PerceivedSeverityType

PerceivedSeverityType
PerceivedSeverityType

Indicates the relative level of urgency for operator attention. * CRITICAL: The Critical severity level indicates that a service affecting condition has occurred and an immediate corrective action is required. Such a severity can be reported, for example, when a managed object becomes totally out of service and its capability needs to be restored (ITU-T Recommendation X.733).

  • MAJOR: The Major severity level indicates that a service affecting condition has developed and an urgent corrective action is required. Such a severity can be reported, for example, when there is a severe degradation in the capability of the managed object and its full capability needs to be restored (ITU-T Recommendation X.733).
  • MINOR: The Minor severity level indicates the existence of a non-service affecting fault condition and that corrective action should be taken in order to prevent a more serious (for example, service affecting) fault. Such a severity can be reported, for example, when the detected alarm condition is not currently degrading the capacity of the managed object (ITU-T Recommendation X.733).
  • WARNING: The Warning severity level indicates the detection of a potential or impending service affecting fault, before any significant effects have been felt. Action should be taken to further diagnose (if necessary) and correct the problem in order to prevent it from becoming a more serious service affecting fault (ITU-T Recommendation X.733).
  • INDETERMINATE: The Indeterminate severity level indicates that the severity level cannot be determined (ITU-T Recommendation X.733).
  • CLEARED: The Cleared severity level indicates the clearing of one or more previously reported alarms. This alarm clears all alarms for this managed object that have the same Alarm type, Probable cause and Specific problems (if given) (ITU-T Recommendation X.733).
This data structure has no properties.
Enumeration: CRITICAL, MAJOR, MINOR, WARNING, INDETERMINATE, CLEARED,