)]}'
{
  "log": [
    {
      "commit": "22e2c507c301c3dbbcf91b4948b88f78842ee6c9",
      "tree": "9a97c91d1362e69703aa286021daffb8a5456f4c",
      "parents": [
        "020f46a39eb7b99a575b9f4d105fce2b142acdf1"
      ],
      "author": {
        "name": "Jens Axboe",
        "email": "axboe@suse.de",
        "time": "Mon Jun 27 10:55:12 2005 +0200"
      },
      "committer": {
        "name": "Linus Torvalds",
        "email": "torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org",
        "time": "Mon Jun 27 14:33:29 2005 -0700"
      },
      "message": "[PATCH] Update cfq io scheduler to time sliced design\n\nThis updates the CFQ io scheduler to the new time sliced design (cfq\nv3).  It provides full process fairness, while giving excellent\naggregate system throughput even for many competing processes.  It\nsupports io priorities, either inherited from the cpu nice value or set\ndirectly with the ioprio_get/set syscalls.  The latter closely mimic\nset/getpriority.\n\nThis import is based on my latest from -mm.\n\nSigned-off-by: Jens Axboe \u003caxboe@suse.de\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Linus Torvalds \u003ctorvalds@osdl.org\u003e\n"
    },
    {
      "commit": "2031d0f586839bc68f35bcf8580b18947f8491d4",
      "tree": "e317615b4cb62350edeea0afe0a4fc94152cee29",
      "parents": [
        "98e7f29418a4931f97e6b78d1ef3a47103fe6cd5",
        "3e1d1d28d99dabe63c64f7f40f1ca1d646de1f73"
      ],
      "author": {
        "name": "Linus Torvalds",
        "email": "torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org",
        "time": "Sat Jun 25 17:16:53 2005 -0700"
      },
      "committer": {
        "name": "Linus Torvalds",
        "email": "torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org",
        "time": "Sat Jun 25 17:16:53 2005 -0700"
      },
      "message": "Merge Christoph\u0027s freeze cleanup patch\n"
    },
    {
      "commit": "3e1d1d28d99dabe63c64f7f40f1ca1d646de1f73",
      "tree": "d1e7c1e2e8902072042aefc3a7976b271cf76021",
      "parents": [
        "b3e112bcc19abd8e9657dca34a87316786e096f3"
      ],
      "author": {
        "name": "Christoph Lameter",
        "email": "christoph@lameter.com",
        "time": "Fri Jun 24 23:13:50 2005 -0700"
      },
      "committer": {
        "name": "Linus Torvalds",
        "email": "torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org",
        "time": "Sat Jun 25 17:10:13 2005 -0700"
      },
      "message": "[PATCH] Cleanup patch for process freezing\n\n1. Establish a simple API for process freezing defined in linux/include/sched.h:\n\n   frozen(process)\t\tCheck for frozen process\n   freezing(process)\t\tCheck if a process is being frozen\n   freeze(process)\t\tTell a process to freeze (go to refrigerator)\n   thaw_process(process)\tRestart process\n   frozen_process(process)\tProcess is frozen now\n\n2. Remove all references to PF_FREEZE and PF_FROZEN from all\n   kernel sources except sched.h\n\n3. Fix numerous locations where try_to_freeze is manually done by a driver\n\n4. Remove the argument that is no longer necessary from two function calls.\n\n5. Some whitespace cleanup\n\n6. Clear potential race in refrigerator (provides an open window of PF_FREEZE\n   cleared before setting PF_FROZEN, recalc_sigpending does not check\n   PF_FROZEN).\n\nThis patch does not address the problem of freeze_processes() violating the rule\nthat a task may only modify its own flags by setting PF_FREEZE. This is not clean\nin an SMP environment. freeze(process) is therefore not SMP safe!\n\nSigned-off-by: Christoph Lameter \u003cchristoph@lameter.com\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Linus Torvalds \u003ctorvalds@osdl.org\u003e\n"
    },
    {
      "commit": "1a20ff27ef75d866730ee796acd811a925af762f",
      "tree": "a9e6acd72db03cfec5fdaee8cfab231032216581",
      "parents": [
        "37e4ab3f0cba13adf3535d373fd98e5ee47b5410"
      ],
      "author": {
        "name": "Dinakar Guniguntala",
        "email": "dino@in.ibm.com",
