Reference Guide
Property Description Supported
Operating
System(s)
• 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 Oine — Indicates that the element may be completing commands,
and will 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.
HealthState
Indicates the current health of the element. This attribute expresses the health of this
element but not necessarily that of its subcomponents.
Possible values are:
• 0 = Unknown — The implementation cannot report on HealthState at this time.
• 5 = OK — The element is fully functional and is operating within normal operational
parameters and without error.
• 10 = Degraded/Warning — The element is in working order and all functionality is
provided. However, the element is not working to the best of its abilities. For example,
the element may not be operating at optimal performance or it may be reporting
recoverable errors.
• 15 = Minor failure — All functionality is available but some may be degraded.
• 20 = Major failure — The element is failing. It is possible that some or all of the
functionality of this component is degraded or not working.
• 25 = Critical failure — The element is non-functional and recovery may not be possible.
• 30 = Non-recoverable error — The element has completely failed, and recovery is not
possible. All functionality provided by this element has been lost.
• .. = DMTF Reserved
DMTF has reserved the unused portion of the continuum for additional HealthStates in the
future.
Microsoft
Windows, Linux
LowerThresholdCritical
The Sensor's threshold values specify the ranges (min and max values) for determining
whether the Sensor is operating under Normal, NonCritical or Critical conditions. The
CurrentState is Critical once the CurrentReading is below LowerThresholdCritical.
Microsoft
Windows, Linux
LowerThresholdNonCri
tical
The Sensor's threshold values specify the ranges (min and max values) for determining
whether the Sensor is operating under Normal, NonCritical, Critical conditions. If Current
Reading is between LowerThresholdNonCritical and Upper ThresholdNonCritical, then the
Sensor is reporting a normal value. If CurrentReading is between
LowerThresholdNonCritical and LowerThresholdCritical, then the CurrentState is
NonCritical.
Example for Set command: wmic /namespace:\\root\dcim\sysman path
dcim_numericsensor Where ElementName like '%Temperature Sensor:%' set
LowerThresholdNonCritical = 30. This sets the all temperature probes (lower threshold non
critical) in the system to 30 degree Celsius.
Microsoft
Windows, Linux
124 Dell Command | Monitor10.1.0 classes and properties