Andy Shevchenko <andy@xxxxxxxxxx> writes: > On Mon, Sep 30, 2024 at 01:30:07PM +0200, Christian Marangi wrote: >> Hi, >> this is an initial proposal to complete support for manually defining >> partition table. >> >> >> Some block device also implement boot1 and boot2 additional disk. Similar >> to the cmdline parser, these disk can have OF support using the >> "partitions-boot0" and "partitions-boot1" additional node. >> >> It's also completed support for declaring partition as read-only as this >> feature was introduced but never finished in the cmdline parser. > > > I'm not sure I fully understood the problem you are trying to solve. > I have a device at hand that uses eMMC (and was produced almost ten years ago). > This device has a regular GPT on eMMC and no kernel needs to be patched for that. > So, why is it a problem for the mentioned OEMs to use standard GPT approach? For the user area (main block device), yes, a GPT can often be used, but not always. For the boot partitions, the particular SOC/cpu/bootrom may make it impossible to use a standard partition table, because the bootrom expects to find a bootloader at offset 0 on the active boot partition. In such a case, there's no way you can write a regular MBR or GPT, but it is nevertheless nice to have a machine-readable definition of which data goes where in the boot partitions. With these patches, one can do partitions-boot0 { partition@0 { label = "bootloader"; reg = <0 0x...>; // 2 MB } partition@... { label = "device-data"; reg = <...> // 4 MB } } and describe that layout. Rasmus