class CIM_BGPProtocolEndpoint : CIM_ProtocolEndpoint



Description:

A ProtocolEndpoint that is dedicated to running BGP.

Definition:

Feature Type Class Origin Qualifiers
Caption string CIM_ManagedElement
Description The Caption property is a short textual description (one- line string) of the object.
MaxLen 64
Description string CIM_ManagedElement
Override Description
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|IF-MIB.ifDescr
Description The Description property provides a textual description of the object.
ElementName string CIM_ManagedElement
Description A user-friendly name for the object. This property allows each instance to define a user-friendly name in addition to its key properties, identity data, and description information. Note that the Name property of ManagedSystemElement is also defined as a user-friendly name. But, it is often subclassed to be a Key. It is not reasonable that the same property can convey both identity and a user-friendly name, without inconsistencies. Where Name exists and is not a Key (such as for instances of LogicalDevice), the same information can be present in both the Name and ElementName properties.
InstallDate datetime CIM_ManagedSystemElement
Description A datetime value that indicates when the object was installed. Lack of a value does not indicate that the object is not installed.
MappingStrings MIF.DMTF|ComponentID|001.5
Name string CIM_ManagedSystemElement
Override Name
Description A string that identifies this ProtocolEndpoint with either a port or an interface on a device. To ensure uniqueness, the Name property should be prepended or appended with information from the Type or OtherTypeDescription properties. The method selected is described in the NameFormat property of this class.
MaxLen 256
Key TRUE
OperationalStatus uint16[] CIM_ManagedSystemElement
Override OperationalStatus
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|IF-MIB.ifOperStatus
Description Indicates the current statuses of the element. Various operational statuses are defined. Many of the enumeration's values are self-explanatory. However, a few are not and are described here in more detail. "Stressed" indicates that the element is functioning, but needs attention. Examples of "Stressed" states are overload, overheated, and so on. "Predictive Failure" indicates that an element is functioning nominally but predicting a failure in the near future. "In Service" describes an element being configured, maintained, cleaned, or otherwise administered. "No Contact" indicates that the monitoring system has knowledge of this element, but has never been able to establish communications with it. "Lost Communication" indicates that the ManagedSystem Element is known to exist and has been contacted successfully in the past, but is currently unreachable. "Stopped" and "Aborted" are similar, although the former implies a clean and orderly stop, while the latter implies an abrupt stop where the state and configuration of the element might need to be updated. "Dormant" indicates that the element is inactive or quiesced. "Supporting Entity in Error" indicates that this element might 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. "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). "Power Mode" indicates that the element has additional power model information contained in the Associated PowerManagementService association. OperationalStatus replaces the Status property on ManagedSystemElement to provide a consistent approach to enumerations, to address implementation needs for an array property, and to provide a migration path from today's environment to the future. This change was not made earlier because it required the deprecated qualifier. Due to the widespread use of the existing Status property in management applications, it is strongly recommended that providers or instrumentation provide both the Status and OperationalStatus properties. Further, the first value of OperationalStatus should contain the primary status for the element. When instrumented, Status (because it is single-valued) should also provide the primary status of the element.
ValueMap 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, .., 0x8000..
Values "Unknown" [0]
"Other" [1]
"OK" [2]
"Degraded" [3]
"Stressed" [4]
"Predictive Failure" [5]
"Error" [6]
"Non-Recoverable Error" [7]
"Starting" [8]
"Stopping" [9]
"Stopped" [10]
"In Service" [11]
"No Contact" [12]
"Lost Communication" [13]
"Aborted" [14]
"Dormant" [15]
"Supporting Entity in Error" [16]
"Completed" [17]
"Power Mode" [18]
"DMTF Reserved" [..]
"Vendor Reserved" [0x8000..]
ArrayType Indexed
ModelCorrespondence CIM_ManagedSystemElement.StatusDescriptions
StatusDescriptions string[] CIM_ManagedSystemElement
Description Strings describing the various OperationalStatus array values. For example, if "Stopping" is the value assigned to OperationalStatus, then this property may contain an explanation as to why an object is being stopped. Note that entries in this array are correlated with those at the same array index in OperationalStatus.
