Commit Graph

400 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matthias Krüger
2bd65ebede
Rollup merge of #137210 - workingjubilee:fixup-passmode-import, r=RalfJung
compiler: Stop reexporting stuff in cg_llvm::abi

The reexports confuse tooling like rustdoc into thinking cg_llvm is the source of key types that originate in rustc_target.
2025-02-19 01:30:12 +01:00
Jubilee Young
2d2de18166 compiler: Stop reexporting stuff in cg_llvm::abi
The reexports confuse tooling like rustdoc into thinking cg_llvm is
the source of key types that originate in rustc_target.
2025-02-18 00:31:29 -08:00
Nicholas Nethercote
fd7b4bf4e1 Move methods from Map to TyCtxt, part 2.
Continuing the work started in #136466.

Every method gains a `hir_` prefix, though for the ones that already
have a `par_` or `try_par_` prefix I added the `hir_` after that.
2025-02-18 10:17:44 +11:00
Jubilee
864eba9fb1
Rollup merge of #136895 - maurer:fix-enum-discr, r=nikic
debuginfo: Set bitwidth appropriately in enum variant tags

Previously, we unconditionally set the bitwidth to 128-bits, the largest an enum would possibly be. Then, LLVM would cut down the constant by chopping off leading zeroes before emitting the DWARF. LLVM only supported 64-bit enumerators, so this would also have occasionally resulted in truncated data.

LLVM added support for 128-bit enumerators in llvm/llvm-project#125578

That patchset trusts the constant to describe how wide the variant tag is, so the high 64-bits of zeros are considered potentially load-bearing.

As a result, we went from emitting tags that looked like:
DW_AT_discr_value     (0xfe)

(because `dwarf::BestForm` selected `data1`)

to emitting tags that looked like:
DW_AT_discr_value	(<0x10> fe ff ff ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 )

This makes the `DW_AT_discr_value` encode at the bitwidth of the tag, which:
1. Is probably closer to our intentions in terms of describing the data.
2. Doesn't invoke the 128-bit support which may not be supported by all debuggers / downstream tools.
3. Will result in smaller debug information.
2025-02-13 17:46:08 -08:00
Matthew Maurer
d82219a4fa debuginfo: Set bitwidth appropriately in enum variant tags
Previously, we unconditionally set the bitwidth to 128-bits, the largest
an discrimnator would possibly be. Then, LLVM would cut down the constant by
chopping off leading zeroes before emitting the DWARF. LLVM only
supported 64-bit descriminators, so this would also have occasionally
resulted in truncated data (or an assert) if more than 64-bits were
used.

LLVM added support for 128-bit enumerators in llvm/llvm-project#125578

That patchset also trusts the constant to describe how wide the variant tag is.
As a result, we went from emitting tags that looked like:
DW_AT_discr_value     (0xfe)

(`form1`)

to emitting tags that looked like:
DW_AT_discr_value	(<0x10> fe ff ff ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 )

This makes the `DW_AT_discr_value` encode at the bitwidth of the tag,
which:
1. Is probably closer to our intentions in terms of describing the data.
2. Doesn't invoke the 128-bit support which may not be supported by all
   debuggers / downstream tools.
3. Will result in smaller debug information.
2025-02-12 18:01:42 +00:00
Oli Scherer
dcf1e4d72b Document some safety constraints and use more safe wrappers 2025-02-11 09:47:13 +00:00
bors
124cc92199 Auto merge of #136751 - bjorn3:update_rustfmt, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Update bootstrap compiler and rustfmt

The rustfmt version we previously used formats things differently from what the latest nightly rustfmt does. This causes issues for subtrees that get formatted both in-tree and in their own repo. Updating the rustfmt used in-tree solves those issues. Also bumped the bootstrap compiler as the stage0 update command always updates both at the same
time.
2025-02-09 15:44:16 +00:00
Urgau
5ec56e5fbb
Rollup merge of #136659 - wesleywiser:dwarf_version_lto_merge_behavior, r=jieyouxu
Pick the max DWARF version when LTO'ing modules with different versions

Currently, when rustc compiles code with `-Clto` enabled that was built
with different choices for `-Zdwarf-version`, a warning will be
reported. It's very easy to observe this by compiling most anything (eg,
"hello world") and specifying `-Clto -Zdwarf-version=5` since the
standard library is distributed with `-Zdwarf-version=4`.