        "time": "Sat Jun 25 14:57:33 2005 -0700"
      },
      "committer": {
        "name": "Linus Torvalds",
        "email": "torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org",
        "time": "Sat Jun 25 16:24:45 2005 -0700"
      },
      "message": "[PATCH] Dynamic sched domains: sched changes\n\nThe following patches add dynamic sched domains functionality that was\nextensively discussed on lkml and lse-tech.  I would like to see this added to\n-mm\n\no The main advantage with this feature is that it ensures that the scheduler\n  load balacing code only balances against the cpus that are in the sched\n  domain as defined by an exclusive cpuset and not all of the cpus in the\n  system. This removes any overhead due to load balancing code trying to\n  pull tasks outside of the cpu exclusive cpuset only to be prevented by\n  the tasks\u0027 cpus_allowed mask.\no cpu exclusive cpusets are useful for servers running orthogonal\n  workloads such as RT applications requiring low latency and HPC\n  applications that are throughput sensitive\n\no It provides a new API partition_sched_domains in sched.c\n  that makes dynamic sched domains possible.\no cpu_exclusive cpusets sets are now associated with a sched domain.\n  Which means that the users can dynamically modify the sched domains\n  through the cpuset file system interface\no ia64 sched domain code has been updated to support this feature as well\no Currently, this does not support hotplug. (However some of my tests\n  indicate hotplug+preempt is currently broken)\no I have tested it extensively on x86.\no This should have very minimal impact on performance as none of\n  the fast paths are affected\n\nSigned-off-by: Dinakar Guniguntala \u003cdino@in.ibm.com\u003e\nAcked-by: Paul Jackson \u003cpj@sgi.com\u003e\nAcked-by: Nick Piggin \u003cnickpiggin@yahoo.com.au\u003e\nAcked-by: Matthew Dobson \u003ccolpatch@us.ibm.com\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Andrew Morton \u003cakpm@osdl.org\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Linus Torvalds \u003ctorvalds@osdl.org\u003e\n"
    },
    {
      "commit": "476d139c218e44e045e4bc6d4cc02b010b343939",
      "tree": "82a6537b829b2b35156fba5a312f4e44273a4356",
      "parents": [
        "674311d5b411e9042df4fdf7aef0b3c8217b6240"
      ],
      "author": {
        "name": "Nick Piggin",
        "email": "nickpiggin@yahoo.com.au",
        "time": "Sat Jun 25 14:57:29 2005 -0700"
      },
      "committer": {
        "name": "Linus Torvalds",
        "email": "torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org",
        "time": "Sat Jun 25 16:24:44 2005 -0700"
      },
      "message": "[PATCH] sched: consolidate sbe sbf\n\nConsolidate balance-on-exec with balance-on-fork.  This is made easy by the\nsched-domains RCU patches.\n\nAs well as the general goodness of code reduction, this allows the runqueues\nto be unlocked during balance-on-fork.\n\nschedstats is a problem.  Maybe just have balance-on-event instead of\ndistinguishing fork and exec?\n\nSigned-off-by: Nick Piggin \u003cnickpiggin@yahoo.com.au\u003e\nAcked-by: Ingo Molnar \u003cmingo@elte.hu\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Andrew Morton \u003cakpm@osdl.org\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Linus Torvalds \u003ctorvalds@osdl.org\u003e\n"
    },
    {
      "commit": "4866cde064afbb6c2a488c265e696879de616daa",
      "tree": "6effad1ab6271129fc607b98273086409876563a",
      "parents": [
        "48c08d3f8ff94fa118187e4d8d4a5707bb85e59d"
      ],
      "author": {
        "name": "Nick Piggin",
        "email": "nickpiggin@yahoo.com.au",
        "time": "Sat Jun 25 14:57:23 2005 -0700"
      },
      "committer": {
        "name": "Linus Torvalds",
        "email": "torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org",
        "time": "Sat Jun 25 16:24:43 2005 -0700"
      },
