This implements the block-based GC as a partially precise GC. This means
that for most heap allocations it is known which words contain a pointer
and which don't. This should in theory make the GC faster (because it
can skip non-pointer object) and have fewer false positives in a GC
cycle. It does however use a bit more RAM to store the layout of each
object.
Right now this GC seems to be slower than the conservative GC, but
should be less likely to run out of memory as a result of false
positives.
The extalloc collector has been broken for a while, and it doesn't seem reasonable to fix right now.
In addition, after a recent change it no longer compiles.
In the future similar functionality can hopefully be reintroduced, but for now this seems to be the most reasonable option.
The wasm build tag together with GOARCH=arm was causing problems in the
internal/cpu package. In general, I think having two architecture build
tag will only cause problems (in this case, wasm and arm) so I've
removed the wasm build tag and replaced it with tinygo.wasm.
This is similar to the tinygo.riscv build tag, which is used for older
Go versions that don't yet have RISC-V support in the standard library
(and therefore pretend to be GOARCH=arm instead).
The only architecture that actually needs special support for scanning
the stack is WebAssembly. All others allow raw access to the stack with
a small bit of assembly. Therefore, don't manually keep track of all
these objects on the stack manually and instead just use conservative
stack scanning.
This results in a massive code size decrease in the affected targets
(only tested linux/amd64 for code size) - sometimes around 33%. It also
allows for future improvements such as using proper stackful goroutines.