There currently does not exist a way to answer the question: "What is in the page cache?". There are various heuristics and counters but nothing that can tell you anything like: * 3M from /home/dxu/foo.txt * 5K from ... * etc. The answer to the question is particularly useful in the stacked container world. Stacked containers implies multiple containers are run on the same physical host. Memory is precious resource on some (if not most) of these systems. On these systems, it's useful to know how much duplicated data is in the page cache. Once you know the answer, you can do something about it. One possible technique would be bind mount common items from the root host into each container. NOTES: * This patch compiles and (maybe) works -- totally not fully tested or in a final state * I'm sending this early RFC to get comments on the general approach. I chatted w/ Johannes a little bit and it seems like the best way to do this is through superblock -> inode -> address_space iteration rather than going from numa node -> LRU iteration * I'll most likely add a page_hash() helper (or something) that hashes a page so that userspace can more easily tell which pages are duplicate Daniel Xu (1): bpf: Introduce iter_pagecache kernel/bpf/Makefile | 2 +- kernel/bpf/pagecache_iter.c | 293 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 2 files changed, 294 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) create mode 100644 kernel/bpf/pagecache_iter.c -- 2.26.3