      "message": "[PATCH] sched: cleanup context switch locking\n\nInstead of requiring architecture code to interact with the scheduler\u0027s\nlocking implementation, provide a couple of defines that can be used by the\narchitecture to request runqueue unlocked context switches, and ask for\ninterrupts to be enabled over the context switch.\n\nAlso replaces the \"switch_lock\" used by these architectures with an oncpu\nflag (note, not a potentially slow bitflag).  This eliminates one bus\nlocked memory operation when context switching, and simplifies the\ntask_running function.\n\nSigned-off-by: Nick Piggin \u003cnickpiggin@yahoo.com.au\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Andrew Morton \u003cakpm@osdl.org\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Linus Torvalds \u003ctorvalds@osdl.org\u003e\n"
    },
    {
      "commit": "68767a0ae428801649d510d9a65bb71feed44dd1",
      "tree": "678e2daa5726acf46ffd00a337d931e08ab928f9",
      "parents": [
        "147cbb4bbe991452698f0772d8292f22825710ba"
      ],
      "author": {
        "name": "Nick Piggin",
        "email": "nickpiggin@yahoo.com.au",
        "time": "Sat Jun 25 14:57:20 2005 -0700"
      },
      "committer": {
        "name": "Linus Torvalds",
        "email": "torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org",
        "time": "Sat Jun 25 16:24:42 2005 -0700"
      },
      "message": "[PATCH] sched: schedstats update for balance on fork\n\nAdd SCHEDSTAT statistics for sched-balance-fork.\n\nSigned-off-by: Nick Piggin \u003cnickpiggin@yahoo.com.au\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Andrew Morton \u003cakpm@osdl.org\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Linus Torvalds \u003ctorvalds@osdl.org\u003e\n"
    },
    {
      "commit": "147cbb4bbe991452698f0772d8292f22825710ba",
      "tree": "cb86550d7e440e7dfbe22b0af6d2cfc991cb76cf",
      "parents": [
        "cafb20c1f9976a70d633bb1e1c8c24eab00e4e80"
      ],
      "author": {
        "name": "Nick Piggin",
        "email": "nickpiggin@yahoo.com.au",
        "time": "Sat Jun 25 14:57:19 2005 -0700"
      },
      "committer": {
        "name": "Linus Torvalds",
        "email": "torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org",
        "time": "Sat Jun 25 16:24:42 2005 -0700"
      },
      "message": "[PATCH] sched: balance on fork\n\nReimplement the balance on exec balancing to be sched-domains aware.  Use this\nto also do balance on fork balancing.  Make x86_64 do balance on fork over the\nNUMA domain.\n\nThe problem that the non sched domains aware blancing became apparent on dual\ncore, multi socket opterons.  What we want is for the new tasks to be sent to\na different socket, but more often than not, we would first load up our\nsibling core, or fill two cores of a single remote socket before selecting a\nnew one.\n\nThis gives large improvements to STREAM on such systems.\n\nSigned-off-by: Nick Piggin \u003cnickpiggin@yahoo.com.au\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Andrew Morton \u003cakpm@osdl.org\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Linus Torvalds \u003ctorvalds@osdl.org\u003e\n"
    },
    {
      "commit": "7897986bad8f6cd50d6149345aca7f6480f49464",
      "tree": "10a5e08e004ae685aaab6823a3774803455b7704",
      "parents": [
        "99b61ccf0bf0e9a85823d39a5db6a1519caeb13d"
      ],
      "author": {
        "name": "Nick Piggin",
        "email": "nickpiggin@yahoo.com.au",
        "time": "Sat Jun 25 14:57:13 2005 -0700"
      },
      "committer": {
        "name": "Linus Torvalds",
        "email": "torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org",
        "time": "Sat Jun 25 16:24:41 2005 -0700"
      },
      "message": "[PATCH] sched: balance timers\n\nDo CPU load averaging over a number of different intervals.  Allow each\ninterval to be chosen by sending a parameter to source_load and target_load.\n0 is instantaneous, idx \u003e 0 returns a decaying average with the most recent\nsample weighted at 2^(idx-1).  To a maximum of 3 (could be easily increased).\n\nSo generally a higher number will result in more conservative balancing.\n\nSigned-off-by: Nick Piggin \u003cnickpiggin@yahoo.com.au\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Andrew Morton \u003cakpm@osdl.org\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Linus Torvalds \u003ctorvalds@osdl.org\u003e\n"
