* move trap site definitions into cranelift-module
`cranelift-faerie` and `cranelift-object` already have identical
definitions of structures to represent trap sites. We might as well
merge them ahead of work to define functions via a raw slice of bytes
with associated traps, which will need some kind of common structure for
representing traps anyway.
* cranelift-module: add `define_function_bytes` interface
This interface is useful when the client needs to precisely specify the
ordering of bytes in a particular function.
* add comment about saving files for `perf`
This removes the need to call `finalize_definitions` for cranelift-object.
`finalize_definitions` is only intended for backends that produce
finalized functions and data objects, which cranelift-object does not.
* Bump version to 0.48.0
* Re-enable `byteorder`'s default features.
The code uses `WriteBytesExt` which depends on the `std` feature being
enabled. So for now, just enable `std`.
The failure crate invents its own traits that don't use
std::error::Error (because failure predates certain features added to
Error); this prevents using ? on an error from failure in a function
using Error. The thiserror crate integrates with the standard Error
trait instead.
* the target-lexicon crate no longer has or needs the std feature
in cargo, so we can delete all default-features=false, any mentions
of its std feature, and the nostd configs in many lib.rs files
* the representation of arm architectures has changed, so some case
statements needed refactoring
The result of the emitter is a vector of bytes holding machine code,
jump tables, and (in the future) other read-only data. Some clients,
notably Firefox's Wasm compiler, needs to separate the machine code
from the data in order to insert more code directly after the code
generated by Cranelift.
To make such separation possible, we record more information about the
emitted bytes: the sizes of each of the sections of code, jump tables,
and read-only data, as well as the locations within the code that
reference (PC-relatively) the jump tables and read-only data.