A LogicalDisk is a presentation of a contiguous range of logical blocks that is identifiable by applications such as filesystems via the Name field. (DeviceID (key) may use the same name or some other unique text such as a UUID.) For example in a Windows environment, the Name field may contain a drive letter. In a Unix environment, it may contain the access path (for example, '/dev/...'); and in a NetWare environment, may contain the volume name. LogicalDisks are typically built on a DiskPartition or other LogicalDisks (for instance, those exposed by a software volume manager). However, it can be based on other StorageExtents, like CIM_Memory, in the case of a RAM disk.
LogicalDisks SHOULD set the 'Exported' value in ExtentStatus[] if they are intended for application use.
CIM_LogicalDisk - child subclasses in ROOT\virtualization\v2
{'Description':'The state requested for the element. This information will be placed into the RequestedState property of the instance if the return code of the RequestStateChange method is 0 ('Completed with No Error'), or 4096 (0x1000) ('Job Started'). Refer to the description of the EnabledState and RequestedState properties for the detailed explanations of the RequestedState values.','ModelCorrespondence':['CIM_EnabledLogicalElement.RequestedState'],'ValueMap':['2', '3', '4', '6', '7', '8', '9', '10', '11', '..', '32768..65535'],'Values':['Enabled', 'Disabled', 'Shut Down', 'Offline', 'Test', 'Defer', 'Quiesce', 'Reboot', 'Reset', 'DMTF Reserved', 'Vendor Reserved']}
{'Description':'May contain a reference to the ConcreteJob created to track the state transition initiated by the method invocation.'}
TimeoutPeriod
datetime
2
✓
-
{'Description':'A timeout period that specifies the maximum amount of time that the client expects the transition to the new state to take. The interval format must be used to specify the TimeoutPeriod. A value of 0 or a null parameter indicates that the client has no time requirements for the transition. If this property does not contain 0 or null and the implementation does not support this parameter, a return code of 'Use Of Timeout Parameter Not Supported' shall be returned.'}
{'Description':'The power state to set.','ValueMap':['1', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6'],'Values':['Full Power', 'Power Save - Low Power Mode', 'Power Save - Standby', 'Power Save - Other', 'Power Cycle', 'Power Off']}
Time
datetime
1
✓
-
{'Description':'Time indicates when the power state should be set, either as a regular date-time value or as an interval value (where the interval begins when the method invocation is received.'}
'A LogicalDisk is a presentation of a contiguous range of logical blocks that is identifiable by applications such as filesystems via the Name field. (DeviceID (key) may use the same name or some other unique text such as a UUID.) For example in a Windows environment, the Name field may contain a drive letter. In a Unix environment, it may contain the access path (for example, '/dev/...'); and in a NetWare environment, may contain the volume name. LogicalDisks are typically built on a DiskPartition or other LogicalDisks (for instance, those exposed by a software volume manager). However, it can be based on other StorageExtents, like CIM_Memory, in the case of a RAM disk.
LogicalDisks SHOULD set the 'Exported' value in ExtentStatus[] if they are intended for application use.'