Information technology - Storage management - Part 5: File systems

Storage Management Technical Specification, Part 2 Common Architecture, 1.8.0 Rev 4 defines the core architecture and protocols in SMI-S. The components of SMI-S architecture include: Transport - communicating management information between constituents of the management system Health and fault management - detecting failures through monitoring the state of storage components General information about the object model Names - how SMI-S uses names to allow applications to correlate across SMI-S and to other standards Standard messages - how exceptions are presented to client applications Service discovery - techniques clients use to discover SMI-S services Installation and upgrade - recommendations for implementations Compliance - requirement for compliance to the standard

Technologie de l'information — Management du stockage — Partie 5: Titre manque

General Information

Status
Published
Publication Date
06-Apr-2021
Current Stage
6060 - International Standard published
Start Date
07-Apr-2021
Due Date
15-Nov-2021
Completion Date
23-Mar-2021

Relations

Effective Date
14-Oct-2020

Overview

ISO/IEC 24775-5:2021 - Information technology - Storage management - Part 5: File systems - is the ISO/IEC adoption of the SNIA Storage Management Technical Specification for file systems (SMI-S Filesystems). The standard defines a vendor-neutral management information model, profiles and service interfaces for managing file-system resources in SAN and NAS environments. It focuses on consistent, multi-vendor interoperability for file servers, file shares, quotas, replication and related management tasks.

Key topics and technical scope

  • SMI-S architecture alignment: complements the Storage Management Technical Specification core architecture (transport, health/fault management, naming, indications, service discovery, installation/upgrade and compliance).
  • CIM-based information model: uses DMTF CIM classes and schema versions (CIM-XML / CIM schema references) to represent file-system objects, capabilities and services.
  • Profiles and services: defines multiple profiles such as Filesystem, Filesystem Manipulation, Filesystem Performance, Filesystem Quotas, Filesystem Replication Services, File Server Manipulation, NAS Head, NAS Network Port and Self-Contained NAS. Profiles specify mandatory/optional capabilities and indications.
  • File share and export management: models for FileShare, export manipulation and access control (including Simple Identity Management/ACL manipulation integration).
  • Quotas, statistics and performance: classes and statistical data for quota enforcement, usage reporting and performance measurement.
  • Replication and copy services: models and methods for creating and managing synchronized or replicated file-system relationships.
  • Maturity model & versioning: content is tagged by maturity (Experimental, Implemented, Stable, Finalized) and the specification uses version/release/update identifiers to manage backward compatibility and change levels.

Practical applications

  • Enable multi-vendor SAN/NAS interoperability by providing a standardized management API and data model.
  • Automate file-share provisioning, ACL updates and export management across heterogeneous storage arrays and NAS heads.
  • Implement quota enforcement, usage monitoring and reporting using standardized CIM classes.
  • Configure and monitor filesystem replication and copy services for disaster recovery and data mobility.
  • Integrate storage management into enterprise orchestration, monitoring and backup systems via SMI-S-compliant providers.

Who should use this standard

  • Storage vendors building SMI-S provider implementations (NAS heads, file servers, storage arrays).
  • Systems integrators and software vendors who develop management consoles, orchestration tools or monitoring systems that target multi-vendor environments.
  • IT architects and storage administrators designing interoperable SAN/NAS management and automation workflows.
  • Test labs and compliance teams validating SMI-S interoperability and profile conformance.

Related standards and references

  • ISO/IEC 24775 series (Storage management)
  • SNIA Storage Management Technical Specification (SMI-S)
  • DMTF CIM schema / DSP specifications (CIM-XML, Indications Profile)
  • ISO/IEC JTC 1 processes for standards adoption

Keywords: ISO/IEC 24775-5:2021, storage management, file systems, SMI-S, SNIA, CIM, filesystem quotas, filesystem replication, NAS, file share, storage interoperability.

