Поделиться через


CIM_ManagedSystemElement class

CIM_ManagedSystemElement is the base class for the system element hierarchy. Any component of a system can potentially be represented by this class or its subclasses.

Examples of system components include:

  • Software components such as application servers, databases, and applications.
  • Operating system components such as files, processes; and threads device components such as disk drives, controllers, processors, and printers.
  • Physical components such as chips and cards.

The following syntax is simplified from MOF code and includes all inherited properties.

Syntax

[Abstract, Version("2.22.0"), UMLPackagePath("CIM::Core::CoreElements"), AMENDMENT]
class CIM_ManagedSystemElement : CIM_ManagedElement
{
  string   InstanceID;
  string   Caption;
  string   Description;
  string   ElementName;
  datetime InstallDate;
  string   Name;
  uint16   OperationalStatus[];
  string   StatusDescriptions[];
  string   Status;
  uint16   HealthState;
  uint16   CommunicationStatus;
  uint16   DetailedStatus;
  uint16   OperatingStatus;
  uint16   PrimaryStatus;
};

Members

The CIM_ManagedSystemElement class has these types of members:

Properties

The CIM_ManagedSystemElement class has these properties.

Caption

Data type: string

Access type: Read-only

Qualifiers: MaxLen (64)

A short textual description of the object.

This property is inherited from CIM_ManagedElement.

CommunicationStatus

Data type: uint16

Access type: Read-only

Indicates the ability of the instrumentation to communicate with this element. A NULL value indicates that instrumentation does not support this property.

Unknown (0)

Indicates that the instrumentation cannot report on the CommunicationStatus property at this time.

Not Available (1)

Indicates that the instrumentation is capable of reporting this property, but intentionally does not for this element.

Communication OK (2)

Indicates only that communication is established with the element.

Lost Communication (3)

Indicates that the element has been contacted in the past, but is currently unreachable.

No Contact (4)

Indicates that the instrumentation has contact information for this element, but has never been able to communicate with it.

DMTF Reserved

Reserved.

Vendor Reserved

Reserved.

Description

Data type: string

Access type: Read-only

A textual description of the object.

This property is inherited from CIM_ManagedElement.

DetailedStatus

Data type: uint16

Access type: Read-only

Qualifiers: ModelCorrespondence ("CIM_EnabledLogicalElement.PrimaryStatus", "CIM_ManagedSystemElement.HealthState")

Indicates additional status details that complement the PrimaryStatus property. A NULL value indicates that the instrumentation does not support this property.

Not Available (0)

Indicates that the instrumentation is capable of reporting this property, but intentionally does not report it for this element.

No Additional Information (1)

Indicates that no details have to be added to the PrimaryStatus property, for example when the PrimaryStatus is set to OK.

Stressed (2)

Indicates that the element functions, but requires attention. Overload and overheated are examples of Stressed states.

Predictive Failure (3)

Indicates that an element functions nominally, but predicts a failure in the near future.

Non-Recoverable Error (4)

Indicates that this element is in an error condition that requires human intervention.

Supporting Entity in Error (5)

Indicates that an element on which this element depends is in error. This element might be OK but cannot function because of the state of a dependent element. An example is a network service or endpoint that cannot function due to lower-layer networking problems.

DMTF Reserved

Reserved.

Vendor Reserved

Reserved.

ElementName

Data type: string

Access type: Read-only

A user-friendly name for the object. This property allows each instance to define a user-friendly name in addition to its key properties, identity data, and description information.

This property is inherited from CIM_ManagedElement.

HealthState

Data type: uint16

Access type: Read-only

Indicates the current health of the element. This attribute expresses the health of this element, but not necessarily the health of its subcomponents.

Unknown (0)

The implementation cannot report on HealthState at this time.

OK (5)

The element is fully functional and operates within normal operational parameters and without error.

Degraded/Warning (10)

The element is in working order, and all functionality is provided. However, the element does not function to the best of its abilities. For example, the element might not operate at optimal performance, or it might report recoverable errors.