This behavior isn't actually useful for a few reasons:
- From observation, LLVM chooses to pick the highest DWARF version
  anyway after issuing the warning.
- Clang specifies that in this case, the max version should be picked
  without a warning and as a general principle, we want to support
  x-lang LTO with Clang which implies using the same module flag merge
  behaviors.
- Debuggers need to be able to handle a variety of versions within the
  same debugging session as you can easily have some parts of a binary
  (or some dynamic libraries within an application) all compiled with
  different DWARF versions.

This commit changes the module flag merge behavior to match Clang and
use the highest version of DWARF. It also adds a test to ensure this
behavior is respected in the case of two crates being LTO'd together and
adds a test to ensure no warning is printed.

Fixes #130041 which fails due to these warnings being printed

cc #103057
2025-02-09 00:37:28 +01:00
bjorn3
1fcae03369 Rustfmt 2025-02-08 22:12:13 +00:00
Wesley Wiser
bbc40e7822 Pick the max DWARF version when LTO'ing modules with different versions
Currently, when rustc compiles code with `-Clto` enabled that was built
with different choices for `-Zdwarf-version`, a warning will be
reported. It's very easy to observe this by compiling most anything (eg,
"hello world") and specifying `-Clto -Zdwarf-version=5` since the
standard library is distributed with `-Zdwarf-version=4`.

This behavior isn't actually useful for a few reasons:
- from observation, LLVM chooses to pick the highest DWARF version
  anyway after issuing the warning
- Clang specifies that in this case, the max version should be picked
  without a warning and as a general principle, we want to support
  x-lang LTO with Clang which implies using the same module flag merge
  behaviors
- Debuggers need to be able to handle a variety of versions withing the
  same debugging session as you can easily have some parts of a binary
  (or some dynamic libraries within an application) all compiled with
  different DWARF versions

This commit changes the module flag merge behavior to match Clang and
use the highest version of DWARF. It also adds a test to ensure this
behavior is respected in the case of two crates being LTO'd together and
updates the test added in the previous commit to ensure no warning is
printed.
2025-02-08 16:33:36 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
93b194516a
Rollup merge of #136640 - Zalathar:debuginfo-align-bits, r=compiler-errors
Debuginfo for function ZSTs should have alignment of 8 bits, not 1 bit

In #116096, function ZSTs were made to have debuginfo that gives them an alignment of “1”. But because alignment in LLVM debuginfo is denoted in *bits*, not bytes, this resulted in an alignment specification of 1 bit instead of 1 byte.

I don't know whether this has any practical consequences, but I noticed that a test started failing when I accidentally fixed the mistake while working on #136632, so I extracted the fix (and the test adjustment) to this PR.
2025-02-08 03:58:45 +01:00
Zalathar
4385a9e063 Debuginfo for function ZSTs should have alignment of 8 bits, not 1 bit 2025-02-06 23:01:29 +11:00
bors
2f92f050e8 Auto merge of #136471 - safinaskar:parallel, r=SparrowLii
tree-wide: parallel: Fully removed all `Lrc`, replaced with `Arc`

tree-wide: parallel: Fully removed all `Lrc`, replaced with `Arc`

This is continuation of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/132282 .

I'm pretty sure I did everything right. In particular, I searched all occurrences of `Lrc` in submodules and made sure that they don't need replacement.

There are other possibilities, through.

We can define `enum Lrc<T> { Rc(Rc<T>), Arc(Arc<T>) }`. Or we can make `Lrc` a union and on every clone we can read from special thread-local variable. Or we can add a generic parameter to `Lrc` and, yes, this parameter will be everywhere across all codebase.

