Re: [PATCH v7 2/3] mm: track DONTCACHE dirty pages per bdi_writeback
From: Jeff Layton
Date: Mon May 11 2026 - 09:35:33 EST
On Mon, 2026-05-11 at 15:10 +0200, Christian Brauner wrote:
> On Mon, May 11, 2026 at 07:58:28AM -0400, Jeff Layton wrote:
> > Add a per-wb WB_DONTCACHE_DIRTY counter that tracks the number of dirty
> > pages with the dropbehind flag set (i.e., pages dirtied via RWF_DONTCACHE
> > writes).
> >
> > Increment the counter alongside WB_RECLAIMABLE in folio_account_dirtied()
> > when the folio has the dropbehind flag set, and decrement it in
> > folio_clear_dirty_for_io() and folio_account_cleaned(). Also decrement it
> > when a non-DONTCACHE lookup atomically clears the dropbehind flag on a
> > dirty folio in __filemap_get_folio_mpol(), using folio_test_clear_dropbehind()
> > to prevent concurrent lookups from double-decrementing the counter, and
> > guarding the decrement with mapping_can_writeback() to match the increment
> > path.
> >
> > Transfer the counter alongside WB_RECLAIMABLE in inode_do_switch_wbs() so
> > that the stat is properly migrated when an inode switches cgroup writeback
> > domains.
> >
> > The counter will be used by the writeback flusher to determine how many
> > pages to write back when expediting writeback for IOCB_DONTCACHE writes,
> > without flushing the entire BDI's dirty pages.
> >
> > Suggested-by: Jan Kara <jack@xxxxxxx>
> > Assisted-by: Claude:claude-opus-4-6
>
> Picking up on something we discussed at LSFMM in one of the sessions as
> an aside rant: I find these AI Assisted-by tags so useless tbh and just
> pure noise in the git log _especially_ for a core developer like Jeff
> that I really don't see the point of them and I'm always tempted to just
> remove the tags when I apply. I have dropped them before because I found
> them so pointless.
>
> Crediting Jan here is the right thing to do and it provides actual value
> and also just makes sure that a real person who spent time helping out
> gets visibility in the git history. Why we should extend the same
> courtesy to automated tooling is really beyond me. Somehow we've become
> all convinced that these tools require a special status but have spent
> months arguing about the usefulness of other tags.
To be clear, Christoph and Ritesh also contributed a lot of review and
suggestions.
I was mainly trying to follow this new verbiage in
Documentation/process/submitting-patches.rst:
------------------8<-------------------
Using Assisted-by:
------------------
If you used any sort of advanced coding tool in the creation of your patch,
you need to acknowledge that use by adding an Assisted-by tag. Failure to
do so may impede the acceptance of your work. Please see
Documentation/process/coding-assistants.rst for details regarding the
acknowledgment of coding assistants.
------------------8<-------------------
If we're demanding this from anyone, then we should demand it from
everyone. I don't think we want one set of rules for core contributors
and another set for other folks.
As to whether we should add them at all -- I don't know. I think it
really comes down to what we intend to do with this info. I'll play
devil's advocate for the moment:
The cost of adding these tags is low. It's just a few extra bits in the
repo. Maybe this could eventually have historical value?
--
Jeff Layton <jlayton@xxxxxxxxxx>