* Store the local crates in an Rc<[CrateNum]>
* Move all the allocation history into Stacks
* Clean up the implementation of get_logs_relevant_to a bit
Use atomic RMW for `{mutex, rwlock, cond, srwlock}_get_or_create_id` functions
This is required for #1963
`{mutex, rwlock, cond, srwlock}_get_or_create_id()` currently checks whether an ID field is 0 using an atomic read, allocate one and get a new ID if it is, then write it in a separate atomic write. This is fine without weak memory. For instance, in `pthread_mutex_lock` which may be called by two threads concurrently, only one thread can read 0, create and then write a new ID, the later-run thread will always see the newly created ID and never 0.
```rust
fn pthread_mutex_lock(&mut self, mutex_op: &OpTy<'tcx, Tag>) -> InterpResult<'tcx, i32> {
let this = self.eval_context_mut();
let kind = mutex_get_kind(this, mutex_op)?.check_init()?;
let id = mutex_get_or_create_id(this, mutex_op)?;
let active_thread = this.get_active_thread();
```
However, with weak memory behaviour, both threads may read 0: the first thread has to see 0 because nothing else was written to it, and the second thread is not guaranteed to observe the latest value, causing a duplicate mutex to be created and both threads "successfully" acquiring the lock at the same time.
This is a pretty typical pattern requiring the use of atomic RMWs. RMW *always* reads the latest value in a location, so only one thread can create the new mutex and ID, all others scheduled later will see the new ID.
* Pass a ThreadInfo down to grant/access to get the current span lazily
* Rename add_* to log_* for clarity
* Hoist borrow_mut calls out of loops by tweaking the for_each signature
* Explain the parameters of check_protector a bit more
Add a command line flag to avoid printing to stdout and stderr
This is practical for tests that don't actually care about the output and thus don't want it intermingled with miri's warnings, errors or ICEs
fixes#2083
Replace unneeded use of `ref` in favor of "match ergonomics"
The signature of `check_shim` is very amenable to this.
```rust
fn check_shim<'a, const N: usize>(…) -> InterpResult<'tcx, &'a [OpTy<'tcx, Tag>; N]>
```
Instead of:
```rust
let &[ref ptr, ref flags] = this.check_shim(…)?;
```
we can write it just as:
```rust
let [ptr, flags] = this.check_shim(…)?;
```
Clean up all trailing whitespace
Editors commonly strip trailing whitespace from source code on save, because it's almost always undesired, and that leads to spurious diffs in these files when working with them in such an editor.