Description | string | A string indicating the current status of the object. Various operational and non-operational statuses are defined. Operational statuses are "OK", "Degraded", "Stressed" and "Pred Fail". "Stressed" indicates that the Element is functioning, but needs attention. Examples of "Stressed" states are overload, overheated, etc. The condition "Pred Fail" (failure predicted) indicates that an Element is functioning properly but predicting a failure in the near future. An example is a SMART-enabled hard drive.
Non-operational statuses can also be specified. These are "Error", "NonRecover", "Starting", "Stopping", "Stopped", "Service", "No Contact" and "Lost Comm". "NonRecover" indicates that a non-recoverable error has occurred. "Service" describes an Element being configured, maintained, cleaned, or otherwise administered. This status could apply during mirror-resilvering of a disk, reload of a user permissions list, or other administrative task. Not all such work is on-line, yet the Element is neither "OK" nor in one of the other states. "No Contact" indicates that the current instance of the monitoring system has knowledge of this Element but has never been able to establish communications with it. "Lost Comm" indicates that the ManagedSystemElement is known to exist and has been contacted successfully in the past, but is currently unreachable."Stopped" indicates that the ManagedSystemElement is known to exist, it is not operational (i.e. it is unable to provide service to users), but it has not failed. It has purposely been made non-operational. The Element may have never been "OK", the Element may have initiated its own stop, or a management system may have initiated the stop. | None | TRANSLATABLE= true |
ValueMap | string | OK, Error, Degraded, Unknown, Pred Fail, Starting, Stopping, Service, Stressed, NonRecover, No Contact, Lost Comm, Stopped | None | None |