On Wed, Nov 23, 2022 at 12:03 PM David Howells <dhowells@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Linus Torvalds <torvalds@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > But I also think it's strange in another way, with that odd placement of > > > > mapping_clear_release_always(inode->i_mapping); > > > > at inode eviction time. That just feels very random. > > I was under the impression that a warning got splashed if unexpected > address_space flags were set when ->evict_inode() returned. I may be thinking > of page flags. If it doesn't, fine, this isn't required. I don't know if the warning happens or not, but the thing I reacted to was just how *random* this was. There was no logic to it, nor any explanation. I *suspect* that if we add this kind of new generic address space flag, then that flag should just be cleared by generic code when the address space is released. But I'm not saying it has to be done that way - I'm just saying that however it is done, please don't make it this random mess with no explanation. The *setting* of the flag was at least fairly obvious. I didn't find code like this odd: + if (v9inode->netfs.cache) + mapping_set_release_always(inode->i_mapping); and it makes all kinds of sense (ie I can read it as a "if I use netfs caching for this inode, then I want to be informed when a folio is released from this mapping"). It's just the clearing that looked very random to me. Maybe just a comment would have helped, but I get the feeling that it migth as well just be cleared in "clear_inode()" or something like that. > > That code makes no sense what-so-ever. Why isn't it using > > "folio_has_private()"? > > It should be, yes. > > > Why is this done as an open-coded - and *badly* so - version of > > !folio_needs_release() that you for some reason made private to mm/vmscan.c? > > Yeah, in retrospect, I should have put that in mm/internal.h. So if folio_needs_release() is in mm/internal.h, and then mm/filemap.c uses it in filemap_release_folio() instead of the odd open-coding, I think that would clear up my worries about both mm/filemap.c and mm/vmscan.c. Linus