    },
    {
      "commit": "3e30148c3d524a9c1c63ca28261bc24c457eb07a",
      "tree": "a2fcc46cc11fe871ad976c07476d934a07313576",
      "parents": [
        "8589b4e00e352f983259140f25a262d973be6bc5"
      ],
      "author": {
        "name": "David Howells",
        "email": "dhowells@redhat.com",
        "time": "Thu Jun 23 22:00:56 2005 -0700"
      },
      "committer": {
        "name": "Linus Torvalds",
        "email": "torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org",
        "time": "Fri Jun 24 00:05:19 2005 -0700"
      },
      "message": "[PATCH] Keys: Make request-key create an authorisation key\n\nThe attached patch makes the following changes:\n\n (1) There\u0027s a new special key type called \".request_key_auth\".\n\n     This is an authorisation key for when one process requests a key and\n     another process is started to construct it. This type of key cannot be\n     created by the user; nor can it be requested by kernel services.\n\n     Authorisation keys hold two references:\n\n     (a) Each refers to a key being constructed. When the key being\n     \t constructed is instantiated the authorisation key is revoked,\n     \t rendering it of no further use.\n\n     (b) The \"authorising process\". This is either:\n\n     \t (i) the process that called request_key(), or:\n\n     \t (ii) if the process that called request_key() itself had an\n     \t      authorisation key in its session keyring, then the authorising\n     \t      process referred to by that authorisation key will also be\n     \t      referred to by the new authorisation key.\n\n\t This means that the process that initiated a chain of key requests\n\t will authorise the lot of them, and will, by default, wind up with\n\t the keys obtained from them in its keyrings.\n\n (2) request_key() creates an authorisation key which is then passed to\n     /sbin/request-key in as part of a new session keyring.\n\n (3) When request_key() is searching for a key to hand back to the caller, if\n     it comes across an authorisation key in the session keyring of the\n     calling process, it will also search the keyrings of the process\n     specified therein and it will use the specified process\u0027s credentials\n     (fsuid, fsgid, groups) to do that rather than the calling process\u0027s\n     credentials.\n\n     This allows a process started by /sbin/request-key to find keys belonging\n     to the authorising process.\n\n (4) A key can be read, even if the process executing KEYCTL_READ doesn\u0027t have\n     direct read or search permission if that key is contained within the\n     keyrings of a process specified by an authorisation key found within the\n     calling process\u0027s session keyring, and is searchable using the\n     credentials of the authorising process.\n\n     This allows a process started by /sbin/request-key to read keys belonging\n     to the authorising process.\n\n (5) The magic KEY_SPEC_*_KEYRING key IDs when passed to KEYCTL_INSTANTIATE or\n     KEYCTL_NEGATE will specify a keyring of the authorising process, rather\n     than the process doing the instantiation.\n\n (6) One of the process keyrings can be nominated as the default to which\n     request_key() should attach new keys if not otherwise specified. This is\n     done with KEYCTL_SET_REQKEY_KEYRING and one of the KEY_REQKEY_DEFL_*\n     constants. The current setting can also be read using this call.\n\n (7) request_key() is partially interruptible. If it is waiting for another\n     process to finish constructing a key, it can be interrupted. This permits\n     a request-key cycle to be broken without recourse to rebooting.\n\nSigned-Off-By: David Howells \u003cdhowells@redhat.com\u003e\nSigned-Off-By: Benoit Boissinot \u003cbenoit.boissinot@ens-lyon.org\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Andrew Morton \u003cakpm@osdl.org\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Linus Torvalds \u003ctorvalds@osdl.org\u003e\n"
