The administrative state of blades/blade systems.
Reflects what the administrator has done.
The operational state of blades/blade systems.
Reflects if the entity is on/off.
The availability state of blades/blade systems.
Reflects if the entity is useable or not.
The bus type used by a blade.
Parent of all blade systems.
This class describes a Blade System.
It serves as a mountpoint for the blade system specific model.
A user friendly Blade System name, must be set at creation and can be
changed when BS is locked.
An identifier for the BS. A new integer has to be used every time a new
BS is created.
The identity of the Software Group (SWG) that the BS implements.
The revision of the Software Group (SWG) that the BS implements.
The identity of the correction package (CXR) applied to the SWG.
The revision of the correction package (CXR) applied to the SWG
The administrative state of the Blade System.
The operational state of the Blade System.
The availability status of the Blade System.
The identity of the Blade System domain the Blade system belongs to.
IP address of the Blade System OaM Master.
Locks the blade system. If the system already is locked the
action does nothing.
Unlocks the blade system. If the system already is unlocked the
action does nothing. This operation orders the blade system to be unlocked.
However the blade system may not be unlocked even if this order works.
See the operational state to figure out if the unlock succeded.
Shuts down the blade system. If the system already is locked the
action does nothing.
Action to create a backup file from the current
Blade System. It is stored locally on disk.
An instance of the MO class
Software/Jobs/Backup/Create is created as a log of this
action.
A user specified backup creation job name
Action to restore a backup into the current
Blade System. It is fetched from the local disk.
An instance of the MO class
Software/Jobs/Backup/Restore is created as a log of this
action.
The IS site local backup identity
A user specified backup restore job name
Action to upgrade the current Blade System. Files
are fetched from the local disk storage.
An instance of the MO class
Software/Jobs/Upgrade is created as a log of this
action.
A user specified ugrade job name
The Ericsson product number of blade system software group
The Ericsson revision of blade system software group
The Ericsson product number of software correction package
The Ericsson revision of software correction package
The Ericsson product number of blade software group
The Ericsson revision of blade software group
The maximum time allowed to finish the entire
software change procedure (minutes).
Default value depends on blade system software.
This class describes a Blade.
A Blade is identified by the subrack and slot number.
A reference to the associated subrack (i.e. the value of 'subrackId'
for the associated subrack)
031
The slot number for this Blade within the subrack.
025
The slot label of the blade. Will only be set at creation.
This should be used in alarms related to the slot to inform the
operator of what position in the subrack the blade is located in.
E.g. for GEM subracks it will be a string like X02 for slot 0
up to X80 for slot 25.
An identifier for the BS to which the blade belongs.
A value of 0 means that the blade is inserted in the subrack but it
has not been configured to any BS yet.
The type of the Blade defined by a string BladeTypeId.
The expectedregistered SW group id of the Blade.
The registered SW group revision state of the Blade.
The installed SW group id of the Blade.
The installed SW group revision state of the Blade.
Indicates if this blade is a BSOM candidate.
Set to protected if blade sholud no be knocked out before the
switch blade.
A user friendly Blade name, always possible to set.
Default value indicates HwmBladeType and used slot.
The administrative state of the Blade.
The operational state of the Blade.
The availability status of the Blade.
The type of maintenance bus on the found Blade
The Product Number of the found Blade
The Product Revision of the found Blade.
The Serial Number of the found Blade.
The Product Name of the found Blade.
The Vendor name of the found Blade.
The manufacturing date of the found Blade.
The aggregated MAC address of the found Blade.
The left link MAC address of the found Blade. Only used by some blades
The right link MAC address of the found Blade. Only used by some blades
The date when the blade was last changed.
IP address on the ISBS subnet.
IP address on the ISOB subnet.
IP address on the ISLCT subnet.
Locks the blade. If the blade already is locked the
action does nothing. This operation orders the blade to be locked.
It may however take long time before it happens.
Unlocks the blade. If the blade already is unlocked the
action does nothing. This operation orders the blade to be unlocked.
However the blade may not be unlocked even if this order works.
See the operational state to figure out if the unlock succeded.
Shuts down the blade. If the blade already is locked the
action does nothing.
