of opcodes specifies the frequency of the instruction in a random program).

Table 5.1.1: Instruction groups

group # instructions # opcodes
integer 17 129 50.4%
floating point 9 94 36.7%
control 2 17 6.6%
store 1 16 6.3%
29 256 100%

All instructions are described below in chapters 5.2 - 5.5.

5.1.2 dst

Destination register. Only bits 0-1 (register groups A, F, E) or 0-2 (groups R, F+E) are used to encode a register according to Table 5.1.2.

Table 5.1.2: Addressable register groups

index R A F E F+E
0 r0 a0 f0 e0 f0
1 r1 a1 f1 e1 f1
2 r2 a2 f2 e2 f2
3 r3 a3 f3 e3 f3
4 r4 e0
5 r5 e1
6 r6 e2
7 r7 e3

5.1.3 src

The src flag encodes a source operand register according to Table 5.1.2 (only bits 0-1 or 0-2 are used).

Some integer instructions use a constant value as the source operand in cases when dst and src encode the same register (see Table 5.2.1).

For register-memory instructions, the source operand is used to calculate the memory address.

5.1.4 mod

The mod flag is encoded as:

Table 5.1.3: mod flag encoding

mod bits description range of values
0-1 mod.mem flag 0-3
2-3 mod.shift flag 0-3
4-7 mod.cond flag 0-15

The mod.mem flag selects between Scratchpad levels L1 and L2 when reading from or writing to memory except for two cases:

  • it's a memory read and dst and src encode the same register
  • it's a memory write mod.cond is 14 or 15

In these two cases, the Scratchpad level is L3 (see Table 5.1.4).

Table 5.1.4: memory access Scratchpad level

condition Scratchpad level
src == dst (read) L3
mod.cond >= 14 (write) L3
mod.mem == 0 L2
mod.mem != 0 L1

The address for reading/writing is calculated by applying bitwise AND operation to the address and the 8-byte aligned address mask listed in Table 4.2.1.

The mod.cond and mod.shift flags are used by some instructions (see 5.2, 5.4).

5.1.5 imm32

A 32-bit immediate value that can be used as the source operand and is used to calculate addresses for memory operations. The immediate value is sign-extended to 64 bits unless specified otherwise.

5.2 Integer instructions

For integer instructions, the destination is always an integer register (register group R). Source operand (if applicable) can be either an integer register or memory value. If dst and src refer to the same register, most instructions use 0 or imm32 instead of the register. This is indicated in the 'src == dst' column in Table 5.2.1.

[mem] indicates a memory operand loaded as an 8-byte value from the address src + imm32.

Table 5.2.1 Integer instructions

frequency instruction dst src src == dst ? operation
25/256 IADD_RS R R src = dst dst = dst + (src << mod.shift) (+ imm32)
7/256 IADD_M R R src = 0 dst = dst + [mem]
16/256 ISUB_R R R src = imm32 dst = dst - src
7/256 ISUB_M R R src = 0 dst = dst - [mem]
16/256 IMUL_R R R src = imm32 dst = dst * src
4/256 IMUL_M R R src = 0 dst = dst * [mem]
4/256 IMULH_R R R src = dst dst = (dst * src) >> 64
1/256 IMULH_M R R src = 0 dst = (dst * [mem]) >> 64
4/256 ISMULH_R R R src = dst dst = (dst * src) >> 64 (signed)
1/256 ISMULH_M R R src = 0 dst = (dst * [mem]) >> 64 (signed)
8/256 IMUL_RCP R - - dst = 2x / imm32 * dst
2/256 INEG_R R - - dst = -dst
15/256 IXOR_R R R src = imm32 dst = dst ^ src
5/256 IXOR_M R R src = 0 dst = dst ^ [mem]
10/256 IROR_R R R src = imm32 dst = dst >>> src
0/256 IROL_R R R src = imm32 dst = dst <<< src
4/256 ISWAP_R R R src = dst temp = src; src = dst; dst = temp

5.2.1 IADD_RS

This instructions adds the values of two registers (modulo 264). The value of the second operand is shifted left by 0-3 bits (determined by the mod.shift flag). Additionally, if dst is register r5, the immediate value imm32 is added to the result.

