this introduces a DropAndReplace terminator as a fix to #30380. That terminator
is suppsoed to be translated by desugaring during drop elaboration, which is
not implemented in this commit, so this breaks `-Z orbit` temporarily.
Currently, all switches in MIR are exhausitive, meaning that we can have
a lot of arms that all go to the same basic block, the extreme case
being an if-let expression which results in just 2 possible cases, be
might end up with hundreds of arms for large enums.
To improve this situation and give LLVM less code to chew on, we can
detect whether there's a pre-dominant target basic block in a switch
and then promote this to be the default target, not translating the
corresponding arms at all.
In combination with #33544 this makes unoptimized MIR trans of
nickel.rs as fast as using old trans and greatly improves the times for
optimized builds, which are only 30-40% slower instead of ~300%.
cc #33111
Some types weren't being properly monomorphised, and didn't have their
regions properly erased. This is now fixed.
Also fixes an issue where a temp was initialized in two separate
branches, but wasn't given an alloca.
rBreak Critical Edges and other MIR work
This PR is built on top of #32080.
This adds the basic depth-first traversals for MIR, preorder, postorder and reverse postorder. The MIR blocks are now translated using reverse postorder. There is also a transform for breaking critical edges, which includes the edges from `invoke`d calls (`Drop` and `Call`), to account for the fact that we can't add code after an `invoke`. It also stops generating the intermediate block (since the transform essentially does it if necessary already).
The kinds of cases this deals with are difficult to produce, so the test is the one I managed to get. However, it seems to bootstrap with `-Z orbit`, which it didn't before my changes.
This is a fairly standard transform that inserts blocks along critical
edges so code can be inserted along the edge without it affecting other
edges. The main difference is that it considers a Drop or Call
terminator that would require an `invoke` instruction in LLVM a critical
edge. This is because we can't actually insert code after an invoke, so
it ends up looking similar to a critical edge anyway.
The transform is run just before translation right now.