)]}'
{
  "log": [
    {
      "commit": "2e2446ea0758cd57dd065962d9544e3f4d44ea2b",
      "tree": "745b7fb19e2fb48265aed6eb8ee33217a9e3f22a",
      "parents": [
        "19dbd0f6a74f7529d6d49dd50ad6b31adbe0598d"
      ],
      "author": {
        "name": "David Gibson",
        "email": "david@gibson.dropbear.id.au",
        "time": "Fri Aug 19 14:52:31 2005 +1000"
      },
      "committer": {
        "name": "Paul Mackerras",
        "email": "paulus@samba.org",
        "time": "Mon Aug 29 10:53:33 2005 +1000"
      },
      "message": "[PATCH] Remove NACA fixed address constraint\n\nComments in head.S suggest that the iSeries naca has a fixed address,\nbecause tools expect to find it there.  The only tool which appears to\naccess the naca is addRamDisk, but both the in-kernel version and the\nversion used in RHEL and SuSE in fact locate the NACA the same way as\nthe hypervisor does, by following the pointer in the hvReleaseData\nstructure.\n\nSince the requirement for a fixed address seems to be obsolete, this\npatch removes the naca from head.S and replaces it with a normal C\ninitializer.\n\nFor good measure, it removes an old version of addRamDisk.c which was\nsitting, unused, in the ppc32 tree.\n\nSigned-off-by: David Gibson \u003cdwg@au1.ibm.com\u003e\nSigned-off-by: Paul Mackerras \u003cpaulus@samba.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"
    }
  ]
}
