I have addressed all of the review comments as I understand them, and fixed the small oversight the kernel test robot was able to find. (I had failed to initialize the new field pid->inodes). I did not hear any concerns from the 10,000 foot level last time so I am assuming this set of changes (baring bugs) is good to go. Unless some new issues appear my plan is to put this in my tree and get this into linux-next. Which will give Alexey something to build his changes on. I tested this set of changes by running: (while ls -1 -f /proc > /dev/null ; do :; done ) & And monitoring the amount of free memory. With the flushing disabled I saw the used memory in the system grow by 20M before the shrinker would bring it back down to where it started. With the patch applied I saw the memory usage stay essentially fixed. So flushing definitely keeps things working better. If anyone sees any problems with this code please let me know. Thank you, Eric W. Biederman (6): proc: Rename in proc_inode rename sysctl_inodes sibling_inodes proc: Generalize proc_sys_prune_dcache into proc_prune_siblings_dcache proc: In proc_prune_siblings_dcache cache an aquired super block proc: Use d_invalidate in proc_prune_siblings_dcache proc: Clear the pieces of proc_inode that proc_evict_inode cares about proc: Use a list of inodes to flush from proc fs/proc/base.c | 111 ++++++++++++++++-------------------------------- fs/proc/inode.c | 73 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--- fs/proc/internal.h | 4 +- fs/proc/proc_sysctl.c | 45 +++----------------- include/linux/pid.h | 1 + include/linux/proc_fs.h | 4 +- kernel/exit.c | 4 +- kernel/pid.c | 1 + 8 files changed, 120 insertions(+), 123 deletions(-)