ArrayType Indexed
ModelCorrespondence CIM_ManagedSystemElement.OperationalStatus
Status string CIM_ManagedSystemElement
Deprecated CIM_ManagedSystemElement.OperationalStatus
Description A string indicating the current status of the object. Various operational and non-operational statuses are defined. This property is deprecated in lieu of OperationalStatus, which includes the same semantics in its enumeration. This change is made for 3 reasons: 1) Status is more correctly defined as an array. This definition overcomes the limitation of describing status using a single value, when it is really a multi-valued property (for example, an element might be OK AND Stopped. 2) A MaxLen of 10 is too restrictive and leads to unclear enumerated values. 3) The change to a uint16 data type was discussed when CIM V2.0 was defined. However, existing V1.0 implementations used the string property and did not want to modify their code. Therefore, Status was grandfathered into the Schema. Use of the deprecated qualifier allows the maintenance of the existing property, but also permits an improved definition using OperationalStatus.
ValueMap OK, Error, Degraded, Unknown, Pred Fail, Starting, Stopping, Service, Stressed, NonRecover, No Contact, Lost Comm, Stopped
MaxLen 10
HealthState uint16 CIM_ManagedSystemElement
Description Indicates the current health of the element. This attribute expresses the health of this element but not necessarily that of its subcomponents. The possible values are 0 to 30, where 5 means the element is entirely healthy and 30 means the element is completely non-functional. The following continuum is defined: "Non-recoverable Error" (30) - The element has completely failed, and recovery is not possible. All functionality provided by this element has been lost. "Critical Failure" (25) - The element is non-functional and recovery might not be possible. "Major Failure" (20) - The element is failing. It is possible that some or all of the functionality of this component is degraded or not working. "Minor Failure" (15) - All functionality is available but some might be degraded. "Degraded/Warning" (10) - The element is in working order and all functionality is provided. However, the element is not working to the best of its abilities. For example, the element might not be operating at optimal performance or it might be reporting recoverable errors. "OK" (5) - The element is fully functional and is operating within normal operational parameters and without error. "Unknown" (0) - The implementation cannot report on HealthState at this time. DMTF has reserved the unused portion of the continuum for additional HealthStates in the future.
ValueMap 0, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, ..
Values "Unknown" [0]
"OK" [5]
"Degraded/Warning" [10]
"Minor failure" [15]
"Major failure" [20]
"Critical failure" [25]
"Non-recoverable error" [30]
"DMTF Reserved" [..]
PrimaryStatus uint16 CIM_ManagedSystemElement
Experimental TRUE
Description PrimaryStatus provides a high level status value, intended to align with Red-Yellow-Green type representation of status. It should be used in conjunction with DetailedStatus to provide high level and detailed health status of the ManagedElement and its subcomponents. PrimaryStatus consists of one of the following values: Unknown, OK, Degraded or Error. "Unknown" indicates the implementation is in general capable of returning this property, but is unable to do so at this time. "OK" indicates the ManagedElement is functioning normally. "Degraded" indicates the ManagedElement is functioning below normal. "Error" indicates the ManagedElement is in an Error condition.
ValueMap 0, 1, 2, 3, .., 0x8000..
Values "Unknown" [0]
"OK" [1]
"Degraded" [2]
"Error" [3]
"DMTF Reserved" [..]
"Vendor Reserved" [0x8000..]
ModelCorrespondence CIM_ManagedSystemElement.DetailedStatus, CIM_ManagedSystemElement.HealthState
DetailedStatus uint16 CIM_ManagedSystemElement
Experimental TRUE
Description DetailedStatus compliments PrimaryStatus with additional status detail. It consists of one of the following values: Not Available, No Additional Information, Stressed, Predictive Failure, Error, Non-Recoverable Error, SupportingEntityInError. Detailed status is used to expand upon the PrimaryStatus of the element. A Null return indicates the implementation (provider) does not implement this property. "Not Available" indicates that the implementation (provider) is capable of returning a value for this property, but not ever for this particular piece of hardware/software or the property is intentionally not used because it adds no meaningful information (as in the case of a property that is intended to add additional info to another property). "No Additional Information" indicates that the element is functioning normally as indicated by PrimaryStatus = "OK". "Stressed" indicates that the element is functioning, but needs attention. Examples of "Stressed" states are overload, overheated, and so on. "Predictive Failure" indicates that an element is functioning normally but a failure is predicted in the near future. "Non-Recoverable Error " indicates that this element is in an error condition that requires human intervention. "Supporting Entity in Error" indicates that this element might 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.
