This extends cfg-gating to attributes.
```rust
#[cfg_attr(<cfg pattern>, <attr>)]
```
will expand to
```rust
#[<attr>]
```
if the `<cfg pattern>` matches the current cfg environment, and nothing
if it does not. The grammar for the cfg pattern has a simple
recursive structure:
* `value` and `key = "value"` are cfg patterns,
* `not(<cfg pattern>)` is a cfg pattern and matches if `<cfg pattern>`
does not.
* `all(<cfg pattern>, ...)` is a cfg pattern and matches if all of the
`<cfg pattern>`s do.
* `any(<cfg pattern>, ...)` is a cfg pattern and matches if any of the
`<cfg pattern>`s do.
Examples:
```rust
// only derive Show for assert_eq! in tests
#[cfg_attr(test, deriving(Show))]
struct Foo { ... }
// only derive Show for assert_eq! in tests and debug builds
#[cfg_attr(any(test, not(ndebug)), deriving(Show))]
struct Foo { ... }
// ignore a test in certain cases
#[test]
#[cfg_attr(all(not(target_os = "linux"), target_endian = "big"), ignore)]
fn test_broken_thing() { ... }
// Avoid duplication when fixing staging issues in rustc
#[cfg_attr(not(stage0), lang="iter")]
pub trait Iterator<T> { ... }
```