You can use mdadm to examine the superblock on each drive and it will
give you the details of the array that the drive thinks it is in.
Without a mdadm.conf, the kernel will attempt to assemble the array
based on what it finds in the drive superblocks and will default to
md127 and count up from there.
/proc/mdadm will give you the status of the assembled arrays directly
without the need to go through the mdadm util.

On Tue, Feb 2, 2021 at 9:09 PM John Jason Jordan <joh...@gmx.com> wrote:
>
> On Tue, 2 Feb 2021 19:46:51 -0800
> wes <p...@the-wes.com> dijo:
>
> >If you create the RAID array with UUIDs, it (probably) won't break when
> >your system renames devices.
>
> Brilliant!
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