So, if you think we should take some alternative approach, then don't merge this PR. But if it is decided to stick with `Arc`, then, please, merge.

cc "Parallel Rustc Front-end" ( https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/113349 )

r? SparrowLii

`@rustbot` label WG-compiler-parallel
2025-02-06 10:50:05 +00:00
Askar Safin
0a21f1d0a2 tree-wide: parallel: Fully removed all Lrc, replaced with Arc 2025-02-03 13:25:57 +03:00
Zalathar
8ddd9c38f6 Use LLVMDIBuilderCreateDebugLocation
The LLVM-C binding takes an explicit context, whereas our binding obtained the
context from the scope argument.
2025-02-01 14:14:40 +11:00
Zalathar
949b4673ce Use LLVMDIBuilderCreateLexicalBlockFile 2025-02-01 14:14:40 +11:00
Zalathar
70d41bc711 Use LLVMDIBuilderCreateLexicalBlock 2025-02-01 14:14:40 +11:00
Zalathar
878ab125a1 Use LLVMDIBuilderCreateNameSpace 2025-02-01 14:14:39 +11:00
Zalathar
cd2af2dd9a Use LLVMDIBuilderFinalize 2025-02-01 13:38:12 +11:00
Zalathar
832fcfb64f Introduce DIBuilderBox, an owning pointer to DIBuilder 2025-02-01 13:34:14 +11:00
bors
c37fbd873a Auto merge of #135318 - compiler-errors:vtable-fixes, r=lcnr
Fix deduplication mismatches in vtables leading to upcasting unsoundness

We currently have two cases where subtleties in supertraits can trigger disagreements in the vtable layout, e.g. leading to a different vtable layout being accessed at a callsite compared to what was prepared during unsizing. Namely:

### #135315

In this example, we were not normalizing supertraits when preparing vtables. In the example,

```
trait Supertrait<T> {
    fn _print_numbers(&self, mem: &[usize; 100]) {
        println!("{mem:?}");
    }
}
impl<T> Supertrait<T> for () {}

trait Identity {
    type Selff;
}
impl<Selff> Identity for Selff {
    type Selff = Selff;
}

trait Middle<T>: Supertrait<()> + Supertrait<T> {
    fn say_hello(&self, _: &usize) {
        println!("Hello!");
    }
}
impl<T> Middle<T> for () {}

trait Trait: Middle<<() as Identity>::Selff> {}
impl Trait for () {}

fn main() {
    (&() as &dyn Trait as &dyn Middle<()>).say_hello(&0);
}
```

When we prepare `dyn Trait`, we see a supertrait of `Middle<<() as Identity>::Selff>`, which itself has two supertraits `Supertrait<()>` and `Supertrait<<() as Identity>::Selff>`. These two supertraits are identical, but they are not duplicated because we were using structural equality and *not* considering normalization. This leads to a vtable layout with two trait pointers.

When we upcast to `dyn Middle<()>`, those two supertraits are now the same, leading to a vtable layout with only one trait pointer. This leads to an offset error, and we call the wrong method.

### #135316

This one is a bit more interesting, and is the bulk of the changes in this PR. It's a bit similar, except it uses binder equality instead of normalization to make the compiler get confused about two vtable layouts. In the example,

```
trait Supertrait<T> {
    fn _print_numbers(&self, mem: &[usize; 100]) {
        println!("{mem:?}");
    }
}
impl<T> Supertrait<T> for () {}

trait Trait<T, U>: Supertrait<T> + Supertrait<U> {
    fn say_hello(&self, _: &usize) {
        println!("Hello!");
    }
}
impl<T, U> Trait<T, U> for () {}

fn main() {
    (&() as &'static dyn for<'a> Trait<&'static (), &'a ()>
        as &'static dyn Trait<&'static (), &'static ()>)
        .say_hello(&0);
}
```

When we prepare the vtable for `dyn for<'a> Trait<&'static (), &'a ()>`, we currently consider the PolyTraitRef of the vtable as the key for a supertrait. This leads two two supertraits -- `Supertrait<&'static ()>` and `for<'a> Supertrait<&'a ()>`.

However, we can upcast[^up] without offsetting the vtable from `dyn for<'a> Trait<&'static (), &'a ()>` to `dyn Trait<&'static (), &'static ()>`. This is just instantiating the principal trait ref for a specific `'a = 'static`. However, when considering those supertraits, we now have only one distinct supertrait -- `Supertrait<&'static ()>` (which is deduplicated since there are two supertraits with the same substitutions). This leads to similar offsetting issues, leading to the wrong method being called.

[^up]: I say upcast but this is a cast that is allowed on stable, since it's not changing the vtable at all, just instantiating the binder of the principal trait ref for some lifetime.

