On Sat, Mar 16, 2019 at 01:33:58PM +0100, Marek Vasut wrote: > If you have a FS or partition table there, it does. > If you don't, I agree ... that's a problem. eMMC boot partitions are called mmcblkXbootY, and unless you have more than one eMMC device on the system, they can be found either by looking for /dev/mmcblk*boot* or by querying udev. The advantage of using udev is you can discover the physical device behind it by looking at DEVPATH, ID_PATH, etc, but you may not have that installed on an embedded device. However, as I say, just looking for /dev/mmcblk*boot* is sufficient to find the eMMC boot partitions where there is just one eMMC device present (which seems to be the standard setup.) > > I don't care the slightest what the numbering is, as long as it is > > stable. On some hardware, with an unpatched kernel, the mmc device > > numbering changes depending on whether or not an SD card is inserted on > > boot. Getting rid of that behaviour is really all I want. > > Agreed, that would be an improvement. The mmc device numbering was tied to the mmc host numbering a while back and the order that the hosts are probed should be completely independent of whether a card is inserted or not: snprintf(md->disk->disk_name, sizeof(md->disk->disk_name), "mmcblk%u%s", card->host->index, subname ? subname : ""); snprintf(rpmb_name, sizeof(rpmb_name), "mmcblk%u%s", card->host->index, subname ? subname : ""); I suspect that Mans is quoting something from the dim and distant past to confuse the issue - as shown above, it is now dependent on the host numbering order not the order in which cards are inserted. -- RMK's Patch system: https://www.armlinux.org.uk/developer/patches/ FTTC broadband for 0.8mile line in suburbia: sync at 12.1Mbps down 622kbps up According to speedtest.net: 11.9Mbps down 500kbps up