5.2.2 IADD_M

64-bit integer addition operation (performed modulo 264) with a memory source operand.

5.2.3 ISUB_R, ISUB_M

64-bit integer subtraction (performed modulo 264). ISUB_R uses register source operand, ISUB_M uses a memory source operand.

5.2.4 IMUL_R, IMUL_M

64-bit integer multiplication (performed modulo 264). IMUL_R uses a register source operand, IMUL_M uses a memory source operand.

5.2.5 IMULH_R, IMULH_M, ISMULH_R, ISMULH_M

These instructions output the high 64 bits of the whole 128-bit multiplication result. The result differs for signed and unsigned multiplication (IMULH is unsigned, ISMULH is signed). The variants with a register source operand perform a squaring operation if dst equals src.

5.2.6 IMUL_RCP

If imm32 equals 0 or is a power of 2, IMUL_RCP is a no-op. In other cases, the instruction multiplies the destination register by a reciprocal of imm32 (the immediate value is zero-extended and treated as unsigned). The reciprocal is calculated as rcp = 2x / imm32 by choosing the largest integer x such that rcp < 264.

5.2.7 INEG_R

Performs two's complement negation of the destination register.

5.2.8 IXOR_R, IXOR_M

64-bit exclusive OR operation. IXOR_R uses a register source operand, IXOR_M uses a memory source operand.

5.2.9 IROR_R, IROL_R

Performs a cyclic shift (rotation) of the destination register. Source operand (shift count) is implicitly masked to 6 bits. IROR rotates bits right, IROL left.

5.2.9 ISWAP_R

This instruction swaps the values of two registers. If source and destination refer to the same register, the result is a no-op.

5.3 Floating point instructions

For floating point instructions, the destination can be a group F or group E register. Source operand is either a group A register or a memory value.

[mem] indicates a memory operand loaded as an 8-byte value from the address src + imm32 and converted according to the rules in chapters 4.3.1 (group F) or 4.3.2 (group E). The lower and upper memory operands are denoted as [mem][0] and [mem][1].

All floating point operations are rounded according to the current value of the fprc register (see Table 4.3.1). Due to restrictions on the values of the floating point registers, no operation results in NaN or a denormal number.

Table 5.3.1 Floating point instructions

frequency instruction dst src operation
8/256 FSWAP_R F+E - (dst0, dst1) = (dst1, dst0)
20/256 FADD_R F A (dst0, dst1) = (dst0 + src0, dst1 + src1)
5/256 FADD_M F R (dst0, dst1) = (dst0 + [mem][0], dst1 + [mem][1])
20/256 FSUB_R F A (dst0, dst1) = (dst0 - src0, dst1 - src1)
5/256 FSUB_M F R (dst0, dst1) = (dst0 - [mem][0], dst1 - [mem][1])
6/256 FSCAL_R F - (dst0, dst1) = (-2x0 * dst0, -2x1 * dst1)
20/256 FMUL_R E A (dst0, dst1) = (dst0 * src0, dst1 * src1)
4/256 FDIV_M E R (dst0, dst1) = (dst0 / [mem][0], dst1 / [mem][1])
6/256 FSQRT_R E - (dst0, dst1) = (√dst0, √dst1)

5.3.1 FSWAP_R

Swaps the lower and upper halves of the destination register. This is the only instruction that is applicable to both F an E register groups.

5.3.2 FADD_R, FADD_M

Double precision floating point addition. FADD_R uses a group A register source operand, FADD_M uses a memory operand.

5.3.3 FSUB_R, FSUB_M

Double precision floating point subtraction. FSUB_R uses a group A register source operand, FSUB_M uses a memory operand.