The solution here is to recognize that a vtable isn't really meaningfully higher ranked, and to just treat a vtable as corresponding to a `TraitRef` so we can do this deduplication more faithfully. That is to say, the vtable for `dyn for<'a> Tr<'a>` and `dyn Tr<'x>` are always identical, since they both would correspond to a set of free regions on an impl... Do note that `Tr<for<'a> fn(&'a ())>` and `Tr<fn(&'static ())>` are still distinct.

----

There's a bit more that can be cleaned up. In codegen, we can stop using `PolyExistentialTraitRef` basically everywhere. We can also fix SMIR to stop storing `PolyExistentialTraitRef` in its vtable allocations.

As for testing, it's difficult to actually turn this into something that can be tested with `rustc_dump_vtable`, since having multiple supertraits that are identical is a recipe for ambiguity errors. Maybe someone else is more creative with getting that attr to work, since the tests I added being run-pass tests is a bit unsatisfying. Miri also doesn't help here, since it doesn't really generate vtables that are offset by an index in the same way as codegen.

r? `@lcnr` for the vibe check? Or reassign, idk. Maybe let's talk about whether this makes sense.

<sup>(I guess an alternative would also be to not do any deduplication of vtable supertraits (or only a really conservative subset) rather than trying to normalize and deduplicate more faithfully here. Not sure if that works and is sufficient tho.)</sup>

cc `@steffahn` -- ty for the minimizations
cc `@WaffleLapkin` -- since you're overseeing the feature stabilization :3

Fixes #135315
Fixes #135316
2025-01-31 04:09:11 +00:00
bors
6c1d960d88 Auto merge of #136318 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-a159mzo, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 9 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #135026 (Cast global variables to default address space)
 - #135475 (uefi: Implement path)
 - #135852 (Add `AsyncFn*` to `core` prelude)
 - #136004 (tests: Skip const OOM tests on aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu)
 - #136157 (override build profile for bootstrap tests)
 - #136180 (Introduce a wrapper for "typed valtrees" and properly check the type before extracting the value)
 - #136256 (Add release notes for 1.84.1)
 - #136271 (Remove minor future footgun in `impl Debug for MaybeUninit`)
 - #136288 (Improve documentation for file locking)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-01-30 23:11:38 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
89f8abe8b4
Rollup merge of #135026 - Flakebi:global-addrspace, r=saethlin
Cast global variables to default address space

Pointers for variables all need to be in the same address space for correct compilation. Therefore ensure that even if a global variable is created in a different address space, it is casted to the default address space before its value is used.

This is necessary for the amdgpu target and others where the default address space for global variables is not 0.

For example `core` does not compile in debug mode when not casting the address space to the default one because it tries to emit the following (simplified) LLVM IR, containing a type mismatch:

```llvm
`@alloc_0` = addrspace(1) constant <{ [6 x i8] }> <{ [6 x i8] c"bit.rs" }>, align 1
`@alloc_1` = addrspace(1) constant <{ ptr }> <{ ptr addrspace(1) `@alloc_0` }>, align 8
; ^ here a struct containing a `ptr` is needed, but it is created using a `ptr addrspace(1)`
```

For this to compile, we need to insert a constant `addrspacecast` before we use a global variable:

```llvm
`@alloc_0` = addrspace(1) constant <{ [6 x i8] }> <{ [6 x i8] c"bit.rs" }>, align 1
`@alloc_1` = addrspace(1) constant <{ ptr }> <{ ptr addrspacecast (ptr addrspace(1) `@alloc_0` to ptr) }>, align 8
```

As vtables are global variables as well, they are also created with an `addrspacecast`. In the SSA backend, after a vtable global is created, metadata is added to it. To add metadata, we need the non-casted global variable. Therefore we strip away an addrspacecast if there is one, to get the underlying global.

Tracking issue: #135024
2025-01-30 20:47:02 +01:00
Michael Goulet
9dc41a048d Use ExistentialTraitRef throughout codegen 2025-01-30 15:34:00 +00:00
Michael Goulet
fdc4bd22b7 Do not treat vtable supertraits as distinct when bound with different bound vars 2025-01-30 15:33:58 +00:00
Wesley Wiser
51eaa0d56a Clean up uses of the unstable dwarf_version option
- Consolidate calculation of the effective value.
- Check the target `DebuginfoKind` instead of using `is_like_msvc`.
2025-01-29 21:44:21 -06:00
Flakebi
b06e840d9e
Add comments about address spaces 2025-01-24 00:37:05 +01:00
bors
6a64e3b897 Auto merge of #135643 - khuey:135332, r=jieyouxu
When LLVM's location discriminator value limit is exceeded, emit locations with dummy spans instead of dropping them entirely

Dropping them fails `-Zverify-llvm-ir`.

