Exclusive — Mt6589 Android Scatter Emmc.txt----------------------------------------------------------------n----------------------------------------------------------------nlin
It looks like you’ve posted a fragment of a scatter file for an MT6589 (MediaTek chipset) Android device, specifically for eMMC storage.
A. The Header (General Info)
The file usually begins with a declaration of the hardware version.
Elara opened the raw hex editor side-by-side with the scatter file. She saw the gap—a tiny, corrupted sliver of code where the bootloader ended and the recovery began. She typed furiously, adjusting the linear_start_addr to bridge the gap. It looks like you’ve posted a fragment of
Chipset: MT6589 (a Quad-Core processor widely used in older devices like the Micromax Canvas 4, Gionee Elife E3, and various Sony Xperia clones). Storage Type: EMMC (Embedded MultiMediaCard).
The Importance of Scatter Files and EMMC.txt Open SP Flash Tool → Scatter-loading → select
Understanding the MT6589 Android Scatter File: The Map to Your Device
The MT6589 and the Anatomy of scatter emmc.txt: A Guide to Pre-Loader Partitioning
1. Introduction: The MT6589 Landscape
The MediaTek MT6589 (Codename: Magnet) was a watershed SoC for the budget and mid-range smartphone market in 2013. Built on a 28nm process, it featured a quad-core Cortex-A7 CPU and a PowerVR SGX544 MP GPU. Crucially for low-level system administration, devices using the MT6589 almost universally employed eMMC (embedded MultiMediaCard) storage. Gionee Elife E3
Formatting Specific Partitions: You can use the start address and size from this file to format a single partition (like the FRP or Cache) if the device is locked or boot-looping.
6. Flashing Scenarios with SP Flash Tool
Using the Scatter File:
- Open SP Flash Tool →
Scatter-loading→ selectMT6589_Android_scatter_emmc.txt - The tool auto-populates the partitions.
- Options:











































































