To get the full benefit of dyld3 on Darwin platforms, pointer relocations need to be pointer-aligned, which unfortunately requires growing some key path data structures a little bit. This does tidy up some code that had to hack around our lack of unaligned load/store operations on UnsafeRawPointer, at least. While we're here, we can also simplify the identification strategy for reabstracted stored properties; we only need the property index to identify, not the absolute offset. rdar://problem/32318829
We need to use the ivar offset variables in this case, since the Swift field offset vector doesn't pick up the adjusted offsets from the ObjC runtime. Fixes SR-5036 | rdar://problem/32488871.
A property imported from Objective-C, or marked in Swift with the `dynamic` keyword, doesn't have a vtable slot, so can't be identified that way. Use the ObjC selector as the unique identifier to ascribe equality to such components. Fixes rdar://problem/31768669. (While we're here, throw some more execution tests and a changelog note in.)