Action to upgrade the current blade. Files
are fetched from the local disk storage.
An instance of the MO class
Software/Jobs/Upgrade is created as a log of this
action.
A Blade may have one or more resilient interfaces
to the backplane. Such an interface is called a
Link Service Access Point (LSAP), which is the
point where you access layer 2. LSAPs are
automatically created and deleted along with the
hosting blade.
The id of a LinkSap is a number from 0 to X within the slot.
The MO branch where the Blade System specific
Network resources are mapped to blade system
network requirements to common Integrated Site
resources. This activity must be performed before
a new blade or blade system successfully can be
unlocked via the Hardware service. Some blade
system designers have partly pre-registered their
network requirements, while others demand that
you read the corresponding information from
separate Operation Procedure Instructions and
manually register the blade system network
requirements. The pre-registered network
requirements automates parts of the blade
system-specific configuration activity.
In an Integrated Site, the blade systems obtain
their actual network configuration dynamically in
runtime. When you change the network
configuration it will affect blade systems. In
order to minimize the disturbance of active blade
systems, the changes are normally applied in a
separate storage which not is visible to the
blade systems. In order to make use of the new
unpublished configuration, it must explicitly be
published by altering the updateMode. If the new
settings introduces severe problems the
configuration can be reverted to the old settings
by altering the updateMode.
The common Network configuration including
updateMode and its publish mechanism is specified
in a separate MIM called CPD MIM.
A BS VLAN is mapped to one IS VLAN. A BS VLAN is
the requirement a Blade System have of an IS
VLAN. Different instances of a Blade System type
may call their BS VLANs the same thing but in the
end the IS Site Designer can choose to map them
to the same or different IS VLAN.
BS VLANs can either be created manually by the
operator or they can be automatically created
from pre-registered network requirements bundled
with the Blade System software. Regardless of
how they are created, each one needs to be
mapped to an IS VLAN before the blades can be
unlocked. The mapping is done with the
'isVlanRef' attribute.
Different instances of a Blade System type may call
their BS VLANs the same thing but in the end the IS
Site Designer can choose to map them to the same or
different IS VLAN.
Name of the BS VLAN. It is unique within the Blade System.
Short description of the BS VLAN.
Setting the private attribute to true, means
that the corresponding IS VLAN not can be
used by other Blade Systems. The IS VLAN is
private for this particular Blade System.
The mapping to a corresponding IS VLAN. This
mapping must be done before the blades of the
Blade System can be unlocked.
A BS Logical Network (BSLN) is associated to
one IS Logical Network. A BS Logical Network
is the requirement a Blade Systems have of an
IS Logical Network.
BS Logical Networks can either be created
manually by the operator or they can be
automatically created from pre-registered
network requirements bundled with the Blade
System software. Regardless of how they are
created, each one needs to be mapped to an IS
Logical Network before the blades can be
unlocked. The mapping is done with the
'isLogicalNetworkRef' attribute.
Different instances of a Blade System type may call
their BS Logical Networks the same thing but in
the end the IS Site Designer can choose to map
them to the same or different IS Logical
Network.
Name of the BS logical network. It is unique within the Blade System.
Short description of the BS Logical Network.
Flag that shows whether the BS Logical Network
is private for this Blade System or if it may
be shared among several Blade Systems.
Reference to the corresponding IS Logical Network.
A BS Subnet (BSSN) is associated to one IS
Subnet. A BS Subnet Network is the requirement a
Blade Systems have of an IS Subnet.
BS Subnets can either be created manually by the
operator or they can be automatically created
from pre-registered network requirements bundled
with the Blade System software. Regardless of
how they are created, each one needs to be
mapped to both a BS VLan and an IS Subnet before
blades can be unlocked via the Hardware service.
Each BS Subnet contains one or more BS Subnet
Segments. The mappings are done with the
'bsVlanRef' and 'isSubnetRef' attributes.
Different instances of a Blade System type may
call their BS Subnets the same thing but in the
end the IS Site Designer can choose to map them
to the same or different IS Subnet.
Name of the BS Subnet. It is unique within the BS Logical Network.
