Yes, it is possible to have duplicate serial numbers. I am not aware of
 any SW that runs ion the board that uses that information. Every processor
has a unique ID that is better suited for tracking different boards.

Serial numbers are for manufacturing use and as it contains a manufacturers
information, that should be adequate, but then again it is not 100% fool
proof. If people are just making clones of the board and selling it as a
BeagleBone Black clone and being sold as the real thing, then we will be
able to detect that pretty quickly.

Gerald


On Wed, May 13, 2015 at 10:02 AM, Joshua DeWeese <[email protected]>
wrote:

> My apologies. I had an out-of-date SRM (A4) I have what I think is the
> newest SRM (C1), and I do see that it has the table of addresses/lengths
> that I was missing. I'm talking about the EEPROM onboard the BBB, not the
> cape's EEPROMs.
>
> I didn't expect that anyone is enforcing valid EEPROM's as it is an open
> design after all, but I just don't see any provision to avoid serial number
> duplicates for those who wish to do so. Am I still missing something? I
> don't see anywhere to encode the manufacturer's name in the EEPROM. Is
> there some other way for manufacturer's to co-operatively assign unique
> numbers?
>
>
> On Wednesday, May 13, 2015 at 9:59:54 AM UTC-4, Gerald wrote:
>>
>> What sort of EEPROM  layout are you looking for? The tables in the SRM
>> show the address and the data. Not sure what more you need.
>>
>> Yes, the serial numbers could be the same, but there is code in there for
>> manufacturers information. We are not in the business of policing what
>> people do with this design in their products. It is up to them to handle
>> that.
>>
>> Gerald
>>
>>
>> On Wed, May 13, 2015 at 8:53 AM, Joshua DeWeese <[email protected]>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Looking at the BeagleBone's SRM, I see that the contents of the board's
>>> EEPROM are well defined (Board ID, Version, etc). The BeagleBone Black's
>>> SRM, doesn't say anything about the EEPROM's layout, but looking at the
>>> contents of some of my boards, it seems to follow the same spec with a few
>>> changes. Is there a spec. for the BBB's EEPROM somewhere out there?
>>>
>>> I also see that the serial number programmed into the EEPROM is
>>> basically just the year, week, some constant ASCII characters and then an
>>> index that (I assume) resets to 0 at the beginning of each week. This makes
>>> since if there was only one manufacture building the bones, but since it is
>>> open source, there could be theoretically many people building them.
>>> Wouldn't this lead to many boards that have identical serial numbers?
>>>
>>> --
>>> For more options, visit http://beagleboard.org/discuss
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>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Gerald
>>
>> [email protected]
>> http://beagleboard.org/
>> http://circuitco.com/support/
>>
>  --
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-- 
Gerald

[email protected]
http://beagleboard.org/
http://circuitco.com/support/

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