ValueMap 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, .., 0x8000..
Values "Not Available" [0]
"No Additional Information" [1]
"Stressed" [2]
"Predictive Failure" [3]
"Non-Recoverable Error" [4]
"Supporting Entity in Error" [5]
"DMTF Reserved" [..]
"Vendor Reserved" [0x8000..]
ModelCorrespondence CIM_EnabledLogicalElement.PrimaryStatus, CIM_ManagedSystemElement.HealthState
OperatingStatus uint16 CIM_ManagedSystemElement
Experimental TRUE
Description OperatingStatus provides a current status value for the operational condition of the element and can be used for providing more detail with respect to the value of EnabledState. It can also provide the transitional states when an element is transitioning from one state to another, such as when an element is transitioning between EnabledState and RequestedState, as well as other transitional conditions. OperatingStatus consists of one of the following values: Unknown, Not Available, In Service, Starting, Stopping, Stopped, Aborted, Dormant, Completed, Migrating, Emmigrating, Immigrating, Snapshotting. Shutting Down, In Test A Null return indicates the implementation (provider) does not implement this property. "Unknown" indicates the implementation is in general capable of returning this property, but is unable to do so at this time. "None" indicates that the implementation (provider) is capable of returning a value for this property, but not ever for this particular piece of hardware/software or the property is intentionally not used because it adds no meaningful information (as in the case of a property that is intended to add additional info to another property). "Servicing" describes an element being configured, maintained, cleaned, or otherwise administered. "Starting" describes an element being initialized. "Stopping" describes an element being brought to an orderly stop. "Stopped" and "Aborted" are similar, although the former implies a clean and orderly stop, while the latter implies an abrupt stop where the state and configuration of the element might need to be updated. "Dormant" indicates that the element is inactive or quiesced. "Completed" indicates that the element has completed its operation. This value should be combined with either OK, Error, or Degraded in the PrimaryStatus 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). "Migrating" element is being moved between host elements. "Immigrating" element is being moved to new host element. "Emigrating" element is being moved away from host element. "Shutting Down" describes an element being brought to an abrupt stop. "In Test" element is performing test functions. "Transitioning" describes an element that is between states, that is, it is not fully available in either its previous state or its next state. This value should be used if other values indicating a transition to a specific state are not applicable. "In Service" describes an element that is in service and operational.
ValueMap 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, .., 0x8000..
Values "Unknown" [0]
"Not Available" [1]
"Servicing" [2]
"Starting" [3]
"Stopping" [4]
"Stopped" [5]
"Aborted" [6]
"Dormant" [7]
"Completed" [8]
"Migrating" [9]
"Emigrating" [10]
"Immigrating" [11]
"Snapshotting" [12]
"Shutting Down" [13]
"In Test" [14]
"Transitioning" [15]
"In Service" [16]
"DMTF Reserved" [..]
"Vendor Reserved" [0x8000..]
ModelCorrespondence CIM_EnabledLogicalElement.EnabledState
CommunicationStatus uint16 CIM_ManagedSystemElement
Experimental TRUE
Description CommunicationStatus indicates the ability of the instrumentation to communicate with the underlying ManagedElement. CommunicationStatus consists of one of the following values: Unknown, None, Communication OK, Lost Communication, or No Contact. A Null return indicates the implementation (provider) does not implement this property. "Unknown" indicates the implementation is in general capable of returning this property, but is unable to do so at this time. "Not Available" indicates that the implementation (provider) is capable of returning a value for this property, but not ever for this particular piece of hardware/software or the property is intentionally not used because it adds no meaningful information (as in the case of a property that is intended to add additional info to another property). "Communication OK " indicates communication is established with the element, but does not convey any quality of service. "No Contact" indicates that the monitoring system has knowledge of this element, but has never been able to establish communications with it. "Lost Communication" indicates that the Managed Element is known to exist and has been contacted successfully in the past, but is currently unreachable.
