For safety sake, (future users) use a sharpie and mark in the open area over the top of the breakers "3 PHASE, 240V Delta"
On the top breaker (3 coupled together) Clearly mark "MAIN".
I dislike backfed mains, too easy for someone that doesn't understand them to fry themselves. Even someone who understands them can make a mistake if they're not labeled clearly. I had that happen on a job to a very good electrician that had done a lot of work for me over a period of years. We were disconnecting a UPS system, that had a subpanel that had been wired badly, probably by the computer techs. It was unlabeled. I don't recall the exact circumstances, but it went something like this: It looked like the backfed main was the feed to the UPS, as there was a main breaker also. We shut off the main panel breaker that was labeled to feed the UPS subpanel, shut off the main breaker in the subpanel, and then broke the UPS in the middle of the battery array, and then disconnected battery by battery. Standard procedure for safely breaking down a battery array. Then, took off the panel cover, and used a non-contact tester to determine that the wires feeding the main disconnect were dead. We didn't think to test the breaker leads, as we knew the UPS was disconnected. My guy put a screwdriver to the breaker terminal, and removed one wire. It swung loose and hit a bus bar and the panel blew up in a ball of fire.
What had been done is they backfed the breaker from a panel, and backfed the UPS through the main. So, if they shut off the main, the UPS was isolated, but the panel was still live and the circuits on the UPS would be live also. I don't know how they had fed the backfed breaker, but must have been through some kind of transfer switch, and it wasn't through the labeled breaker that we had disconnected. We were salvaging the UPS and battery array, so didn't investigate further. Just cleaned out our pants and finished the job!
The guy I had doing the work was very good, and had probably about 25 years of solid commercial experience. What it really taught me, was to check all wires with a non-contact tester. He said the same thing, he just got sloppy that day and relied on having disconnected the things he presumed were the hot feeds into the panel.
I personally label backfed mains with that wording "BACKFED MAIN".