Standard

ISO/IEC 24775-5:2021 - Information technology — Storage management — Part 5: File systems Released:4/7/2021

English language
377 pages
sale 15% off
Preview
sale 15% off
Preview

Frequently Asked Questions

ISO/IEC 24775-5:2021 is a standard published by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). Its full title is "Information technology - Storage management - Part 5: File systems". This standard covers: Storage Management Technical Specification, Part 2 Common Architecture, 1.8.0 Rev 4 defines the core architecture and protocols in SMI-S. The components of SMI-S architecture include: Transport - communicating management information between constituents of the management system Health and fault management - detecting failures through monitoring the state of storage components General information about the object model Names - how SMI-S uses names to allow applications to correlate across SMI-S and to other standards Standard messages - how exceptions are presented to client applications Service discovery - techniques clients use to discover SMI-S services Installation and upgrade - recommendations for implementations Compliance - requirement for compliance to the standard

Storage Management Technical Specification, Part 2 Common Architecture, 1.8.0 Rev 4 defines the core architecture and protocols in SMI-S. The components of SMI-S architecture include: Transport - communicating management information between constituents of the management system Health and fault management - detecting failures through monitoring the state of storage components General information about the object model Names - how SMI-S uses names to allow applications to correlate across SMI-S and to other standards Standard messages - how exceptions are presented to client applications Service discovery - techniques clients use to discover SMI-S services Installation and upgrade - recommendations for implementations Compliance - requirement for compliance to the standard

ISO/IEC 24775-5:2021 is classified under the following ICS (International Classification for Standards) categories: 35.200 - Interface and interconnection equipment. The ICS classification helps identify the subject area and facilitates finding related standards.

ISO/IEC 24775-5:2021 has the following relationships with other standards: It is inter standard links to ISO/IEC 24775-5:2014. Understanding these relationships helps ensure you are using the most current and applicable version of the standard.

ISO/IEC 24775-5:2021 is available in PDF format for immediate download after purchase. The document can be added to your cart and obtained through the secure checkout process. Digital delivery ensures instant access to the complete standard document.

Standards Content (Sample)


INTERNATIONAL ISO/IEC
STANDARD 24775-5
Second edition
2021-03
Information technology — Storage
management —
Part 5:
File systems
Reference number
©
ISO/IEC 2021
© ISO/IEC 2021
All rights reserved. Unless otherwise specified, or required in the context of its implementation, no part of this publication may
be reproduced or utilized otherwise in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, or posting
on the internet or an intranet, without prior written permission. Permission can be requested from either ISO at the address
below or ISO’s member body in the country of the requester.
ISO copyright office
CP 401 • Ch. de Blandonnet 8
CH-1214 Vernier, Geneva
Phone: +41 22 749 01 11
Email: copyright@iso.org
Website: www.iso.org
Published in Switzerland
ii © ISO/IEC 2021 – All rights reserved

Foreword
ISO (the International Organization for Standardization) and IEC (the International Electrotechnical
Commission) form the specialized system for worldwide standardization. National bodies that are
members of ISO or IEC participate in the development of International Standards through technical
committees established by the respective organization to deal with particular fields of technical activity.
ISO and IEC technical committees collaborate in fields of mutual interest. Other international
organizations, governmental and non-governmental, in liaison with ISO and IEC, also take part in the
work.
The procedures used to develop this document and those intended for its further maintenance are
described in the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 1. In particular, the different approval criteria needed for the
different types of document should be noted (see www.iso.org/directives).
Attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this document may be the subject of
patent rights. ISO and IEC shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such patent rights. Details
of any patent rights identified during the development of the document will be in the Introduction and/or
on the ISO list of patent declarations received (see www.iso.org/patents) or the IEC list of patent
declarations received (see http://patents.iec.ch).
Any trade name used in this document is information given for the convenience of users and does not
constitute an endorsement.
For an explanation of the voluntary nature of standards, the meaning of ISO specific terms and
expressions related to conformity assessment, as well as information about ISO's adherence to the World
Trade Organization (WTO) principles in the Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT),
see www.iso.org/iso/foreword.html.
This document was prepared by SNIA (as Storage Management Technical Specification, Part 5
Filesystems, Version 1.8.0, Revision 5) and drafted in accordance with its editorial rules. It was adopted,
under the JTC 1 PAS procedure, by Joint Technical Committee ISO/IEC JTC 1, Information technology.
This second edition cancels and replaces the first edition (ISO/IEC 24775-5:2014), which has been
technically revised.
The main changes compared to the previous edition are as follows:
— USAGE text was revised to address code (now included in the front matter for all SNIA specifications)
— All recipes and their references were deleted.
— Instances of subprofile were changed to profile. In the annex, instances of subprofile were changed
to component profile (TSG meeting voice vote).
— Profile versions and related text were updated. (TSG meeting voice vote).
— Indications have been replaced by DMTF Indications, and all affected clauses updated. (TSG meeting
voice vote).
— Instances of Experimental within profiles already labeled as Experimental were removed to avoid
confusion and redundancy. (Editorial change)
— CIM/XML was changed to CIM-XML (Response to ballot comments).
© ISO/IEC 2021 – All rights reserved iii

