Reference Guide

Property Description
OperationalStatus
Indicates the current statuses of the element.
Various operational statuses are defined. 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 soon.
6 = Error
7 = Non-Recoverable Error
8 = Starting
9 = Stopping
10 = Stopped — Implies a clean and orderly
stop
11 = In Service — Describes an element being
configured, 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 unreachable.
14 = Aborted — Implies an abrupt stop where
the state and configuration of the element may
need to be updated.
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
finished, but it did not complete OK or did not
report an error).
18 = Power Mode — Indicates that the element
has additional power model information
36