Reference Guide

Property Description
OperationalStatus
Indicates the current statuses of the element. Various operational
statuses are dened. Many of the enumeration's values are self-
explanatory.
Possible values are:
0 = Unknown
1 = Other
2 = OK
3 = Degraded
4 = Stressed — Indicates that the element is functioning, but
needs attention. Examples of Stressed states are overload,
overheated, and so on.
5 = Predictive Failure — Indicates that an element is
functioning nominally but predicting a failure in the near future.
6 = Error
7 = Non-Recoverable Error
8 = Starting
9 = Stopping
10 = Stopped
11 = In Service — Describes an element being congured,
maintained, cleaned, or otherwise administered.
12 = No Contact — Indicates that the monitoring system has
knowledge of this element, but has never been able to establish
communications with it.
13 = Lost Communication — Indicates that the
ManagedSystem Element is known to exist and has been
contacted successfully in the past, but is currently unreachable.
14 = Aborted
15 = Dormant — Indicates that the element is inactive or
quiesced.
16 = Supporting Entity in Error — Indicates that this element
may be OK but that another element, on which it is dependent,
is in error. An example is a network service or endpoint that
cannot function due to lower-layer networking problems.
17 = Completed — Indicates that the element has completed its
operation. This value should be combined with either OK, Error,
or Degraded so that a client can tell if the complete operation
Completed with OK (passed), Completed with Error (failed), or
Completed with Degraded (the operation nished, but it did not
complete OK or did not report an error).
18 = Power Mode — Indicates that the element has additional
power model information contained in the Associated
PowerManagementService association.
.. = DMTF Reserved
0x8000.. = Vendor Reserved
OperationalStatus replaces the Status property on
ManagedSystemElement to provide a consistent approach to
enumerations, to address implementation needs for an array
property, and to provide a migration path from today's environment
to the future. This change was not made earlier because it required
the deprecated qualier. Due to the widespread use of the existing
Status property in management applications, it is strongly
recommended that providers or instrumentation provide both the
Status and OperationalStatus properties. Further, the rst value of
OperationalStatus should contain the primary status for the
element. When instrumented, Status (because it is single-valued)
should also provide the primary status of the element.
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Dell Command | Monitor10.1.0 classes and properties