5.3.4 FSCAL_R

This instruction negates the number and multiplies it by 2x. x is calculated by taking the 5 least significant digits of the biased exponent and interpreting them as a binary number using the digit set {+1, -1} as opposed to the traditional {0, 1}. The possible values of x are all odd numbers from -31 to +31.

The mathematical operation described above is equivalent to a bitwise XOR of the binary representation with the value of 0x81F0000000000000.

5.3.5 FMUL_R

Double precision floating point multiplication. This instruction uses only a register source operand.

5.3.6 FDIV_M

Double precision floating point division. This instruction uses only a memory source operand.

5.3.7 FSQRT_R

Double precision floating point square root of the destination register.

5.4 Control instructions

There are 2 control instructions.

Table 5.4.1 - Control instructions

frequency instruction dst src operation
1/256 CFROUND fprc R fprc = src >>> imm32
16/256 CBRANCH - - (conditional jump)

5.4.1 CFROUND

This instruction calculates a 2-bit value by rotating the source register right by imm32 bits and taking the 2 least significant bits (the value of the source register is unaffected). The result is stored in the fprc register. This changes the rounding mode of all subsequent floating point instructions.

5.4.2 CBRANCH

This instruction performs a conditional jump in the Program Buffer. It uses an implicit integer register operand creg. This register is determined based on preceding instructions. For this purpose, the VM assigns each integer register two tag values:

  • lastUsed - the index of the instruction when the register was last modified. The initial value at the start of each program iteration is -1, meaning the register is unmodified.
  • count - the number of times the register has been selected as the operand of a CBRANCH instruction. The initial value at the start of each program iteration is 0.

A register is considered as modified by an instruction in the following cases:

  • It is the destination register of an integer instruction except IMUL_RCP and ISWAP_R.
  • It is the destination register of IMUL_RCP and imm32 is not zero or a power of 2.
  • It is the source or the destination register of ISWAP_R and the destination and source registers are distinct.
  • The CBRANCH instruction is considered to modify all integer registers.

There are 3 rules for the selection of the creg register, evaluated in this order:

  1. The register with the lowest value of lastUsed tag is selected.
  2. In case multiple registers have the same value of the lastUsed tag, the register with the lowest value of the count tag is selected from them.
  3. In case multiple registers have the same values of both lastUsed and count tags, the register with the lowest index is selected (r0 before r1 etc.) from them.

Whenever a register is selected as the operand of a CBRANCH instruction, its count tag is increased by 1.

The CBRANCH instruction performs the following steps:

  1. A constant b is calculated as mod.cond + RANDOMX_JUMP_OFFSET.
  2. A constant cimm is constructed as sign-extended imm32 with bit b set to 1 and bit b-1 set to 0 (if b > 0).
  3. cimm is added to creg.
  4. If bits b to b + RANDOMX_JUMP_BITS - 1 of creg are zero, execution jumps to instruction creg.lastUsed + 1 (the instruction following the instruction where creg was last modified).

Bits in immediate and register values are numbered from 0 to 63 with 0 being the least significant bit. For example, for b = 10 and RANDOMX_JUMP_BITS = 8, the bits are arranged like this:

cimm = SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM10MMMMMMMMM
creg = ..............................................XXXXXXXX..........

S is a copied sign bit from imm32. M denotes bits of imm32. The 9th bit is set to 0 and the 10th bit is set to 1. This value would be added to creg.

The second line uses X to mark bits of creg that would be checked by the condition. If all these bits are 0 after adding cimm, the jump is executed.

The construction of the CBRANCH instruction ensures that no inifinite loops are possible in the program.

5.5 Store instruction

There is one explicit store instruction for integer values.

[mem] indicates the destination is an 8-byte value at the address dst + imm32.

Table 5.5.1 - Store instruction

frequency instruction dst src operation
16/256 ISTORE R R [mem] = src

5.5.1 ISTORE

This instruction stores the value of the source integer register to the memory at the address calculated from the value of the destination register. The src and dst can be the same register.