    },
    {
      "commit": "d6e711448137ca3301512cec41a2c2ce852b3d0a",
      "tree": "f0765ebd90fdbdf270c05fcd7f3d32b24ba56681",
      "parents": [
        "8b0914ea7475615c7c8965c1ac8fe4069270f25c"
      ],
      "author": {
        "name": "Alan Cox",
        "email": "alan@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk",
        "time": "Thu Jun 23 00:09:43 2005 -0700"
      },
      "committer": {
        "name": "Linus Torvalds",
        "email": "torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org",
        "time": "Thu Jun 23 09:45:26 2005 -0700"
      },
      "message": "[PATCH] setuid core dump\n\nAdd a new `suid_dumpable\u0027 sysctl:\n\nThis value can be used to query and set the core dump mode for setuid\nor otherwise protected/tainted binaries. The modes are\n\n0 - (default) - traditional behaviour.  Any process which has changed\n    privilege levels or is execute only will not be dumped\n\n1 - (debug) - all processes dump core when possible.  The core dump is\n    owned by the current user and no security is applied.  This is intended\n    for system debugging situations only.  Ptrace is unchecked.\n\n2 - (suidsafe) - any binary which normally would not be dumped is dumped\n    readable by root only.  This allows the end user to remove such a dump but\n    not access it directly.  For security reasons core dumps in this mode will\n    not overwrite one another or other files.  This mode is appropriate when\n    adminstrators are attempting to debug problems in a normal environment.\n\n(akpm:\n\n\u003e \u003e +EXPORT_SYMBOL(suid_dumpable);\n\u003e\n\u003e EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL?\n\nNo problem to me.\n\n\u003e \u003e  \tif (current-\u003eeuid \u003d\u003d current-\u003euid \u0026\u0026 current-\u003eegid \u003d\u003d current-\u003egid)\n\u003e \u003e  \t\tcurrent-\u003emm-\u003edumpable \u003d 1;\n\u003e\n\u003e Should this be SUID_DUMP_USER?\n\nActually the feedback I had from last time was that the SUID_ defines\nshould go because its clearer to follow the numbers. They can go\neverywhere (and there are lots of places where dumpable is tested/used\nas a bool in untouched code)\n\n\u003e Maybe this should be renamed to `dump_policy\u0027 or something.  Doing that\n\u003e would help us catch any code which isn\u0027t using the #defines, too.\n\nFair comment. The patch was designed to be easy to maintain for Red Hat\nrather than for merging. Changing that field would create a gigantic\ndiff because it is used all over the place.\n\n)\n\nSigned-off-by: Alan Cox \u003calan@redhat.com\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Andrew Morton \u003cakpm@osdl.org\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Linus Torvalds \u003ctorvalds@osdl.org\u003e\n"
    },
    {
      "commit": "1363c3cd8603a913a27e2995dccbd70d5312d8e6",
      "tree": "405e7fc1ef44678f3ca0a54c536d0457e6e80f45",
      "parents": [
        "e7c8d5c9955a4d2e88e36b640563f5d6d5aba48a"
      ],
      "author": {
        "name": "Wolfgang Wander",
        "email": "wwc@rentec.com",
        "time": "Tue Jun 21 17:14:49 2005 -0700"
      },
      "committer": {
        "name": "Linus Torvalds",
        "email": "torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org",
        "time": "Tue Jun 21 18:46:16 2005 -0700"
      },