ValueMap 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, .., 0x8000..
Values "Unknown" [0]
"Not Available" [1]
"Communication OK" [2]
"Lost Communication" [3]
"No Contact" [4]
"DMTF Reserved" [..]
"Vendor Reserved" [0x8000..]
EnabledState uint16 CIM_EnabledLogicalElement
Override EnabledState
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|IF-MIB.ifAdminStatus
Description EnabledState is an integer enumeration that indicates the enabled and disabled states of an element. It can also indicate the transitions between these requested states. For example, shutting down (value=4) and starting (value=10) are transient states between enabled and disabled. The following text briefly summarizes the various enabled and disabled states: Enabled (2) indicates that the element is or could be executing commands, will process any queued commands, and queues new requests. Disabled (3) indicates that the element will not execute commands and will drop any new requests. Shutting Down (4) indicates that the element is in the process of going to a Disabled state. Not Applicable (5) indicates the element does not support being enabled or disabled. Enabled but Offline (6) indicates that the element might be completing commands, and will drop any new requests. Test (7) indicates that the element is in a test state. Deferred (8) indicates that the element might be completing commands, but will queue any new requests. Quiesce (9) indicates that the element is enabled but in a restricted mode. Starting (10) indicates that the element is in the process of going to an Enabled state. New requests are queued.
ValueMap 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11..32767, 32768..65535
Values "Unknown" [0]
"Other" [1]
"Enabled" [2]
"Disabled" [3]
"Shutting Down" [4]
"Not Applicable" [5]
"Enabled but Offline" [6]
"In Test" [7]
"Deferred" [8]
"Quiesce" [9]
"Starting" [10]
"DMTF Reserved" [11..32767]
"Vendor Reserved" [32768..65535]
ModelCorrespondence CIM_EnabledLogicalElement.OtherEnabledState
OtherEnabledState string CIM_EnabledLogicalElement
Description A string that describes the enabled or disabled state of the element when the EnabledState property is set to 1 ("Other"). This property must be set to null when EnabledState is any value other than 1.
ModelCorrespondence CIM_EnabledLogicalElement.EnabledState
RequestedState uint16 CIM_EnabledLogicalElement
Description RequestedState is an integer enumeration that indicates the last requested or desired state for the element, irrespective of the mechanism through which it was requested. The actual state of the element is represented by EnabledState. This property is provided to compare the last requested and current enabled or disabled states. Note that when EnabledState is set to 5 ("Not Applicable"), then this property has no meaning. Refer to the EnabledState property description for explanations of the values in the RequestedState enumeration. "Unknown" (0) indicates the last requested state for the element is unknown. Note that the value "No Change" (5) has been deprecated in lieu of indicating the last requested state is "Unknown" (0). If the last requested or desired state is unknown, RequestedState should have the value "Unknown" (0), but may have the value "No Change" (5).Offline (6) indicates that the element has been requested to transition to the Enabled but Offline EnabledState. It should be noted that there are two new values in RequestedState that build on the statuses of EnabledState. These are "Reboot" (10) and "Reset" (11). Reboot refers to doing a "Shut Down" and then moving to an "Enabled" state. Reset indicates that the element is first "Disabled" and then "Enabled". The distinction between requesting "Shut Down" and "Disabled" should also be noted. Shut Down requests an orderly transition to the Disabled state, and might involve removing power, to completely erase any existing state. The Disabled state requests an immediate disabling of the element, such that it will not execute or accept any commands or processing requests. This property is set as the result of a method invocation (such as Start or StopService on CIM_Service), or can be overridden and defined as WRITEable in a subclass. The method approach is considered superior to a WRITEable property, because it allows an explicit invocation of the operation and the return of a result code. If knowledge of the last RequestedState is not supported for the EnabledLogicalElement, the property shall be NULL or have the value 12 "Not Applicable".