Fixes #135332.

r? `@jieyouxu`
2025-01-20 14:16:22 +00:00
Yotam Ofek
264fa0fc54 Run clippy --fix for unnecessary_map_or lint 2025-01-19 19:15:00 +00:00
Kyle Huey
45ef92731b When LLVM's location discriminator value limit is exceeded, emit locations with dummy spans instead of dropping them entirely
Revert most of #133194 (except the test and the comment fixes). Then refix
not emitting locations at all when the correct location discriminator value
exceeds LLVM's capacity.
2025-01-19 07:17:33 -08:00
Rémy Rakic
a13354bea0 rename BitSet to DenseBitSet
This should make it clearer that this bitset is dense, with the
advantages and disadvantages that it entails.
2025-01-11 11:34:01 +00:00
Zalathar
f50721ebad Explain why the DW_TAG_* constants remain as-is for now 2025-01-05 22:16:49 +11:00
Zalathar
1b62645418 Use constants for DWARF opcodes, instead of FFI calls 2025-01-05 22:16:25 +11:00
Zalathar
e267106104 Use gimli to get the values of DWARF constants needed by codegen
The `gimli` crate is already a dependency of `thorin-dwp`, which is already a
dependency of `rustc_codegen_ssa`.
2025-01-05 22:07:48 +11:00
Flakebi
436e4fb647
Cast global variables to default address space
Pointers for variables all need to be in the same address space for
correct compilation. Therefore ensure that even if a global variable is
created in a different address space, it is casted to the default
address space before its value is used.

This is necessary for the amdgpu target and others where the default
address space for global variables is not 0.

For example `core` does not compile in debug mode when not casting the
address space to the default one because it tries to emit the following
(simplified) LLVM IR, containing a type mismatch:

```llvm
@alloc_0 = addrspace(1) constant <{ [6 x i8] }> <{ [6 x i8] c"bit.rs" }>, align 1
@alloc_1 = addrspace(1) constant <{ ptr }> <{ ptr addrspace(1) @alloc_0 }>, align 8
; ^ here a struct containing a `ptr` is needed, but it is created using a `ptr addrspace(1)`
```

For this to compile, we need to insert a constant `addrspacecast` before
we use a global variable:

```llvm
@alloc_0 = addrspace(1) constant <{ [6 x i8] }> <{ [6 x i8] c"bit.rs" }>, align 1
@alloc_1 = addrspace(1) constant <{ ptr }> <{ ptr addrspacecast (ptr addrspace(1) @alloc_0 to ptr) }>, align 8
```

As vtables are global variables as well, they are also created with an
`addrspacecast`. In the SSA backend, after a vtable global is created,
metadata is added to it. To add metadata, we need the non-casted global
variable. Therefore we strip away an addrspacecast if there is one, to
get the underlying global.
2025-01-02 15:42:00 +01:00
Walnut
a1191e30b6 force enum DISCR_* to const u64 to allow for inspection via LLDB's SBTypeStaticField::GetConstantValue() 2024-12-30 19:01:48 -06:00
Ralf Jung
397ae3cdf6 fix outdated comment
Co-authored-by: Camille Gillot <gillot.camille@gmail.com>
2024-12-18 11:01:54 +01:00
Ralf Jung
e023590de4 make no-variant types a dedicated Variants variant 2024-12-18 11:01:54 +01:00
Ralf Jung
21de42bf8d Variants::Single: do not use invalid VariantIdx for uninhabited enums 2024-12-18 11:00:21 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
2620eb42d7 Re-export more rustc_span::symbol things from rustc_span.
`rustc_span::symbol` defines some things that are re-exported from
`rustc_span`, such as `Symbol` and `sym`. But it doesn't re-export some
closely related things such as `Ident` and `kw`. So you can do `use
rustc_span::{Symbol, sym}` but you have to do `use
rustc_span::symbol::{Ident, kw}`, which is inconsistent for no good
reason.

