Reference Guide

Property Description
0 = Unknown
1 = DMTF Reserved
2 = Fully Redundant — Indicates that all of the configured redundancy is still available
3 = Degraded Redundancy — Indicates that some configured elements are degraded,
missing or failed but that the number of elements in the set is still greater than the
minimum required (MinNumberNeeded);
4 = Redundancy Lost — Indicates that sufficient configured elements are missing or
failed that no redundancy is available and the next failure experienced will cause overall
failure.
5 = Overall Failure — Indicates that there has been an overall failure of the
RedundancySet.
TypeOfSet
TypeOfSet provides information on the type of redundancy. - N+1 (=2) indicates all
members are active, are unaware and function independent of one another. However, there
exist at least one extra member to achieve functionality. Sparing is implied (i.e. each
member can be a spare for the other(s). An example of N+1 is a system that has 2 power
supplies, but needs only 1 power supply to functioning properly.
Possible values are:
0 = Unknown
1 = Other
2 = N+1
3 = Load Balanced — Indicates all members are active. However, there functionality is
not independent of each other. Their functioning is determined by some sort of load
balancing algorithm (implemented in hardware and/or software). Sparing is implied (i.e.
each member can be a spare for the other(s).
4 = Sparing — Indicates that all members are active and are aware of each others.
However, their functionality is independent until failover. Each member can be a spare
for the other(s).
5 = Limited Sparing — Indicates that all members are active, and they may or may not
be aware of each and they are not spares for each other. Instead, their redundancy is
indicated by the IsSpare relationship.
.. = DMTF Reserved
0x8000.. = Vendor Reserved
DCIM_Role
Table 89. Role
Property Description
CommonName
A Common Name is a (possibly ambiguous) name by which the role is commonly known in
some limited scope (such as an organization) and conforms to the naming conventions of
the country or culture with which it is associated.
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 subclassed 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.
Dell Command | Monitor 10.3 classes and properties 215