— Annex: SMI-S Information Mo
— The CIM schema version was changed to 2.51 for V1.8.0 Rev3.
— Multiple profiles
— Changed LocalAccessAvailable LocalAccessAvailableToFS, to respond to a DMTF change.
— File Export Profile (SMIS-170-Draft-SCR00004)
— Removed the deprecated LogicalFile, ConcreteDependency and FileStorage from the diagrams.
— Removed GetElementNameCapabilities from CIM_EnabledLogicalElementCapabilities (moved
to the File Export Manipulation Profile).
— Changed the FileShare reference in CIM_SAPAvailableForFileShare to ManagedElement to
match the mof.
— Added mandatory indications for FileShare.
— File Export Manipulation Profile
— Added missing figure: FileShares and Simple Identity Management in Section 5.1.3.3.
— Promoted all draft material to Experimental.
— Promoted to Stable (TSG-SMIS-SCR00319).
— Changed requirement to Mandatory and description for ProtocolVersions property in Tables
33-36.
— Changed requirement to Mandatory for FileSharingProtocol property in Table 34.
— Added material associated with the DMTF Simple Identity Management Profile (DS1034 rev
1.1.0 as it pertains to ACL manipulation on file shares. (TSG-SMIS-SCR00317).
— Removed the deprecated LogicalFile, ConcreteDependency and FileStorage from the diagrams.
— Fixed the duplicate entry for CIM_AccountManagementService (the second one was changed to
CIM_AssociatedPrivilege).
— Removed the deprecated CIM_ConcreteDependency, CIM_FileStorage and CIM_LogicalFile from
the CIM Elements table.
— Fixed the entries for CIM_ElementCapabilities in the CIM Elements table.
— Added Key properties in the CIM_AccountManagementService CIM Elements table.
— Added the method GetElementNameCapabilities to CIM_ExportedFileShareCapabilities.
— Changed the FileShare reference in CIM_SAPAvailableForFileShare to ManagedElement to
match the mof.
— Added a Key property in the CIM_UserContact CIM Elements table.
— File Server Manipulation Profile
— Changed CanConfigureNetworkVLSN in the class CIM_FileServerConfigurationCapabilities to
CanConfigureNetworkVLAN to match the mof.
— Fixed the PartComponent reference in CIM_SettingsDefineCapabilities (DNSSettingData) to
refer to DNSSettingData.
— Promoted to Stable (TSG-SMIS-SCR00319).
— File Storage Profile
— Changed the Central Class from N/A to CIM_LogicalDisk (SMIS-180-Errata-SCR00003).
— Changed the Scoping Class from ComputerSystem to CIM_LocalFileSystem (SMIS-180-Errata-
SCR00003).
iv © ISO/IEC 2021 – All rights reserved

