)]}'
{
  "commit": "ec36a086261dcde6fcf2ea35e7f875ad62a26f46",
  "tree": "1fb8227181ea7e8266957b25b7b4b5d39818079e",
  "parents": [
    "2b8438fc190af8c3f9cf0a1ac3ccfda254ecb4be"
  ],
  "author": {
    "name": "Ben Vanik",
    "email": "ben.vanik@gmail.com",
    "time": "Tue Aug 30 17:39:03 2022 -0700"
  },
  "committer": {
    "name": "Ben Vanik",
    "email": "ben.vanik@gmail.com",
    "time": "Tue Aug 30 21:16:40 2022 -0700"
  },
  "message": "Adding iree_processor_yield() for use in spin loops.\nIf we\u0027re going to spin we should at least be less bad about it.\nMost processors use this as a strong hint that a particular core is\nspinning in order to allow cooperatively-scheduled smt workloads a chance\nto run. It also introduces latency that can help lighten the memory\nsystem load that sitting and hammering the spin condition can cause.\n",
  "tree_diff": [
    {
      "type": "modify",
      "old_id": "a99208614628843c36d9f6a9cdbd5d4ad98779cb",
      "old_mode": 33188,
      "old_path": "runtime/src/iree/base/internal/synchronization.c",
      "new_id": "08518d3190cba9d8991a5913e561411bcf010c52",
      "new_mode": 33188,
      "new_path": "runtime/src/iree/base/internal/synchronization.c"
    }
  ]
}
