The Status property is a string indicating the current status of the object. Various operational and non-operational statuses can be defined. Operational statuses are OK, Degraded and Pred Fail. Pred Fail indicates that an element may be 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, Starting, Stopping and Service. The latter, Service, could apply during mirror-resilvering of a disk, reload of a user permissions list, or other administrative work. Not all such work is on-line, yet the managed element is neither OK nor in one of the other states.
Parsed from file cimwin32.mib.txt
Company: None
Module: CIMWIN32-MIB
The Status property is a string indicating the current status of the object. Various operational and non-operational statuses can be defined. Operational statuses are OK, Degraded and Pred Fail. Pred Fail indicates that an element may be 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, Starting, Stopping and Service. The latter, Service, could apply during mirror-resilvering of a disk, reload of a user permissions list, or other administrative work. Not all such work is on-line, yet the managed element is neither OK nor in one of the other states.
Parsed from file CIMWIN32-MIB.mib
Module: CIMWIN32-MIB
Vendor: IBM
Module: CIMWIN32-MIB
[Automatically extracted from oidview.com]
win32NetworkClientStatus OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX String ACCESS read-write STATUS mandatory DESCRIPTION "The Status property is a string indicating the current status of the object. Various operational and non-operational statuses can be defined. Operational statuses are OK, Degraded and Pred Fail. Pred Fail indicates that an element may be 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, Starting, Stopping and Service. The latter, Service, could apply during mirror-resilvering of a disk, reload of a user permissions list, or other administrative work. Not all such work is on-line, yet the managed element is neither OK nor in one of the other states." REFERENCE "Win32_NetworkClient.Status" ::= { win32NetworkClientEntry 4 }
win32NetworkClientStatus OBJECT-TYPE SYNTAX String ACCESS read-write STATUS mandatory DESCRIPTION "The Status property is a string indicating the current status of the object. Various operational and non-operational statuses can be defined. Operational statuses are OK, Degraded and Pred Fail. Pred Fail indicates that an element may be 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, Starting, Stopping and Service. The latter, Service, could apply during mirror-resilvering of a disk, reload of a user permissions list, or other administrative work. Not all such work is on-line, yet the managed element is neither OK nor in one of the other states." REFERENCE "Win32-NetworkClient.Status" ::= { win32NetworkClientEntry 4 }
OID | Name | Sub children | Sub Nodes Total | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
1.3.6.1.4.1.2.6.159.1.2.10.350.1.1 | win32NetworkClientKeyIndex | 0 | 0 | " REFERENCE "Win32_NetworkClient.KeyIndex |
1.3.6.1.4.1.2.6.159.1.2.10.350.1.2 | win32NetworkClientManufacturer | 0 | 0 | The Manufacturer property indicates the name of the manufacturer of the network client running on a Win32 system. Example: Compaq |
1.3.6.1.4.1.2.6.159.1.2.10.350.1.3 | win32NetworkClientName | 0 | 0 | The Name property identifies the name of the network client running on a Win32 system. Example: Funazonki |