AddressOrigin
|
Identifies the method by which the IP Address, Subnet Mask,
and Gateway were assigned to the IPProtocolEndpoint.
Possible
values are:
- 0 = Unknown
- 1 = Other
- 2 = Not Applicable
- 3 = Static — Indicates the values were assigned manually.
- 4 = DHCP — Indicates the values were assigned utilizing the Dynamic
Host Configuration Protocol. See RFC 2131 and related.
- 5 = BOOTP — Indicates the values were assigned utilizing BOOTP.
See RFC 951 and related.
- 6 = IPv4 Link Local — Indicates the values were assigned using
the IPv4 Link Local protocol. See RFC 3927.
- 7 = DHCPv6 — Indicates the values were assigned using DHCPv6.
See RFC 3315.
- 8 = IPv6AutoConfig — Indicates the values were assigned using
the IPv6 AutoConfig Protocol. See RFC 4862.
- .. = DMTF Reserved
- 32768..65535 = Vendor Reserved
|
CreationClassName
|
Indicates the name of the class or the subclass used in
the creation of an instance. When used with the other key properties
of this class, this property allows all instances of this class and
its subclasses to be uniquely identified.
|
ElementName
|
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.
-
NOTE: The Name property of
ManagedSystemElement is also defined as a user-friendly name. But,
it is often sub-classed to be a Key. It is not reasonable that the
same property can convey both identity and a user-friendly name, without
inconsistencies. Where Name exists and is not a Key (such as for instances
of LogicalDevice), the same information can be present in both the
Name and ElementName properties.
|
EnabledDefault
|
An enumerated value indicating an administrator's default
or startup configuration for the Enabled State of an element.
Possible values are:
- 2 = Enabled
- 3 = Disabled
- 5 = Not Applicable
- 6 = Enabled but Offline
- 7 = No Default
- 9 = Quiesce
- .. = DMTF Reserved
- 32768..65535 = Vendor Reserved
By default, the element is
Enabled (value = 2) .
|
EnabledState
|
An integer enumeration that indicates the enabled and disabled
states of an element. It can also indicate the transitions between
these requested states.
Possible values are:
- 0 = Unknown
- 1 = Other
- 2 = Enabled — Indicates that the element is or could be executing
commands, will process any queued commands, and queues new requests.
- 3 = Disabled — Indicates that the element will not execute commands
and will drop any new requests.
- 4 = Shutting Down — Indicates that the element is in the process
of going to a Disabled state.
- 5 = Not Applicable — Indicates the element does not support being
enabled or disabled.
- 6 = Enabled but Offline — Indicates that the element may be completing
commands, and drop any new requests.
- 7 = In Test — Indicates that the element is in a test state.
- 8 = Deferred — Indicates that the element may be completing commands,
but will queue any new requests.
- 9 = Quiesce — Indicates that the element is enabled but in a restricted
mode.
- 10 = Starting — Indicates that the element is in the process of
going to an Enabled state. New requests are queued.
- 11..32767 = DMTF Reserved
- 32768..65535 = Vendor Reserved
For example, shutting down (value =
4) and starting
(value =
10) are transient states between enabled and disabled.
|
IPv4Address
|
The IPv4 address that this ProtocolEndpoint represents.
|
IPv6Address
|
The IPv6 address that this ProtocolEndpoint represents.
|
IPv6AddressType
|
Identifies the type of address found in the IPv6Address
property. The values of this property are interpreted according to
RFC4291, Section 2.4
Possible values are:
- 2 = Unspecified
- 3 = Loopback
- 4 = Multicast
- 5 = Link Local Unicast
- 6 = Global Unicast
- 7 = Embedded IPv4 Address
- 8 = Site Local Unicast
- .. = DMTF Reserved
- 32768..65535 = Vendor Reserved
|
IPv6SubnetPrefixLength
|
Identifies the prefix length of the IPv6Address property
that is used to specify a subnet
|
IPVersionSupport
|
This property explicitly defines support for different versions
of the IP protocol, for this Endpoint. It is deprecated since the
ProtocolIFType also provides this functionality by describing an endpoint
as IPv4 only (value =
4096), IPv6 only (value =
4097), or IPv4/v6 (value =
4098).
Possible values are:
- 0 = Unknown
- 1 = IPv4 Only
- 2 = IPv6 Only
- 3 = Both IPv4 and IPv6
|
Name
|
A string that identifies this ProtocolEndpoint with either
a port or an interface on a device. To ensure uniqueness, the Name
property should be prepended or appended with information from the
Type or OtherTypeDescription properties. The method selected is described
in the NameFormat property of this class.
|
NameFormat
|
Contains the naming heuristic that is selected to ensure
that the value of the Name property is unique. For example, you may
choose to prepend the name of the port or interface with the Type
of ProtocolEndpoint (for example, IPv4) of this instance followed
by an underscore.
|
ProtocolIFType
|
ProtocolIFType's enumeration is limited to IP-related and
reserved values for this subclass of ProtocolEndpoint.