6. SuperscalarHash

SuperscalarHash is a custom diffusion function that was designed to burn as much power as possible using only the CPU's integer ALUs.

The input and output of SuperscalarHash are 8 integer registers r0-r7, each 64 bits wide. The output of SuperscalarHash is used to construct the Dataset (see chapter 7.3).

6.1 Instructions

The body of SuperscalarHash is a random sequence of instructions that can run on the Virtual Machine. SuperscalarHash uses a reduced set of only integer register-register instructions listed in Table 6.1.1. dst refers to the destination register, src to the source register.

Table 6.1.1 - SuperscalarHash instructions

freq. † instruction Macro-ops operation rules
0.11 ISUB_R sub_rr dst = dst - src dst != src
0.11 IXOR_R xor_rr dst = dst ^ src dst != src
0.11 IADD_RS lea_sib dst = dst + (src << mod.shift) dst != src, dst != r5
0.22 IMUL_R imul_rr dst = dst * src dst != src
0.11 IROR_C ror_ri dst = dst >>> imm32 imm32 % 64 != 0
0.10 IADD_C add_ri dst = dst + imm32
0.10 IXOR_C xor_ri dst = dst ^ imm32
0.03 IMULH_R mov_rr,mul_r,mov_rr dst = (dst * src) >> 64
0.03 ISMULH_R mov_rr,imul_r,mov_rr dst = (dst * src) >> 64 (signed)
0.06 IMUL_RCP mov_ri,imul_rr dst = 2x / imm32 * dst imm32 != 0, imm32 != 2N

† Frequencies are approximate. Instructions are generated based on complex rules.

6.1.1 ISUB_R

See chapter 5.2.3. Source and destination are always distinct registers.

6.1.2 IXOR_R

See chapter 5.2.8. Source and destination are always distinct registers.

6.1.3 IADD_RS

See chapter 5.2.1. Source and destination are always distinct registers and register r5 cannot be the destination.

6.1.4 IMUL_R

See chapter 5.2.4. Source and destination are always distinct registers.

6.1.5 IROR_C

The destination register is rotated right. The rotation count is given by imm32 masked to 6 bits and cannot be 0.

6.1.6 IADD_C

A sign-extended imm32 is added to the destination register.

6.1.7 IXOR_C

The destination register is XORed with a sign-extended imm32.

6.1.8 IMULH_R, ISMULH_R

See chapter 5.2.5.

6.1.9 IMUL_RCP

See chapter 5.2.6. imm32 is never 0 or a power of 2.

6.2 The reference CPU

Unlike a standard RandomX program, a SuperscalarHash program is generated using a strict set of rules to achieve the maximum performance on a superscalar CPU. For this purpose, the generator runs a simulation of a reference CPU.

The reference CPU is loosely based on the Intel Ivy Bridge microarchitecture. It has the following properties:

  • The CPU has 3 integer execution ports P0, P1 and P5 that can execute instructions in parallel. Multiplication can run only on port P1.
  • Each of the Superscalar instructions listed in Table 6.1.1 consist of one or more Macro-ops. Each Macro-op has certain execution latency (in cycles) and size (in bytes) as shown in Table 6.2.1.
  • Each of the Macro-ops listed in Table 6.2.1 consists of 0-2 Micro-ops that can go to a subset of the 3 execution ports. If a Macro-op consists of 2 Micro-ops, both must be executed together.
  • The CPU can decode at most 16 bytes of code per cycle and at most 4 Micro-ops per cycle.

