Reference Guide

14 Introduction
Manufacturer Provides the name of the organization
responsible for producing the
CIM_PhysicalElement or
CIM_SoftwareElement. This may be the
entity from whom the element is
purchased, but not necessarily. Purchase
information is contained in the
Vendor property of CIM_Product.
string
Name Defines the label by which the object is
known. When subclassed, the Name
property can be overridden to be a
Key property.
string
Status Provides a string indicating how well the
component is functioning—comparable to
"health." Status values for operational and
nonoperational conditions include:
Operational Status Values:
OK indicates that the object is
functioning normally.
Degraded means that the item is
functioning, but not optimally.
Stressed indicates that the element is
functioning, but needs attention. Examples
of Stressed states are overloaded,
overheated, and so on.
Nonoperational Status Values:
Non-recover means that a nonrecoverable
error has occurred.
Error means that an element has
encountered an operational condition that
is severe as compared to its normal mode of
operation.
string
SystemCreationClassName Indicates the system’s creation class name. string
Table 1-2. Common Properties of Classes (continued)
Property Description Data Type
book.book Page 14 Tuesday, February 26, 2008 9:21 AM