Possible
values are:
- 1 = Other
- 225..4095 = IANA
- Reserved 4096 = IPv4
- 4097 = IPv6
- 4098 = IPv4/v6
- 4301..32767 = DMTF Reserved
- 32768.. = Vendor Reserved
|
ProtocolType
|
This property is deprecated instead of the ProtocolIFType
enumeration. This deprecation was done to have better alignment between
the IF-MIB of the IETF and this CIM class. Deprecated description:
ProtocolType is an enumeration that provides information to categorize
and classify different instances of this class. For most instances,
information in this enumeration and the definition of the subclass
overlap. However, there are several cases where a specific subclass
of ProtocolEndpoint is not required (for example, there is no Fibre
Channel subclass of ProtocolEndpoint). Therefore, this property is
needed to define the type of Endpoint.
Possible values are:
- 0 = Unknown
- 1 = Other
- 2 = IPv4
- 3 = IPv6
- 4 = IPX
- 5 = AppleTalk
- 6 = DECnet
- 7 = SNA
- 8 = CONP
- 9 = CLNP
- 10 = VINES
- 11 = XNS
- 12 = ATM
- 13 = Frame Relay
- 14 = Ethernet
- 15 = TokenRing
- 16 = FDDI
- 17 = Infiniband
- 18 = Fibre Channel
- 19 = ISDN BRI Endpoint
- 20 = ISDN B Channel Endpoint
- 21 = ISDN D Channel Endpoint
- 22 = IPv4/v6
- 23 = BGP
- 24 = OSPF
- 25 = MPLS
- 26 = UDP
- 27 = TCP
|
RequestedState
|
An integer enumeration that indicates the last requested
or desired state for the element, irrespective of the mechanism through
which it was requested. The actual state of the element is represented
by EnabledState. This property is provided to compare the last requested
and current enabled or disabled states.
Possible values are:
- 0 = Unknown — Indicates the last requested state for the element
is unknown.
- 2 = Enabled
- 3 = Disabled
- 4 = Shut Down
- 5 = No Change
- 6 = Offline — Indicates that the element has been requested to
transition to the Enabled but Offline EnabledState.
- 7 = Test
- 8 = Deferred
- 9 = Quiesce
- 10 = Reboot — Refers to performing a
Shut Down and then
moving to an
Enabled state.
- 11 = Reset — Indicates that the element is first
Disabled and then
Enabled.
- 12 = Not Applicable
- .. = DMTF Reserved
- 32768..65535 = Vendor Reserved
-
NOTE: When EnabledState
is set to
5 (Not Applicable), then this property has no meaning.
See the EnabledState property description for explanations of the
values in the RequestedState enumeration.
-
NOTE: The value
No Change (5) has been deprecated instead of indicating the last requested
state is
Unknown (0). If the last requested or desired state
is unknown, RequestedState should have the value
Unknown (0), but may have the value
No Change (5). There are two
new values in RequestedState that build on the statuses of EnabledState.
These are
Reboot (10) and
Reset (11).
Shut
Down requests an orderly transition to the Disabled state, and may
involve removing power, to completely erase any existing state. The
Disabled state requests an immediate disabling of the element, such
that it will not execute or accept any commands or processing requests.
This property is set as the result of a method invocation (such as
Start or StopService on CIM_Service), or can be overridden and defined
as WRITEable in a subclass. The method approach is considered superior
to a WRITEable property, because it allows an explicit invocation
of the operation and the return of a result code. If knowledge of
the last RequestedState is not supported for the EnabledLogicalElement,
the property is NULL or have the value 12
Not Applicable.
|
Status
|
A string indicating the current status of the object. Various
operational and non-operational statuses are defined. This property
is deprecated instead of OperationalStatus, which includes the same
semantics in its enumeration. This change is made for the following
reasons:
- Status is more correctly defined as an array. This definition
overcomes the limitation of describing status using a single value,
when it is really a multi-valued property (for example, an element
may be OK AND Stopped.
- A MaxLen of 10 is too restrictive and leads to unclear enumerated
values.
- The change to a uint16 data type was discussed when CIM V2.0 was
defined. However, existing V1.0 implementations used the string property
and did not want to modify their code. Therefore, Status was grandfathered
into the Schema. Use of the deprecated qualifier allows the maintenance
of the existing property, but also permits an improved definition
using OperationalStatus.
Possible values are:
- OK
- Error
- Degraded
- Unknown
- Pred Fail
- Starting
- Stopping
- Service
- Stressed
- NonRecover
- No Contact
- Lost
- Comm
- Stopped
|
SubnetMask
|
The mask for the IPv4 address of this ProtocolEndpoint,
if one is defined.
|
SystemCreationClassName
|
The creation class name of the scoping System.
|
SystemName
|
The Name of the scoping System.
|
TransitioningToState
|
Indicates the target state to which the instance is transitioning.
Possible values are:
- 0 = Unknown
- 2 = Enabled
- 3 = Disabled
- 4 = Shut Down
- 5 = No Change — Indicates that no transition is in progress.
- 6 = Offline
- 7 = Test
- 8 = Defer
- 9 = Quiesce
- 10 = Reboot
- 11 = Reset
- 12 = Not Applicable — Indicates that the implementation does not
support representing ongoing transitions.
A value other than 5 or 12 identifies the state to which the
element is in the process of transitioning.
|