Short description of the BS Subnet.
default
The mapping to a corresponding BS Vlan. This
mapping must be done before the blades of the
Blade System can be unlocked.
The mapping to a corresponding IS Subnet. This
mapping must be done before the blades of the
Blade System can be unlocked.
A BS Subnet Segment (BSSNS) is associated to one
IS Subnet Segment. A BS Subnet Segment is the
requirement a Blade Systems have of an IS Subnet
Segment.
BS Subnet Segments can either be created manually
by you or they can be automatically created from
pre-registered network requirements bundled with
the Blade System software. Regardless of how they
are created, each one needs to be mapped to an IS
Subnet Segment before the blades can be unlocked
via the Hardware service. The mapping is done
with the 'isSubnetSegmentRef' attribute.
Different instances of a Blade System type may
call their BS Subnet Segments the same thing but
in the end the IS Site Designer can choose to
map them to the same or different IS Subnet
Segment.
Name of the BS Subnet Segment. It is unique within the BS Subnet.
Short description of the BS Subnet Segment.
Number of required IP addresses in the IS Subnet Segment.
Flag that controls whether the corresponding IS
Subnet Segment is required to have DHCP enabled
or not.
Flag that controls whether the corresponding IS
Subnet Segment is required to have a router
configured or not.
The mapping to a corresponding IS Subnet
Segment. The mapping here must be done before
the blades of the blade system can be unlocked.
There is a BS VLAN Service Access Point (BSVSAP)
for each Link Service Access Point that an IS
VLAN straddles. It is per BS VLAN Service Access
Point that certain VLAN properties, such as if it
is mandatory to enable isolation protection.
BS VLAN Service Access Points can either be
created manually by the operator or they can be
automatically created from pre-registered network
requirements bundled with the Blade System
software. Regardless of how they are created,
each one needs to be mapped to an Link SAP before
the blades can be unlocked. The mapping is done
with the 'linkSapRef' attribute.
Name of the BS VLAN SAP. It is unique within the BS VLAN.
Short description of the BS VLAN SAP.
Flag which controls whether this BS VLAN SAP
makes static or dynamic use of the
corresponding IS VLAN.
Flag which controls whether this BS VLAN SAP should be
isolation protected or not.
A mapping to the corresponding Link Service Access Point.
A BS IP Traffic Class (BSIPTC) is the
requirement a Blade System have of an IS IP
Traffic Class.
BS IP Traffic Classes can either be created
manually by you or they can be automatically
created from pre-registered network requirements
bundled with the Blade System software. Regardless
of how they are created, each one needs to be
mapped to an IS IP Traffic Class before the blades
can be unlocked via the Hardware service. The
mapping is done with the 'isIpTrafficClassRef'
attribute.
Different instances of a Blade System type may
call their BS IP Traffic Classes the same thing but
in the end the IS Site Designer may choose to
map them to the same or different IS IP Traffic
Classes.
The name of the BS IP Traffic Class. It is
unique within the Blade System.
A short description of The BS IP Traffic Class.
The mapping to a corresponding IS IP Traffic
Class. This mapping must be done before the
blades of the Blade System can be unlocked.
A BS LAN Traffic Class (BSLANTC) is the
requirement a Blade System have of an IS LAN
Traffic Class. Different instances of a Blade
System type may call their BS Traffic Classes
the same thing but in the end the IS Site
Designer may choose to map them to the same or
different IS LAN Traffic Classes.
BS LAN Traffic Classes can either be created
manually by you or they can be automatically
created from pre-registered network requirements
bundled with the Blade System software. Regardless
of how they are created, each one needs to be
mapped to an IS LAN Traffic Class before the blades
can be unlocked via the Hardware service. The
mapping is done with the 'isLanTrafficClassRef'
attribute.
Different instances of a Blade System type may
call their BS LAN Traffic Classes the same
thing but in the end the IS Site Designer may
choose to map them to the same or different IS
LAN Traffic Classes.
Name of the BS IP Traffic Class. It is unique within the Blade System.
Short description of the BS IP Traffic Class.
The mapping to a corresponding IS LAN Traffic
Class. This mapping must be done before the
blades of the Blade System can be unlocked.
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