Reference Guide

Table Of Contents
Introduction
This reference guide documents the OpenManage Server Administrator Common Information Model (CIM) provider contained in
the Management Object File (MOF) dccim32.mof.
CIM provides a conceptual model for describing manageable objects in a systems management environment. CIM is a modeling
tool rather than a programming language. CIM provides the structure for organizing objects into a model of a managed
environment. For modeling a managed environment, CIM makes available a set of abstract and concrete classes of objects.
These classes model the basic characteristics of systems, networks, and applications, as well as groupings of management-
related data.
For more information about CIM, see the Distributed Management Task Force (DMTF) website at dmtf.org and the Microsoft
website at microsoft.com.
NOTE: This document includes sections or data that is not applicable to the PowerEdge MX740x and PowerEdge MX840c.
Topics:
Server Administrator
Documenting CIM Classes and Their Properties
Common Properties of Classes
Other Documents You May Need
Typographical Conventions
Server Administrator
Server Administrator provides a suite of systems management information for keeping track of your networked systems. In
addition to providing systems management agents that are independent of the management console, Server Administrator
supports these systems management standards: CIM and Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP).
In addition to supporting systems management industry standards, Server Administrator provides additional systems
management information about the specific components of your Dell EMC device.
Documenting CIM Classes and Their Properties
The Dell CIM provider extends support to Dell-specific software and hardware components. The Dell MOF defines the classes
for the Dell CIM provider. All of the supported classes and properties in the MOF are documented in this guide.
The following subsections define some of the basic building blocks of CIM classes that are used in describing the dccim32
provider name. These subsections also explain how the elements used in describing these classes are organized. This section
does not document the entire CIM schema, but only those classes and properties supported by the dccim32 provider. The list of
properties for each supported class varies greatly.
The property values being presented could be NULL or empty string on some systems, although in general, some non-empty
values can be expected. Key properties (listed below) always carry non-empty values. It is recommended that you use only the
following properties as key attributes:
CIM_PhysicalElement: CreationClassName, Tag
CIM_System: CreationClassName, Name
CIM_LogicalDevice: SystemCreationClassName, SystemName, CreationClassName, DeviceID
CIM_Dependency: Antecedent, Dependent
CIM_SoftwareElement: Name, Version, SoftwareElementState, SoftwareElementID, TargetOperatingSystem
CIM_SoftwareFeature: IdentifyingNumber, ProductName, Vendor, Version, Name
CIM_IRQ: CSCreationClassName, CSName, CreationClassName, IRQNumber
CIM_MemoryMappedIO: CSCreationClassName, CSName, CreationClassName, StartingAddress
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6 Introduction