ValueMap 0, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, .., 32768..65535
Values "Unknown" [0]
"Enabled" [2]
"Disabled" [3]
"Shut Down" [4]
"No Change" [5]
"Offline" [6]
"Test" [7]
"Deferred" [8]
"Quiesce" [9]
"Reboot" [10]
"Reset" [11]
"Not Applicable" [12]
"DMTF Reserved" [..]
"Vendor Reserved" [32768..65535]
ModelCorrespondence CIM_EnabledLogicalElement.EnabledState
EnabledDefault uint16 CIM_EnabledLogicalElement
Write TRUE
Description An enumerated value indicating an administrator's default or startup configuration for the Enabled State of an element. By default, the element is "Enabled" (value=2).
ValueMap 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 9, .., 32768..65535
Values "Enabled" [2]
"Disabled" [3]
"Not Applicable" [5]
"Enabled but Offline" [6]
"No Default" [7]
"Quiesce" [9]
"DMTF Reserved" [..]
"Vendor Reserved" [32768..65535]
TimeOfLastStateChange datetime CIM_EnabledLogicalElement
Override TimeOfLastStateChange
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|IF-MIB.ifLastChange
Description The date or time when the EnabledState of the element last changed. If the state of the element has not changed and this property is populated, then it must be set to a 0 interval value. If a state change was requested, but rejected or not yet processed, the property must not be updated.
AvailableRequestedStates uint16[] CIM_EnabledLogicalElement
Experimental TRUE
Description AvailableRequestedStates indicates the possible values for the RequestedState parameter of the method RequestStateChange, used to initiate a state change. The values listed shall be a subset of the values contained in the RequestedStatesSupported property of the associated instance of CIM_EnabledLogicalElementCapabilities where the values selected are a function of the current state of the CIM_EnabledLogicalElement. This property may be non-null if an implementation is able to advertise the set of possible values as a function of the current state. This property shall be null if an implementation is unable to determine the set of possible values as a function of the current state.
ValueMap 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11
Values "Enabled" [2]
"Disabled" [3]
"Shut Down" [4]
"Offline" [6]
"Test" [7]
"Defer" [8]
"Quiesce" [9]
"Reboot" [10]
"Reset" [11]
ModelCorrespondence CIM_EnabledLogicalElement.RequestStateChange, CIM_EnabledLogicalElementCapabilities.RequestedStatesSupported
TransitioningToState uint16 CIM_EnabledLogicalElement
Experimental TRUE
Description TransitioningToState indicates the target state to which the instance is transitioning. A value of 5 "No Change" shall indicate that no transition is in progress.A value of 12 "Not Applicable" shall indicate the implementation does not support representing ongoing transitions. A value other than 5 or 12 shall identify the state to which the element is in the process of transitioning.
ValueMap 0, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12
Values "Unknown" [0]
"Enabled" [2]
"Disabled" [3]
"Shut Down" [4]
"No Change" [5]
"Offline" [6]
"Test" [7]
"Defer" [8]
"Quiesce" [9]
"Reboot" [10]
"Reset" [11]
"Not Applicable" [12]
ModelCorrespondence CIM_EnabledLogicalElement.RequestStateChange, CIM_EnabledLogicalElement.RequestedState, CIM_EnabledLogicalElement.EnabledState
RequestStateChange method CIM_EnabledLogicalElement
Description Requests that the state of the element be changed to the value specified in the RequestedState parameter. When the requested state change takes place, the EnabledState and RequestedState of the element will be the same. Invoking the RequestStateChange method multiple times could result in earlier requests being overwritten or lost. A return code of 0 shall indicate the state change was successfully initiated. A return code of 3 shall indicate that the state transition cannot complete within the interval specified by the TimeoutPeriod parameter. A return code of 4096 (0x1000) shall indicate the state change was successfully initiated, a ConcreteJob has been created, and its reference returned in the output parameter Job. Any other return code indicates an error condition.