— Filesystem Profile
— Added mandatory indications for LocalFileSystem (SMIS-170-Draft-SCR00004).
— Material related to ElementCapabilities (naming) incl 8.1.2.3: Promoted to Stable (TSG-
SMISSCR00319).
— Removed the deprecated LogicalFile, ConcreteDependency and FileStorage from the diagrams.
— Removed the deprecated CIM_ConcreteDependency, CIM_FileStorage and CIM_LogicalFile from
the CIM Elements table.
— Removed GetElementNameCapabilities from CIM_EnabledLogicalElementCapabilities (moved
to the Filesystem Manipulation Profile).
— Filesystem Manipulation Profile
— Material related to ElementCapabilities (naming) in 9.1.3.1: Promoted to Stable (TSG-SMIS-
SCR00319).
— Fixed the version numbers on the Related Profiles to match what the profiles claim.
— Removed the deprecated LogicalFile, ConcreteDependency and FileStorage from the diagrams.
— Fixed the description of the Capabilities reference in CIM_ElementCapabilities (Local Access
Configuration Capabilities).
— Added descriptions to the references and property in CIM_ElementCapabilities (Default).
— Added descriptions to the references in CIM_ElementCapabilities (Non-Default).
— Added the GetElementNameCapabilities() method to CIM_FileSystemCapabilities.
— Filesystem Performance Profile
— Changed FileSystemStorageStatisticalData to FileSystemStatisticalData in a diagram and
the CIM Element table for CIM_FileSystemStatisticalData.
— Filesystem Quotas Profile
— Fixed queries in CIM table 173.
— Changed the name of the Profile from FileSystem Quotas to Filesystem Quotas.
— Added a missing ElementCapabilities between CIM_FSQuotaCapabilities and
CIM_FSQuotaManagementService (as depicted in the instance diagram).
— Added a definition for CIM_LogicalFile which is depicted in the instance diagram, but is not in
the CIM Elements table.
— Filesystem Replication Services Profile
— Changed the name of the Clause to match the name of the Profile.
— Fixed the method named GetReplicationRelationshipInstance to be
GetReplicationRelationshipInstances.
— Added DESC to references in CIM_ElementCapabilities, CIM_FileSystemSynchronized,
CIM_HostedCollection, CIM_MemberOfCollection, CIM_OrderedMemberOfCollection and
CIM_ReplicaPoolForStorage.
— Added a CIM Element table to describe properties for CIM_FileSystemGroupSynchronized.
— Changed the DESC for the ManagedElement in SettingsDefineState.
— Filesystem Quotas Profile
© ISO/IEC 2021 – All rights reserved v

— Changed the Central Class from LocalFileSystem to CIM_FSQuotaManagementService (TSG-
SMISSCR00333).
— Host Filesystem Profile
— In the package diagram, changed Filesystem Copy Services to Filesystem Replication Services
and deleted Experimental Indications.
— Added descriptions for references in CIM_HostedCollection (Remote Resources), NAS Head
Profile (TSG-SMIS-SCR00333).
— Changed both the Central Class and Scoping Class from ComputerSystem to
CIM_ComputerSystem (Top Level System).
— NAS Head Profile
— Promoted 12.1.3.8.1 to Stable (TSG-SMIS-SCR00319).
— Promoted the maturity level from DRAFT to EXPERIMENTAL: Updated profiles to remove
SNIA_ classes and use DMTF CIM_ classes (TSG-SMIS-SCR00315.001).
— Revised CIM_AssociatedPrivilege; Added CIM_UserContact, CIM_Identity,
CIM_AccountMapnagementService, CIM_AssignedIdentity.
— Fixed the version numbers on the Related Profiles to match what the profiles claim.
— In the package diagram, removed Cascading and added Filesystem Performance and
Filesystem Replication Services.
— Removed the deprecated LogicalFile, ConcreteDependency and FileStorage from the instance
diagram.
— NAS Network Port Profile
— Fixed the description of CIM_FSIPInterfaceSettingData in the CIM Elements table.
— Deleted the extra CIM_FSIPInterfaceSettingData from the CIM Elements table
CIM_MemberOfCollection (Allocated Resources) and CIM_MemberOfCollection (Remote
Resources).
— Changed the Central Class from ProtocolEndpoint to CIM_ProtocolEndpoint (CIFS or NFS)
(TSG-SMISSCR00333).
— Self-Contained NAS Profile
— Promoted 13.1.3.1, 13.1.3. 2 (TSG-SMIS-SCR00319).
— Fixed the version numbers on the Related Profiles to match what the profiles claim.
— In the package diagram, changed Filesystem Copy Services to Filesystem Replication Services.
— Removed the deprecated LogicalFile, ConcreteDependency and FileStorage from the instance
diagram.
— Added a CIM Element table for CIM_ElementCapabilities (ImplementationCapabilities to
Service).
— Changed both the Central Class and Scoping Class from ComputerSystem to
CIM_ComputerSystem (Top Level System) (TSG-SMIS-SCR00333).
— Annex A SMI-S Information Model
— Deleted “Most SMI-S Profiles are primarily based on the DMTF Final MOFs” per 5/22/15 TSG
meeting consensus.
— DMTF’s CIM schema version changed to 2.45.0. (TSG meeting voice vote).
vi © ISO/IEC 2021 – All rights reserved

