Host Resources Storage Group - Cisco MCS-7825-H3-IPC1 Service Manual

Managed services guide
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Chapter 8
Industry-Standard Management Information Base

Host Resources Storage Group

Registration point for storage types, for use with hrStorageType. These are defined in the
HOST-RESOURCES-TYPES module.
hrStorageTable OBJECT-TYPE
hrStorageEntry OBJECT-TYPE
OL-22523-01
hrStorageTypes OBJECT IDENTIFIER ::= { hrStorage 1 }
hrMemorySize OBJECT-TYPE
SYNTAX KBytes
UNITS KBytes
MAX-ACCESS read-only
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
The amount of physical read-write main memory, typically RAM, contained by the host.
::= { hrStorage 2 }
SYNTAX Sequence of HrStorageEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
The (conceptual) table of logical storage areas on the host. An entry shall be placed in the storage
table for each logical area of storage that is allocated and has fixed resource limits. The amount of
storage represented in an entity is the amount actually usable by the requesting entity, and excludes
loss due to formatting or file system reference information.
These entries are associated with logical storage areas, as might be seen by an application, rather
than physical storage entities which are typically seen by an operating system. Storage such as tapes
and floppies without file systems on them are typically not allocated in chunks by the operating
system to requesting applications, and therefore shouldn't appear in this table. Examples of valid
storage for this table include disk partitions, file systems, RAM (for some architectures this is
further segmented into regular memory, extended memory, and so on), backing store for virtual
memory (`swap space').
This table is intended to be a useful diagnostic for "out of memory" and "out of buffers" types of
failures. In addition, it can be a useful performance monitoring tool for tracking memory, disk, or
buffer usage.
::= { hrStorage 3 }
SYNTAX HrStorageEntry
MAX-ACCESS not-accessible
STATUS current
DESCRIPTION
A (conceptual) entry for one logical storage area on the host. As an example, an instance of the
hrStorageType object might be named hrStorageType.3
INDEX { hrStorageIndex }
::= { hrStorageTable 1 }
Cisco Unified Communications Manager Managed Services Guide
HOST-RESOURCES-MIB
8-79

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