ValueMap 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, .., 4096, 4097, 4098, 4099, 4100..32767, 32768..65535
Values "Completed with No Error" [0]
"Not Supported" [1]
"Unknown or Unspecified Error" [2]
"Cannot complete within Timeout Period" [3]
"Failed" [4]
"Invalid Parameter" [5]
"In Use" [6]
"DMTF Reserved" [..]
"Method Parameters Checked - Job Started" [4096]
"Invalid State Transition" [4097]
"Use of Timeout Parameter Not Supported" [4098]
"Busy" [4099]
"Method Reserved" [4100..32767]
"Vendor Specific" [32768..65535]
ModelCorrespondence CIM_EnabledLogicalElement.RequestedState
SystemCreationClassName string CIM_ServiceAccessPoint
Key TRUE
Description The CreationClassName of the scoping System.
MaxLen 256
Propagated CIM_System.CreationClassName
SystemName string CIM_ServiceAccessPoint
Key TRUE
Description The Name of the scoping System.
MaxLen 256
Propagated CIM_System.Name
CreationClassName string CIM_ServiceAccessPoint
Key TRUE
Description CreationClassName indicates the name of the class or the subclass used in the creation of an instance. When used with the other key properties of this class, this property allows all instances of this class and its subclasses to be uniquely identified.
MaxLen 256
NameFormat string CIM_ProtocolEndpoint
Description NameFormat contains the naming heuristic that is selected to ensure that the value of the Name property is unique. For example, you might choose to prepend the name of the port or interface with the Type of ProtocolEndpoint (for example, IPv4) of this instance followed by an underscore.
MaxLen 256
ProtocolType uint16 CIM_ProtocolEndpoint
Deprecated CIM_ProtocolEndpoint.ProtocolIFType
Description Note: This property is deprecated in lieu of the ProtocolIFType enumeration. This deprecation was done to have better alignment between the IF-MIB of the IETF and this CIM class. Deprecated description: ProtocolType is an enumeration that provides information to categorize and classify different instances of this class. For most instances, information in this enumeration and the definition of the subclass overlap. However, there are several cases where a specific subclass of ProtocolEndpoint is not required (for example, there is no Fibre Channel subclass of ProtocolEndpoint). Therefore, this property is needed to define the type of Endpoint.
ValueMap 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27
Values "Unknown" [0]
"Other" [1]
"IPv4" [2]
"IPv6" [3]
"IPX" [4]
"AppleTalk" [5]
"DECnet" [6]
"SNA" [7]
"CONP" [8]
"CLNP" [9]
"VINES" [10]
"XNS" [11]
"ATM" [12]
"Frame Relay" [13]
"Ethernet" [14]
"TokenRing" [15]
"FDDI" [16]
"Infiniband" [17]
"Fibre Channel" [18]
"ISDN BRI Endpoint" [19]
"ISDN B Channel Endpoint" [20]
"ISDN D Channel Endpoint" [21]
"IPv4/v6" [22]
"BGP" [23]
"OSPF" [24]
"MPLS" [25]
"UDP" [26]
"TCP" [27]
ModelCorrespondence CIM_ProtocolEndpoint.OtherTypeDescription
ProtocolIFType uint16 CIM_ProtocolEndpoint
Override ProtocolIFType
Description ProtocolIFType's enumeration is limited to BGP and reserved values for this subclass of ProtocolEndpoint.
ValueMap 1, 225..4095, 4108, 4301..32767, 32768..
Values "Other" [1]
"IANA Reserved" [225..4095]
"BGP" [4108]
"DMTF Reserved" [4301..32767]
"Vendor Reserved" [32768..]
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|IF-MIB.ifType
ModelCorrespondence CIM_ProtocolEndpoint.OtherTypeDescription
OtherTypeDescription string CIM_ProtocolEndpoint
Description A string that describes the type of ProtocolEndpoint when the Type property of this class (or any of its subclasses) is set to 1 (Other). This property should be set to null when the Type property is any value other than 1.