— References
— Added DMTF DSP1054 v1.2.2, Indications Profile (and changed version to 1.2.2 throughout
book).
— Updated reference to DMTF DSP1054 Indications Profile.
— Removed DSP0214.
— Removed year from DSP1034del.
A list of all parts in the ISO/IEC 24775 series can be found on the ISO website.
Any feedback or questions on this document should be directed to the user’s national standards body. A
complete listing of these bodies can be found at www.iso.org/members.html.
© ISO/IEC 2021 – All rights reserved vii

1 INTENDED AUDIENCE
2 This document is intended for use by individuals and companies engaged in developing, deploying, and
3 promoting interoperable multi-vendor SANs through the Storage Networking Industry Association (SNIA)
4 organization.
5 CHANGES TO THE SPECIFICATION
6 Each publication of this specification is uniquely identified by a three-level identifier, comprised of a
7 version number, a release number and an update number. The current identifier for this specification is
8 version 1.8.0. Future publications of this specification are subject to specific constraints on the scope of
9 change that is permissible from one publication to the next and the degree of interoperability and
10 backward compatibility that should be assumed between products designed to different publications of
this standard. The SNIA has defined three levels of change to a specification:
• Major Revision: A major revision of the specification represents a substantial change to the underlying scope
or architecture of the SMI-S API. A major revision results in an increase in the version number of the version
identifier (e.g., from version 1.x.x to version 2.x.x). There is no assurance of interoperability or backward
compatibility between releases with different version numbers.
• Minor Revision: A minor revision of the specification represents a technical change to existing content or an
adjustment to the scope of the SMI-S API. A minor revision results in an increase in the release number of
the specification’s identifier (e.g., from x.1.x to x.2.x). Minor revisions with the same version number preserve
interoperability and backward compatibility.
• Update: An update to the specification is limited to minor corrections or clarifications of existing specification
content. An update will result in an increase in the third component of the release identifier (e.g., from x.x.1 to
x.x.2). Updates with the same version and minor release levels preserve interoperability and backward
compatibility.
TYPOGRAPHICAL CONVENTIONS
Maturity Level
In addition to informative and normative content, this specification includes guidance about the maturity
of emerging material that has completed a rigorous design review but has limited implementation in
commercial products. This material is clearly delineated as described in the following sections. The
typographical convention is intended to provide a sense of the maturity of the affected material, without
29 altering its normative content. By recognizing the relative maturity of different sections of the standard, an
30 implementer should be able to make more informed decisions about the adoption and deployment of
31 different portions of the standard in a commercial product.
This specification has been structured to convey both the formal requirements and assumptions of the
33 SMI-S API and its emerging implementation and deployment lifecycle. Over time, the intent is that all
34 content in the specification will represent a mature and stable design, be verified by extensive
35 implementation experience, assure consistent support for backward compatibility, and rely solely on
36 content material that has reached a similar level of maturity. Unless explicitly labeled with one of the
subordinate maturity levels defined for this specification, content is assumed to satisfy these
37 requirements and is referred to as “Finalized”. Since much of the evolving specification
38 content in any given release will not have matured to that level, this specification defines three
subordinate levels of implementation maturity that identify important aspects of the content’s increasing
maturity and stability. Each subordinate maturity level is defined by its level of implementation
experience, its stability and its reliance on other emerging standards. Each subordinate maturity level is
identified by a unique typographical tagging convention that clearly distinguishes content at one maturity
model from content at another level.
© ISO/IEC 2021 – All rights reserved