This commit re-exports `Ident`, `kw`, and `MacroRulesNormalizedIdent`,
and changes many `rustc_span::symbol::` qualifiers in `compiler/` to
`rustc_span::`. This is a 200+ net line of code reduction, mostly
because many files with two `use rustc_span` items can be reduced to
one.
2024-12-18 13:38:53 +11:00
Ben Kimock
711c8cc690 Remove polymorphization 2024-12-06 16:42:09 -05:00
bors
8575f8f91b Auto merge of #104342 - mweber15:add_file_location_to_more_types, r=wesleywiser
Require `type_map::stub` callers to supply file information

This change attaches file information (`DIFile` reference and line number) to struct debug info nodes.

Before:

```
; foo.ll
...
!5 = !DIFile(filename: "<unknown>", directory: "")
...
!16 = !DICompositeType(tag: DW_TAG_structure_type, name: "MyType", scope: !2, file: !5, size: 32, align: 32, elements: !17, templateParams: !19, identifier: "4cb373851db92e732c4cb5651b886dd0")
...
```

After:

```
; foo.ll
...
!3 = !DIFile(filename: "foo.rs", directory: "/home/matt/src/rust98678", checksumkind: CSK_SHA1, checksum: "bcb9f08512c8f3b8181ef4726012bc6807bc9be4")
...
!16 = !DICompositeType(tag: DW_TAG_structure_type, name: "MyType", scope: !2, file: !3, line: 3, size: 32, align: 32, elements: !17, templateParams: !19, identifier: "9e5968c7af39c148acb253912b7f409f")
...
```

Fixes #98678

r? `@wesleywiser`
2024-12-03 12:49:57 +00:00
Kyle Huey
f5b023bd9c When the required discriminator value exceeds LLVM's limits, drop the debug info for the function instead of panicking.
The maximum discriminator value LLVM can currently encode is 2^12. If macro use
results in more than 2^12 calls to the same function attributed to the same
callsite, and those calls are MIR-inlined, we will require more than the maximum
discriminator value to completely represent the debug information. Once we reach
that point drop the debug info instead.
2024-11-19 05:19:09 -08:00
Kyle Huey
1e4ebb0ccd Honor collapse_debuginfo when dealing with MIR-inlined functions inside macros.
The test relies on the fact that inlining more than 2^12 calls at the same
callsite will trigger a panic (and after the following commit, a warning) due to
LLVM limitations but with collapse_debuginfo the callsites should not be the
same.
2024-11-19 05:18:56 -08:00
lcnr
9cba14b95b use TypingEnv when no infcx is available
the behavior of the type system not only depends on the current
assumptions, but also the currentnphase of the compiler. This is
mostly necessary as we need to decide whether and how to reveal
opaque types. We track this via the `TypingMode`.
2024-11-18 10:38:56 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
bd79fe7a94
Rollup merge of #132702 - 1c3t3a:issue-132615, r=rcvalle
CFI: Append debug location to CFI blocks

Currently we're not appending debug locations to the inserted CFI blocks. This shows up in #132615 and #100783. This change fixes that by passing down the debug location to the CFI type-test generation and appending it to the blocks.

Credits also belong to `@jakos-sec` who worked with me on this.
2024-11-12 23:26:41 +01:00
Bastian Kersting
c2102259a0 CFI: Append debug location to CFI blocks 2024-11-11 09:17:43 +00:00
Kyle Huey
1dc106121b Add discriminators to DILocations when multiple functions are inlined into a single point.
LLVM does not expect to ever see multiple dbg_declares for the same variable at the same
location with different values. proc-macros make it possible for arbitrary code,
including multiple calls that get inlined, to happen at any given location in the source
code. Add discriminators when that happens so these locations are different to LLVM.

This may interfere with the AddDiscriminators pass in LLVM, which is added by the
unstable flag -Zdebug-info-for-profiling.

Fixes #131944
2024-11-09 08:01:31 -08:00
Matt Weber
8286299742 Clean up use requirements after rebasing 2024-11-06 22:26:18 -05:00
Matt Weber
f9ac7aca5d Add location info for f16 2024-11-06 22:26:18 -05:00