      "message": "[PATCH] Avoiding mmap fragmentation\n\nIngo recently introduced a great speedup for allocating new mmaps using the\nfree_area_cache pointer which boosts the specweb SSL benchmark by 4-5% and\ncauses huge performance increases in thread creation.\n\nThe downside of this patch is that it does lead to fragmentation in the\nmmap-ed areas (visible via /proc/self/maps), such that some applications\nthat work fine under 2.4 kernels quickly run out of memory on any 2.6\nkernel.\n\nThe problem is twofold:\n\n  1) the free_area_cache is used to continue a search for memory where\n     the last search ended.  Before the change new areas were always\n     searched from the base address on.\n\n     So now new small areas are cluttering holes of all sizes\n     throughout the whole mmap-able region whereas before small holes\n     tended to close holes near the base leaving holes far from the base\n     large and available for larger requests.\n\n  2) the free_area_cache also is set to the location of the last\n     munmap-ed area so in scenarios where we allocate e.g.  five regions of\n     1K each, then free regions 4 2 3 in this order the next request for 1K\n     will be placed in the position of the old region 3, whereas before we\n     appended it to the still active region 1, placing it at the location\n     of the old region 2.  Before we had 1 free region of 2K, now we only\n     get two free regions of 1K -\u003e fragmentation.\n\nThe patch addresses thes issues by introducing yet another cache descriptor\ncached_hole_size that contains the largest known hole size below the\ncurrent free_area_cache.  If a new request comes in the size is compared\nagainst the cached_hole_size and if the request can be filled with a hole\nbelow free_area_cache the search is started from the base instead.\n\nThe results look promising: Whereas 2.6.12-rc4 fragments quickly and my\n(earlier posted) leakme.c test program terminates after 50000+ iterations\nwith 96 distinct and fragmented maps in /proc/self/maps it performs nicely\n(as expected) with thread creation, Ingo\u0027s test_str02 with 20000 threads\nrequires 0.7s system time.\n\nTaking out Ingo\u0027s patch (un-patch available per request) by basically\ndeleting all mentions of free_area_cache from the kernel and starting the\nsearch for new memory always at the respective bases we observe: leakme\nterminates successfully with 11 distinctive hardly fragmented areas in\n/proc/self/maps but thread creating is gringdingly slow: 30+s(!) system\ntime for Ingo\u0027s test_str02 with 20000 threads.\n\nNow - drumroll ;-) the appended patch works fine with leakme: it ends with\nonly 7 distinct areas in /proc/self/maps and also thread creation seems\nsufficiently fast with 0.71s for 20000 threads.\n\nSigned-off-by: Wolfgang Wander \u003cwwc@rentec.com\u003e\nCredit-to: \"Richard Purdie\" \u003crpurdie@rpsys.net\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Ken Chen \u003ckenneth.w.chen@intel.com\u003e\nAcked-by: Ingo Molnar \u003cmingo@elte.hu\u003e (partly)\nSigned-off-by: Andrew Morton \u003cakpm@osdl.org\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Linus Torvalds \u003ctorvalds@osdl.org\u003e\n"
    },
    {
      "commit": "3677209239ed71d2654e73eecfab1dbec2af11a9",
      "tree": "125d9d7553c5f6dc6ad030e4c829a5bf71ab3ef5",
      "parents": [
        "291c4a75ce7632ee5c565359fb875ba0597f76be"
      ],
      "author": {
        "name": "Paolo \u0027Blaisorblade\u0027 Giarrusso",
        "email": "blaisorblade@yahoo.it",
        "time": "Thu May 05 16:16:12 2005 -0700"
      },
      "committer": {
        "name": "Linus Torvalds",
        "email": "torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org",
        "time": "Thu May 05 16:36:48 2005 -0700"
      },
      "message": "[PATCH] comments on locking of task-\u003ecomm\n\nAdd some comments about task-\u003ecomm, to explain what it is near its definition\nand provide some important pointers to its uses.\n\nSigned-off-by: Paolo \u0027Blaisorblade\u0027 Giarrusso \u003cblaisorblade@yahoo.it\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Andrew Morton \u003cakpm@osdl.org\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Linus Torvalds \u003ctorvalds@osdl.org\u003e\n"
    },
    {
      "commit": "408b664a7d394a5e4315fbd14aca49b042cb2b08",
      "tree": "bd3ebe72229227962d157e46e61ed65b78d6e28b",
      "parents": [
        "c31403a1f5a761599df38bcc2d6ba94f24320c33"
      ],
      "author": {
        "name": "Adrian Bunk",