46 Experimental Maturity Level
No material is included in this document unless its initial architecture has been completed and reviewed.
Some content included in this document has complete and reviewed design, but lacks implementation
experience and the maturity gained through implementation experience. This content is included in order
to gain wider review and to gain implementation experience. This material is referred to as
“Experimental”. It is presented here as an aid to implementers who are interested in likely future
developments within the SMI specification. The contents of an Experimental profile may change as
implementation experience is gained. There is a high likelihood that the changed content will be included
in an upcoming revision of the specification. Experimental material can advance to a higher maturity level
as soon as implementations are available. Figure 1 is a sample of the typographical convention for
Experimental content.
EXPERIMENTAL
Experimental content appears here.
EXPERIMENTAL
Figure 1 - Experimental Maturity Level Tag
Implemented Maturity Level
Profiles for which initial implementations have been completed are classified as “Implemented”. This
indicates that at least two different vendors have implemented the profile, including at least one provider
implementation. At this maturity level, the underlying architecture and modeling are stable, and changes
in future revisions will be limited to the correction of deficiencies identified through additional
implementation experience. Should the material become obsolete in the future, it must be deprecated in a
minor revision of the specification prior to its removal from subsequent releases. Figure 2 is a sample of
the typographical convention for Implemented content.
IMPLEMENTED
Implemented content appears here.
IMPLEMENTED
Figure 2 - Implemented Maturity Level Tag
Stable Maturity Level
Once content at the Implemented maturity level has garnered additional implementation experience, it
can be tagged at the Stable maturity level. Material at this maturity level has been implemented by three
different vendors, including both a provider and a client. Should material that has reached this maturity
level become obsolete, it may only be deprecated as part of a minor revision to the specification. Material
at this maturity level that has been deprecated may only be removed from the specification as part of a
major revision. A profile that has reached this maturity level is guaranteed to preserve backward
compatibility from one minor specification revision to the next. As a result, Profiles at or above the Stable
© ISO/IEC 2021 – All rights reserved

76 maturity level shall not rely on any content that is Experimental. Figure 3 is a sample of the typographical
77 convention for Implemented content.
STABLE
Stable content appears here.
STABLE
Figure 3 - Stable Maturity Level Tag
78 Finalized Maturity Level
79 Content that has reached the highest maturity level is referred to as “Finalized.” In addition to satisfying
80 the requirements for the Stable maturity level, content at the Finalized maturity level must solely depend
81 upon or refine material that has also reached the Finalized level. If specification content depends upon
82 material that is not under the control of the SNIA, and therefore not subject to its maturity level
83 definitions, then the external content is evaluated by the SNIA to assure that it has achieved a
84 comparable level of completion, stability, and implementation experience. Should material that has
85 reached this maturity level become obsolete, it may only be deprecated as part of a major revision to the
86 specification. A profile that has reached this maturity level is guaranteed to preserve backward
87 compatibility from one minor specification revision to the next. Over time, it is hoped that all specification
content will attain this maturity level. Accordingly, there is no special typographical convention, as there is
with the other, subordinate maturity levels. Unless content in the specification is marked with one of the
typographical conventions defined for the subordinate maturity levels, it should be assumed to have
reached the Finalized maturity level.
Deprecated Material
Non-Experimental material can be deprecated in a subsequent revision of the specification. Sections
identified as “Deprecated” contain material that is obsolete and not recommended for use in new
development efforts. Existing and new implementations may still use this material, but shall move to the
newer approach as soon as possible. The maturity level of the material being deprecated determines how
long it will continue to appear in the specification. Implemented content shall be retained at least until the
next revision of the specialization, while Stable and Finalized material shall be retained until the next
major revision of the specification. Providers shall implement the deprecated elements as long as it
appears in the specification in order to achieve backward compatibility. Clients may rely on deprecated
elements, but are encouraged to use non-deprecated alternatives when possible.
Deprecated sections are documented with a reference to the last published version to include the
deprecated section as normative material and to the section in the current specification with the
replacement. Figure 4 contains a sample of the typographical convention for deprecated content.
DEPRECATED
Content that has been deprecated appears here.
DEPRECATED
Figure 4 - Deprecated Tag
© ISO/IEC 2021 – All rights reserved

