This forces anyone who wants to look into and/or manipulate an address
space to lock it. And this replaces the previous, more flimsy, manual
spinlock use.
Note that pointers *into* the address space are not safe to use after
you unlock the space. We've got many issues like this, and we'll have
to track those down as wlel.
To ensure that we stay on the same CPU that acquired the spinlock until
we're completely unlocked, we now leave the critical section *before*
re-enabling interrupts.
The code in Spinlock.h has no architectural specific logic, thus can be
moved to the Arch directory. This contains no functional change.
Also add the Spinlock.cpp file for aarch64 which contains stubs for the
lock and unlock functions.