Table 6.2.1 - Macro-ops

Macro-op latency size 1st Micro-op 2nd Micro-op
sub_rr 1 3 P015 -
xor_rr 1 3 P015 -
lea_sib 1 4 P01 -
imul_rr 3 4 P1 -
ror_ri 1 4 P05 -
add_ri 1 7, 8, 9 P015 -
xor_ri 1 7, 8, 9 P015 -
mov_rr 0 3 - -
mul_r 4 3 P1 P5
imul_r 4 3 P1 P5
mov_ri 1 10 P015 -
  • P015 - Micro-op can be executed on any port
  • P01 - Micro-op can be executed on ports P0 or P1
  • P05 - Micro-op can be executed on ports P0 or P5
  • P1 - Micro-op can be executed only on port P1
  • P5 - Micro-op can be executed only on port P5

Macro-ops add_ri and xor_ri can be optionally padded to a size of 8 or 9 bytes for code alignment purposes. mov_rr has 0 execution latency and doesn't use an execution port, but still occupies space during the decoding stage (see chapter 6.3.1).

6.3 CPU simulation

SuperscalarHash programs are generated to maximize the usage of all 3 execution ports of the reference CPU. The generation consists of 4 stages:

  • Decoding stage
  • Instruction selection
  • Port assignment
  • Operand assignment

Program generation is complete when one of two conditions is met:

  1. An instruction is scheduled for execution on cycle that is equal to or greater than RANDOMX_SUPERSCALAR_LATENCY
  2. The number of generated instructions reaches RANDOMX_SUPERSCALAR_MAX_SIZE

6.3.1 Decoding stage

The generator produces instructions in groups of 3 or 4 Macro-op slots such that the size of each group is exactly 16 bytes.

Table 6.3.1 - Decoder configurations

decoder group configuration
0 4-8-4
1 7-3-3-3
2 3-7-3-3
3 4-9-3
4 4-4-4-4
5 3-3-10

The rules for the selection of the decoder group are following:

  • If the currently processed instruction is IMULH_R or ISMULH_R, the next decode group is group 5 (the only group that starts with a 3-byte slot and has only 3 slots).
  • If the total number of multiplications that have been generated is less than or equal to the current decoding cycle, the next decode group is group 4.
  • If the currently processed instruction is IMUL_RCP, the next decode group is group 0 or 3 (must begin with a 4-byte slot for multiplication).
  • Otherwise a random decode group is selected from groups 0-3.

6.3.2 Instruction selection

Instructions are selected based on the size of the current decode group slot - see Table 6.3.2.

Table 6.3.2 - Decoder configurations

slot size note instructions
3 - ISUB_R, IXOR_R
3 last slot in the group ISUB_R, IXOR_R, IMULH_R, ISMULH_R
4 decode group 4, not the last slot IMUL_R
4 - IROR_C, IADD_RS
7,8,9 - IADD_C, IXOR_C
10 - IMUL_RCP

6.3.3 Port assignment

Micro-ops are issued to execution ports as soon as an available port is free. The scheduling is done optimistically by checking port availability in order P5 -> P0 -> P1 to not overload port P1 (multiplication) by instructions that can go to any port. The cycle when all Micro-ops of an instruction can be executed is called the 'scheduleCycle'.

6.3.4 Operand assignment

The source operand (if needed) is selected first. is it selected from the group of registers that are available at the 'scheduleCycle' of the instruction. A register is available if the latency of its last operation has elapsed.

The destination operand is selected with more strict rules (see column 'rules' in Table 6.1.1):

  • value must be ready at the required cycle
  • cannot be the same as the source register unless the instruction allows it (see column 'rules' in Table 6.1.1)
    • this avoids optimizable operations such as reg ^ reg or reg - reg
    • it also increases intermixing of register values
  • register cannot be multiplied twice in a row unless allowChainedMul is true
    • this avoids accumulation of trailing zeroes in registers due to excessive multiplication
    • allowChainedMul is set to true if an attempt to find source/destination registers failed (this is quite rare, but prevents a catastrophic failure of the generator)
  • either the last instruction applied to the register or its source must be different than the current instruction
    • this avoids optimizable instruction sequences such as r1 = r1 ^ r2; r1 = r1 ^ r2 (can be eliminated) or reg = reg >>> C1; reg = reg >>> C2 (can be reduced to one rotation) or reg = reg + C1; reg = reg + C2 (can be reduced to one addition)
  • register r5 cannot be the destination of the IADD_RS instruction (limitation of the x86 lea instruction)

7. Dataset

The Dataset is a read-only memory structure that is used during program execution (chapter 4.6.2, steps 6 and 7). The size of the Dataset is RANDOMX_DATASET_BASE_SIZE + RANDOMX_DATASET_EXTRA_SIZE bytes and it's divided into 64-byte 'items'.