© ISO/IEC 2021 – All rights reserved

Contents
List of Figures . 17
List of Tables . 19
Foreword . 27
1 Scope . 29
2 Normative References. 31
2.1 General . 31
2.2 References under development . 31
2.3 Other references . 31
3 Terms, Definitions, Symbols, Abbreviations, and Conventions . 33
3.1 General . 33
3.2 Terms and Definitions . 33
4 File Export Profile . 35
4.1 Description . 35
4.2 Health and Fault Management Consideration. 37
4.3 Cascading Considerations . 37
4.4 Methods of the Profile . 37
4.5 Use Cases. 38
4.6 CIM Elements. 38
5 File Export Manipulation Profile. 45
5.1 Description . 45
5.2 Health and Fault Management Considerations. 52
5.3 Cascading Considerations . 53
5.4 Methods of the Profile . 53
5.5 Use Cases. 65
5.6 File Export Manipulation Supported Capabilities Patterns . 66
5.7 CIM Elements. 66
6 File Server Manipulation Profile. 81
6.1 Description . 81
6.2 Health and Fault Management Consideration. 86
6.3 Cascading Considerations . 87
6.4 Methods of the Profile . 87
6.5 Use Cases. 95
6.6 CIM Elements. 96
7 File Storage Profile. 113
7.1 Description . 113
7.2 Health and Fault Management Consideration. 114
7.3 Cascading Considerations . 114
7.4 Methods of the Profile .116
7.5 Client Considerations and Recipes . 117
7.6 CIM Elements. 117
8 Filesystem Profile . 119
8.1 Description . 119
8.2 Health and Fault Management Consideration. 122
8.3 Methods of the Profile .123
8.4 Use Cases. 123
8.5 CIM Elements. 123
9 Filesystem Manipulation Profile. 135
© ISO/IEC 2021 – All rights reserved

9.1 Description . 135
9.2 Health and Fault Management Considerations. 142
9.3 Methods of the Profile .144
9.4 Use Cases. 163
9.5 CIM Elements. 164
10 Filesystem Performance Profile. 189
10.1 Description . 189
10.2 Implementation. 190
10.3 Methods of the Profile . 195
10.4 Use Cases. 200
10.5 CIM Elements. 203
11 Filesystem Quotas Profile. 229
11.1 Description . 229
11.2 Health and Fault Management Considerations. 232
11.3 Methods of the Profile . 232
11.4 Use Cases. 235
11.5 CIM Elements. 241
12 NAS Head Profile . 249
12.1 Description . 249
12.2 Health and Fault Management Considerations. 257
12.3 Methods of the Profile . 258
12.4 Use Cases. 259
12.5 CIM Elements. 259
13 Self-Contained NAS Profile . 267
13.1 Description . 267
13.2 Health and Fault Management Considerations. 275
13.3 Standard Messages used by this Profile. 276
13.4 Cascading Considerations . 276
13.5 Methods of the Profile . 276
13.6 Use Cases. 277
13.7 CIM Elements. 277
14 NAS Network Port Profile . 283
14.1 Description . 283
14.2 Implementation. 284
14.3 Health and Fault Management Considerations. 288
14.4 Cascading Considerations . 289
14.5 Methods . 289
14.6 Use Cases. 289
14.7 CIM Elements. 290
15 Host Filesystem Profile. 301
15.1 Description . 301
15.2 Implementation. 303
15.3 Methods of the Profile . 306
15.4 Use Cases. 307
15.5 CIM Elements. 311
16 Filesystem Replication Services Profile.327
16.1 Description . 327
16.2 Implementation. 343
16.3 Methods . 345
© ISO/IEC 2021 – All rights reserved

16.4 Use Cases. 376
16.5 CIM Elements. 377
Annex A (informative) SMI-S Information Model. 405
© ISO/IEC 2021 – All rights reserved