Minor failure (15)

All functionality is available, but some functionality might be degraded.

Major failure (20)

The element is failing. It is possible that some or all of the functionality of this component is degraded or does not work.

Critical failure (25)

The element is nonfunctional, and recovery might not be possible.

Non-recoverable error (30)

The element has completely failed, and recovery is not possible. All functionality that this element provides has been lost.

DMTF Reserved

Reserved.

InstallDate

Data type: datetime

Access type: Read-only

Qualifiers: MappingStrings ("MIF.DMTF|ComponentID|001.5")

Indicates when the object was installed. The lack of a value does not indicate that the object is not installed.

InstanceID

Data type: string

Access type: Read-only

Uniquely and opaquely identifies an instance of this class within the scope of the containing namespace.

[!Important]

In order to ensure uniqueness within the namespace, the value of the InstanceID property should be constructed in the following pattern: OrgID:LocalID

OrgID must include a copyrighted, trademarked or otherwise unique name that is owned by the business entity that defines the InstanceID, or be a registered ID that is assigned by a recognized global authority. This pattern is similar to the structure of schema class names. In addition, to ensure uniqueness, the first colon in InstanceID must be between the OrgID andLocalID. Therefore the OrgID must not contain a colon (':').

LocalID is chosen by the business entity and should not be re-used to identify different underlying real-world elements.

If the above pattern is not used, the defining entity must assure that the resultant InstanceID value is not re-used across any InstanceID properties that are produced by this provider or other providers for this namespace.

For Distributed Management Task Force (DMTF) defined instances, the pattern must be used with the OrgID set to CIM.

This property is inherited from CIM_ManagedElement.

Name

Data type: string

Access type: Read-only

Qualifiers: MaxLen (1024)

The label by which the object is known. When subclassed, the Name property can be overridden to be a key property.

OperatingStatus

Data type: uint16

Access type: Read-only

Qualifiers: ModelCorrespondence ("CIM_EnabledLogicalElement.EnabledState")

Indicates the current operational condition of the element. This property can be used to provide more detail about the value of the EnabledState property. A NULL value indicates that the instrumentation does not support this property.

Unknown (0)

Indicates that the instrumentation cannot report on the OperatingStatus property at this time.

Not Available (1)

Indicates that the instrumentation is capable of reporting this property, but intentionally does not report it for this element.

Servicing (2)

Indicates that the element is in process to be configured, maintained, cleaned, or otherwise administered.

Starting (3)

Indicates that the element is being initialized.

Stopping (4)

Indicates that the element is being brought to an orderly stop.

Stopped (5)

Indicates that the element is intentionally stopped.

Aborted (6)

Indicates that the element stopped in an unexpected way.

Dormant (7)

Indicates that the element is inactive.

Completed (8)

Indicates that the element completed its operation. We recommend using a PrimaryStatus property value of OK, Error, or Degraded to indicate success or failure of the operation.

Migrating (9)

Indicates that the element is being moved between host elements.

Emigrating (10)

Indicates that the element is being moved away from the host element.

Immigrating (11)

Indicates that the element is being moved to a new host element.

Snapshotting (12)

Indicates that a snapshot copy of the element is being created.

Shutting Down (13)

Indicates that the element is being brought to an abrupt stop.

In Test (14)

Indicates that the element is performing test functions.

Transitioning (15)

Indicates that the element is between states and is not fully available in either state. Use another value that indicates a more specific transition if one is available.

In Service (16)

Indicates that the element is in service and operational.

DMTF Reserved

Reserved.

Vendor Reserved

Reserved.

OperationalStatus

Data type: uint16 array

Access type: Read-only

Qualifiers: ArrayType ("Indexed"), ModelCorrespondence ("CIM_ManagedSystemElement.StatusDescriptions")

Contains indicators of the current status of the element. The first value of the OperationalStatus property should contain the primary status for the element.

