OID | 1.3.6.1.4.1.2699.1.1.1.4.1.1.3 |
Module | Job-Monitoring-MIB (CISCO) |
Nom | jmAttributeValueAsInteger |
Acces | readonly |
Status | current |
Description | The integer value of the attribute. The value of the
attribute SHALL be represented as an integer if the enum
description in the JmAttributeTypeTC textual-convention
definition has the tag: 'INTEGER:'.
Depending on the enum definition, this object value MAY be an
integer, a counter, an index, or an enum, depending on the
jmAttributeTypeIndex value. The units of this value are
specified in the enum description.
For those attributes that are accumulating job consumption as
the job is processed as specified in the JmAttributeTypeTC
textual-convention, SHALL contain the final value after the job
completes processing, i.e., this value SHALL indicate the total
usage of this resource made by the job.
A monitoring application is able to copy this value to a
suitable longer term storage for later processing as part of an
accounting system.
Since the agent MAY add attributes representing resources to
this table while the job is waiting to be processed or being
processed, which can be a long time before any of the resources
are actually used, the agent SHALL set the value of the
jmAttributeValueAsInteger object to 0 for resources that the
job has not yet consumed.
Attributes for which the concept of an integer value is
meaningless, such as fileName(34), jobName, and
processingMessage, do not have the 'INTEGER:' tag in the
JmAttributeTypeTC definition and so an agent SHALL always
return a value of '-1' to indicate 'other' for the value of the
jmAttributeValueAsInteger object for these attributes.
For attributes which do have the 'INTEGER:' tag in the
JmAttributeTypeTC definition, if the integer value is not (yet)
known, the agent either (1) SHALL not materialize the row in
the jmAttributeTable until the value is known or (2) SHALL
return a '-2' to represent an 'unknown' counting integer value,
a '0' to represent an 'unknown' index value, and a '2' to
represent an 'unknown(2)' enum value. |
Syntaxe | Integer32 (-2...2147483647) |
Module | Job-Monitoring-MIB (ietf) |
Nom | jmAttributeValueAsInteger |
Acces | readonly |
Status | current |
Description | The integer value of the attribute. The value of the
attribute SHALL be represented as an integer if the enum
description in the JmAttributeTypeTC textual-convention
definition has the tag: 'INTEGER:'.
Depending on the enum definition, this object value MAY be an
integer, a counter, an index, or an enum, depending on the
jmAttributeTypeIndex value. The units of this value are
specified in the enum description.
For those attributes that are accumulating job consumption as
the job is processed as specified in the JmAttributeTypeTC
textual-convention, SHALL contain the final value after the job
completes processing, i.e., this value SHALL indicate the total
usage of this resource made by the job.
A monitoring application is able to copy this value to a
suitable longer term storage for later processing as part of an
accounting system.
Since the agent MAY add attributes representing resources to
this table while the job is waiting to be processed or being
processed, which can be a long time before any of the resources
are actually used, the agent SHALL set the value of the
jmAttributeValueAsInteger object to 0 for resources that the
job has not yet consumed.
Attributes for which the concept of an integer value is
meaningless, such as fileName(34), jobName, and
processingMessage, do not have the 'INTEGER:' tag in the
JmAttributeTypeTC definition and so an agent SHALL always
return a value of '-1' to indicate 'other' for the value of the
jmAttributeValueAsInteger object for these attributes.
For attributes which do have the 'INTEGER:' tag in the
JmAttributeTypeTC definition, if the integer value is not (yet)
known, the agent either (1) SHALL not materialize the row in
the jmAttributeTable until the value is known or (2) SHALL
return a '-2' to represent an 'unknown' counting integer value,
a '0' to represent an 'unknown' index value, and a '2' to
represent an 'unknown(2)' enum value. |
Syntaxe | Integer32 (-2...2147483647) |