        "email": "bunk@stusta.de",
        "time": "Sun May 01 08:59:29 2005 -0700"
      },
      "committer": {
        "name": "Linus Torvalds",
        "email": "torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org",
        "time": "Sun May 01 08:59:29 2005 -0700"
      },
      "message": "[PATCH] make lots of things static\n\nAnother large rollup of various patches from Adrian which make things static\nwhere they were needlessly exported.\n\nSigned-off-by: Andrew Morton \u003cakpm@osdl.org\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Linus Torvalds \u003ctorvalds@osdl.org\u003e\n"
    },
    {
      "commit": "e43379f10b42194b8a6e1de342cfb44463c0f6da",
      "tree": "bf6463200dc7e14f266b7f12807c7cbfbb6700c2",
      "parents": [
        "9fc1427a01a9df3605e219c6de0c59c4639209a1"
      ],
      "author": {
        "name": "Matt Mackall",
        "email": "mpm@selenic.com",
        "time": "Sun May 01 08:59:00 2005 -0700"
      },
      "committer": {
        "name": "Linus Torvalds",
        "email": "torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org",
        "time": "Sun May 01 08:59:00 2005 -0700"
      },
      "message": "[PATCH] nice and rt-prio rlimits\n\nAdd a pair of rlimits for allowing non-root tasks to raise nice and rt\npriorities. Defaults to traditional behavior. Originally written by\nChris Wright.\n\nThe patch implements a simple rlimit ceiling for the RT (and nice) priorities\na task can set.  The rlimit defaults to 0, meaning no change in behavior by\ndefault.  A value of 50 means RT priority levels 1-50 are allowed.  A value of\n100 means all 99 privilege levels from 1 to 99 are allowed.  CAP_SYS_NICE is\nblanket permission.\n\n(akpm: see http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0503.1/1921.html for\ntips on integrating this with PAM).\n\nSigned-off-by: Matt Mackall \u003cmpm@selenic.com\u003e\nAcked-by: Ingo Molnar \u003cmingo@elte.hu\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Andrew Morton \u003cakpm@osdl.org\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Linus Torvalds \u003ctorvalds@osdl.org\u003e\n"
    },
    {
      "commit": "6c46ada700568897165409e618ed584683838b49",
      "tree": "3e58ca796d70c7867bb2acd6fbe239f671decd78",
      "parents": [
        "2f4cfacecd522849dac254f87273525eeca33d1d"
      ],
      "author": {
        "name": "Coywolf Qi Hunt",
        "email": "coywolf@lovecn.org",
        "time": "Sat Apr 16 15:26:01 2005 -0700"
      },
      "committer": {
        "name": "Linus Torvalds",
        "email": "torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org",
        "time": "Sat Apr 16 15:26:01 2005 -0700"
      },
      "message": "[PATCH] reparent_to_init cleanup\n\nThis patch hides reparent_to_init().  reparent_to_init() should only be\ncalled by daemonize().\n\nSigned-off-by: Coywolf Qi Hunt \u003ccoywolf@lovecn.org\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Andrew Morton \u003cakpm@osdl.org\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Linus Torvalds \u003ctorvalds@osdl.org\u003e\n"
    },
    {
      "commit": "1da177e4c3f41524e886b7f1b8a0c1fc7321cac2",
      "tree": "0bba044c4ce775e45a88a51686b5d9f90697ea9d",
      "parents": [],
      "author": {
        "name": "Linus Torvalds",
        "email": "torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org",
        "time": "Sat Apr 16 15:20:36 2005 -0700"
      },
      "committer": {
        "name": "Linus Torvalds",
        "email": "torvalds@ppc970.osdl.org",
        "time": "Sat Apr 16 15:20:36 2005 -0700"
      },
      "message": "Linux-2.6.12-rc2\n\nInitial git repository build. I\u0027m not bothering with the full history,\neven though we have it. We can create a separate \"historical\" git\narchive of that later if we want to, and in the meantime it\u0027s about\n3.2GB when imported into git - space that would just make the early\ngit days unnecessarily complicated, when we don\u0027t have a lot of good\ninfrastructure for it.\n\nLet it rip!\n"
    }
  ]
}