MaxLen 64
ModelCorrespondence CIM_ProtocolEndpoint.ProtocolType, CIM_ProtocolEndpoint.ProtocolIFType
BroadcastResetSupported boolean CIM_ProtocolEndpoint
Experimental TRUE
Description A boolean indicating whether the instrumentation supports the BroadcastReset method.
MappingStrings FC-SWAPI.INCITS-T11|SWAPI_PORT_CONFIG_CAPS_T.PortForceLipSupported
ModelCorrespondence CIM_ProtocolEndpoint.BroadcastReset
BroadcastReset method CIM_ProtocolEndpoint
Experimental TRUE
Description Send a broadcast reset. A broadcast reset is a request that peers perform a reset. Examples include a parallel SCSI Bus Reset and a Fibre Channel LIP.
ValueMap 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5..0x0FFF, 0x1000..0x7777, 0x8000..
Values "Success" [0]
"Not_Supported" [1]
"Unspecified Error" [2]
"Timeout" [3]
"Failed" [4]
"DMTF_Reserved" [5..0x0FFF]
"Method_Reserved" [0x1000..0x7777]
"Vendor_Reserved" [0x8000..]
ModelCorrespondence CIM_ProtocolEndpoint.BroadcastResetSupported
IsEBGP boolean CIM_BGPProtocolEndpoint
Description A boolean that, when TRUE, signifies that this is an instance of the external version of BGP (FALSE is the internal version).
IsEBGPMultihop boolean CIM_BGPProtocolEndpoint
Description Normally, two routers running EBGP must be physically connected. This boolean, when TRUE, denotes a LOGICAL connection between two routers that are running EBGP (e.g., there is an intermediate router or interface between them).
LocalIdentifier string CIM_BGPProtocolEndpoint
Description This is the unique identifier of the local BGP router. This is often the router ID (e.g., an IP address).
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|BGP4-MIB.bgpIdentifier
PeerIdentifier string CIM_BGPProtocolEndpoint
Description This is the unique identifier of the peer BGP router. This is often the router ID (e.g., an IP address).
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|BGP4-MIB.bgpPeerIdentifier
State uint16 CIM_BGPProtocolEndpoint
Description This defines the current connection state of the BGP Peer.
ValueMap 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
Values "Idle" [1]
"Connect" [2]
"Active" [3]
"OpenSet" [4]
"OpenConfirm" [5]
"Established" [6]
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|BGP4-MIB.bgpPeerState
AdminStatus uint16 CIM_BGPProtocolEndpoint
Deprecated CIM_EnabledLogicalElement.RequestedState
Description This defines the desired state of the BGP connection. It is equivalent to the RequestedState property (i.e., enabled/disabled status) that is inherited from EnabledLogicalElement. AdminStatus is deprecated in lieu of this inherited property.
ValueMap 1, 2
Values "Stop" [1]
"Start" [2]
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|BGP4-MIB.bgpPeerAdminStatus
NegotiatedVersion string CIM_BGPProtocolEndpoint
Description This defines the negotiated version of BGP that is running between the two peers.
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|BGP4-MIB.bgpPeerNegotiatedVersion
LocalAddress string CIM_BGPProtocolEndpoint
Deprecated CIM_BindsTo, CIM_IPProtocolEndpoint
Description This is the local IP address of this router's BGP connection. It is deprecated since a binding should be defined using the CIM_BindsTo association. Ideally the binding is to a TCPProtocolEndpoint which then handles the association to its IPEndpoint.
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|BGP4-MIB.bgpPeerLocalAddr
LocalPort uint16 CIM_BGPProtocolEndpoint
Deprecated CIM_BindsTo, CIM_TCPProtocolEndpoint
Description This is the local port number for the TCP connection of this router's BGP connection. It is deprecated since a binding should be defined (to a TCPProtocolEndpoint) using the CIM_BindsTo association.
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|BGP4-MIB.bgpPeerLocalPort
RemoteAddress string CIM_BGPProtocolEndpoint
Deprecated CIM_BindsTo, CIM_RemoteServiceAccessPoint
Description This is the remote IP address of this router's BGP connection. It is deprecated since a binding to a Remote ServiceAccessPoint should be instantiated, using CIM_BindsTo.
