This PR switches the default backend on x86, for both the
`cranelift-codegen` crate and for Wasmtime, to the new
(`MachInst`-style, `VCode`-based) backend that has been under
development and testing for some time now.
The old backend is still available by default in builds with the
`old-x86-backend` feature, or by requesting `BackendVariant::Legacy`
from the appropriate APIs.
As part of that switch, it adds some more runtime-configurable plumbing
to the testing infrastructure so that tests can be run using the
appropriate backend. `clif-util test` is now capable of parsing a
backend selector option from filetests and instantiating the correct
backend.
CI has been updated so that the old x86 backend continues to run its
tests, just as we used to run the new x64 backend separately.
At some point, we will remove the old x86 backend entirely, once we are
satisfied that the new backend has not caused any unforeseen issues and
we do not need to revert.
The codegen for div/rem ops has two modes, depending on the
`avoid_div_traps` flag: it can either do all checks for trapping
conditions explicitly, and use explicit trap instructions, then use a
hardware divide instruction that will not trap (`avoid_div_traps ==
true`); or it can run in a mode where a hardware FP fault on the divide
instruction implies a Wasm trap (`avoid_div_traps == false`). Wasmtime
uses the former while Lucet (for example) uses the latter.
It turns out that because we run all our spec tests run under Wasmtime,
we missed a spec corner case that fails in the latter: INT_MIN % -1 == 0
per the spec, but causes a trap with the x86 signed divide/remainder
instruction. Hence, in Lucet, this specific remainder computation would
incorrectly result in a Wasm trap.
This PR fixes the issue by just forcing use of the explicit-checks
implementation for `srem` even when `avoid_div_traps` is false.