In order to allow PoW verification with a lower amount of memory, the Dataset is constructed in two steps using an intermediate structure called the "Cache", which can be used to calculate Dataset items on the fly.

The whole Dataset is constructed from the key value K, which is an input parameter of RandomX. The whole Dataset needs to be recalculated everytime the key value changes. Fig. 7.1 shows the process of Dataset construction.

Figure 7.1 - Dataset construction

Imgur

7.1 Cache construction

The key K is expanded into the Cache using the "memory fill" function of Argon2d with parameters according to Table 7.1.1. The key is used as the "password" field.

Table 7.1.1 - Argon2 parameters

parameter value
parallelism RANDOMX_ARGON_LANES
output size 0
memory RANDOMX_ARGON_MEMORY
iterations RANDOMX_ARGON_ITERATIONS
version 0x13
hash type 0 (Argon2d)
password key value K
salt RANDOMX_ARGON_SALT
secret size 0
assoc. data size 0

The finalizer and output calculation steps of Argon2 are omitted. The output is the filled memory array.

7.2 SuperscalarHash initialization

The key value K is used to initialize a BlakeGenerator (see chapter 3.4), which is then used to generate 8 SuperscalarHash instances for Dataset initialization.

7.3 Dataset block generation

Dataset items are numbered sequentially with itemNumber starting from 0. Each 64-byte Dataset item is generated independently using 8 SuperscalarHash functions (generated according to chapter 7.2) and by XORing randomly selected data from the Cache (constructed according to chapter 7.1).

The item data is represented by 8 64-bit integer registers: r0-r7.

  1. The register values are initialized as follows (* = multiplication, ^ = XOR):
    • r0 = (itemNumber + 1) * 6364136223846793005
    • r1 = r0 ^ 9298411001130361340
    • r2 = r0 ^ 12065312585734608966
    • r3 = r0 ^ 9306329213124626780
    • r4 = r0 ^ 5281919268842080866
    • r5 = r0 ^ 10536153434571861004
    • r6 = r0 ^ 3398623926847679864
    • r7 = r0 ^ 9549104520008361294
  2. Let cacheIndex = itemNumber
  3. Let i = 0
  4. Load a 64-byte item from the Cache. The item index is given by cacheIndex modulo the total number of 64-byte items in Cache.
  5. Execute SuperscalarHash[i](r0, r1, r2, r3, r4, r5, r6, r7), where SuperscalarHash[i] refers to the i-th SuperscalarHash function. This modifies the values of the registers r0-r7.
  6. XOR all registers with the 64 bytes loaded in step 4 (8 bytes per column in order r0-r7).
  7. Set cacheIndex to the value of the register that has the longest dependency chain in the SuperscalarHash function executed in step 5.
  8. Set i = i + 1 and go back to step 4 if i < RANDOMX_CACHE_ACCESSES.
  9. Concatenate registers r0-r7 in little endian format to get the final Datset item data.

The constants used to initialize register values in step 1 were determined as follows:

  • Multiplier 6364136223846793005 was selected because it gives an excellent distribution for linear generators (D. Knuth: The Art of Computer Programming – Vol 2., also listed in Commonly used LCG parameters)
  • XOR constants used to initialize registers r1-r7 were determined by calculating a 512-bit Blake2b hash of the ASCII value RandomX SuperScalarHash initialize and taking bytes 8-63 as 7 little-endian unsigned 64-bit integers. Additionally, the constant for r1 was increased by 233+700 and the constant for r3 was increased by 214 (these changes are necessary to ensure that all registers have unique initial values for all values of itemNumber).