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|BGP4-MIB.bgpPeerRemoteAddr
RemotePort uint16 CIM_BGPProtocolEndpoint
Deprecated CIM_BindsTo, CIM_RemotePort
Description This is the remote port number for the TCP connection of this router's BGP connection. It is deprecated since a binding to a RemotePort should be instantiated, using CIM_BindsTo.
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|BGP4-MIB.bgpPeerRemotePort
RemoteAS uint16 CIM_BGPProtocolEndpoint
Description This is the remote AS number for this router's BGP connection.
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|BGP4-MIB.bgpPeerRemoteAs
ConnectRetryInterval uint32 CIM_BGPProtocolEndpoint
Description This defines the time interval, in seconds, for the ConnectRetry timer. The suggested value is 120 seconds.
Units Seconds
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|BGP4-MIB.bgpConnectRetryInterval
PUnit second
HoldTimeConfigured uint16 CIM_BGPProtocolEndpoint
Description This defines the time interval in seconds for the Hold Time configured for this BGP speaker with a peer. This value is placed in an OPEN message sent to a peer by this BGP speaker, and is compared with the Hold Time field in the OPEN message received from the peer. It enables this speaker to establish a mutually agreeable Hold Time with the peer. This value must not be less than three seconds. If it is zero, then the Hold Time is NOT to be established with the peer. The suggested value for this timer is 90 seconds.
Units Seconds
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|BGP4-MIB.bgpPeerHoldTimeConfigured
PUnit second
KeepAliveConfigured uint16 CIM_BGPProtocolEndpoint
Description This defines the time interval in seconds for the KeepAlive timer configured for this BGP speaker with a peer. This value will determine the frequency of the KEEPALIVE messages relative to the value of the HoldTimeConfigured property; the actual frequency is specified by the value of the KeepAlive property. A reasonable value is one third of that of the value of the HoldTimeConfigured property. If it is zero, then NO periodic KEEPALIVE messages are sent to the peer. The suggested value for this property is 30 seconds. The maximum value of this property is 21845 seconds.
Units Seconds
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|BGP4-MIB.bgpPeerKeepAliveConfigured
PUnit second
MinASOriginationInterval uint16 CIM_BGPProtocolEndpoint
Description This defines the time interval in seconds for the MinASOriginationInterval timer. The suggested value for this property is 15 seconds.
Units Seconds
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|BGP4-MIB.bgpPeerMinASOriginationInterval
PUnit second
MinRouteAdvertisementInterval uint16 CIM_BGPProtocolEndpoint
Description This defines the time interval in seconds for the MinRouteAdvertisementInterval timer. The suggested value for this property is 30 seconds.
Units Seconds
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|BGP4-MIB.bgpPeerMinRouteAdvertisementInterval
PUnit second
HoldTime uint16 CIM_BGPProtocolEndpoint
Description This defines the maximum amount of time in seconds that may elapse between the receipt of successive KEEPALIVE or UPDATE messages. This is instrumented as a counter that increments from zero to the value specified in this property. The value of this property is calculated by the BGP speaker by using the smaller of the values of bgpPeerHoldTimeConfigured and the Hold Time received in the OPEN message. This value, if not zero seconds, must be at least three seconds, up to a maximum of 65535 seconds. Receipt of either a KEEPALIVE or an UPDATE message resets this value.
Units Seconds
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|BGP4-MIB.bgpPeerHoldTime
PUnit second
KeepAlive uint16 CIM_BGPProtocolEndpoint
Description This defines the time interval in seconds for the KeepAlive timer established with the peer. The value of this property is calculated by the speaker such that, when compared with the HoldTime property, it has the same proportion as the KeepAliveConfigured property has with the HoldTimeConfigured property. A value of 0 indicates that the KeepAlive timer has not yet been established. The maximum value of this property is 21845 seconds.
Units Seconds
MappingStrings MIB.IETF|BGP4-MIB.bgpPeerKeepAlive
PUnit second

Typographical Conventions:

  1. Inherited properties are italicized.
  2. Local properties are bolded.
  3. Key properties are highlighted in gold