Note

The OperationalStatus property replaces the deprecated Status property. Due to the widespread use of the existing Status property in management applications, we strongly recommend that providers or instrumentation provide both the Status and OperationalStatus properties. When instrumented, Status, because it is a single-valued property, should also provide the primary status of the element.

The possible values are.

Unknown (0)

Indicates that the implementation cannot report on the OperationalStatus property at this time.

Other (1)

Indicates an undefined state.

OK (2)

Indicates full functionality without errors.

Degraded (3)

Indicates that the element is in working order and that all functionality is provided. However, the element does not function to the best of its abilities. For example, the element might not operate at optimal performance, or it might report recoverable errors.

Stressed (4)

Indicates that the element functions, but requires attention. Overload and overheated are examples of Stressed states.

Predictive Failure (5)

Indicates that an element functions nominally, but predicts a failure in the near future.

Error (6)

Indicates that an error has occurred.

Non-Recoverable Error (7)

Indicates that a nonrecoverable error has occurred.

Starting (8)

Indicates that the job is starting.

Stopping (9)

Indicates that the job is stopping.

Stopped (10)

Indicates that the element has been intentionally stopped.

In Service (11)

Indicates that the element is in process to be configured, maintained, cleaned, or otherwise administered.

No Contact (12)

Indicates that the monitoring system has information about this element, but has never been able to establish communications with it.

Lost Communication (13)

Indicates that the monitoring system has successfully contacted this element in the past, but it is currently unavailable.

Aborted (14)

Indicates that the job stopped in an unexpected way. The state and configuration of the job might require an update.

Dormant (15)

Indicates that the job is inactive.

Supporting Entity in Error (16)

Indicates that an element on which this job depends is in error. This element might be OK but cannot function because of the state of a dependent element. An example is a network service or endpoint that cannot function due to lower-layer networking problems.

Completed (17)

Indicates that the job has completed its operation. This value should be combined with either OK, Error, or Degraded to indicate to a client whether the complete operation Completed with OK and passed, or completed with Error and failed, or completed with Degraded and finished the operation, but did not complete OK or did not report an error.

Power Mode (18)

Indicates that the element has additional power model information that is contained in the associated power management service.

DMTF Reserved

Reserved.

Vendor Reserved

Reserved.

PrimaryStatus

Data type: uint16

Access type: Read-only

Qualifiers: ModelCorrespondence ("CIM_ManagedSystemElement.DetailedStatus", "CIM_ManagedSystemElement.HealthState")

Indicates a high-level status value.

The possible values are.

Unknown (0)

OK (1)

Degraded (2)

Error (3)

DMTF Reserved

4 32767

Vendor Reserved

32768 65535

Status

Data type: string

Access type: Read-only

Qualifiers: Deprecated ("CIM_ManagedSystemElement.OperationalStatus"), MaxLen (10)

Indicates the primary status of the object.

Note

This property is deprecated. It is replaced by the OperationalStatus property. If you choose to use the Status property for backward compatibility, it should be secondary to the OperationalStatus property.

The possible values are.

"OK"

"Error"

"Degraded"

"Unknown"

"Pred Fail"

"Starting"

"Stopping"

"Service"

"Stressed"

"NonRecover"

"No Contact"

"Lost Comm"

"Stopped"

StatusDescriptions

Data type: string array

Access type: Read-only

Qualifiers: ArrayType ("Indexed"), ModelCorrespondence ("CIM_ManagedSystemElement.OperationalStatus")

Indicates descriptions of the corresponding values in the OperationalStatus array. For example, if an element in the OperationalStatus property contains the value Stopping, then the element at the same array index in this property might contain an explanation as to why an object is being stopped.

Requirements

Minimum supported client
None supported
Minimum supported server
Windows Server 2016
Namespace
Root\HyperVCluster\v2
MOF
WindowsHyperVCluster.V2.mof
DLL
VMMS.exe

See also

CIM_ManagedElement

Failover Clustering Hyper-V WMI Provider