© ISO/IEC 2021 – All rights reserved

LIST OF FIGURES
Figure 1 - Experimental Maturity Level Tag . 10
Figure 2 - Implemented Maturity Level Tag . 10
Figure 3 - Stable Maturity Level Tag. 11
Figure 4 - Deprecated Tag. 11
Figure 5 - File Export Instance. 36
Figure 6 - File Export Manipulation Profile Instance .46
Figure 7 - Capabilities and Settings for Exported File Share Creation. 49
Figure 8 - FileShares and Simple Identity Management. 51
Figure 9 - File Server Classes and Associations (Read only view). 83
Figure 10 - File Server Configuration classes and association. 85
Figure 11 - File Storage Instance. 113
Figure 12 - Cascading File Storage . 115
Figure 13 - Filesystem Instance. 120
Figure 14 - LocalFileSystem Creation Instance Diagram. 136
Figure 15 - Capabilities and Settings for Filesystem Creation . 141
Figure 16 - Filesystem Performance Profile Summary Instance Diagram . 191
Figure 17 - Filesystem Quotas Instance Diagram. 232
Figure 18 - NAS Head Profiles. 251
Figure 19 - NAS Head Instance . 252
Figure 20 - NAS Storage Instance . 254
Figure 21 - Self-Contained NAS Profiles . 269
Figure 22 - Self-Contained NAS Instance. 270
Figure 23 - NAS Storage Instance . 272
Figure 24 - NAS Support for Front-end Network Ports . 284
Figure 25 - Optional NAS TCP Interface Modeling . 285
Figure 26 - Mandatory NAS Ethernet Port Modeling . 286
Figure 27 - Host Filesystem Profiles and Package . 302
Figure 28 - Host Filesystem Instance Diagram. 303
Figure 29 - Host Filesystem support for Cascading. 305
Figure 30 - Replication Service Discovery . 329
Figure 31 - Local File System Replication . 331
Figure 32 - Remote File System Replication.332
Figure 33 - Group Instance Diagram . 333
Figure 34 - Associated Group and Elements . 334
Figure 35 - One-to-Many Association . 335
Figure 36 - Sample CopyState and ProgressStatus Transitions. 338
Figure 37 - Local Replication with ReplicationEntity . 339
Figure 38 - Remote replication with ReplicationEntity. 340
Figure 39 - Multi-Hop Replication . 341
Figure 40 - SettingDefineState. 341
Figure 41 - SynchronizationAspect Instance Diagram. 342
Figure 42 - Filesystem Replication Service support for Cascading. 344
© ISO/IEC 2021 – All rights reserved

Figure 43 - Cascading and Replication Groups . 345
© ISO/IEC 2021 – All rights reserved

LIST OF TABLES
Table 1 - Related Profiles for File Export.35
Table 2 - FileShare OperationalStatus .37
Table 3 - CIM Elements for File Export.38
Table 4 - SMI Referenced Properties/Methods for CIM_CIFSShare (Exported File Share).39
Table 5 - SMI Referenced Properties/Methods for CIM_ElementCapabilities (EnabledLogicalElementCapa-
bilities to FileShare)40
Table 6 - SMI Referenced Properties/Methods for CIM_EnabledLogicalElementCapabilities (FileShare) .40
Table 7 - SMI Referenced Properties/Methods for CIM_ExportedFileShareSetting (Setting) .41
Table 8 - SMI Referenced Properties/Methods for CIM_FileShare (Exported File Share) .41
Table 9 - SMI Referenced Properties/Methods for CIM_FileShareSettingData (FileShare).42
Table 10 - SMI Referenced Properties/Methods for CIM_HostedShare.42
Table 11 - SMI Referenced Properties/Methods for CIM_NFSShare (Exported File Share).43
Table 12 - SMI Referenced Properties/Methods for CIM_SAPAvailableForFileShare .43
Table 13 - SMI Referenced Properties/Methods for CIM_SharedElement.44
Table 14 - Related Profiles for File Export Manipulation .45
Table 15 - Operational Status for FileExport Service .52
Table 16 - FileExportManipulation Methods .53
Table 17 - Parameters for Extrinsic Method ExportedFileShareCapabilities.CreateGoalSettings .
...

Questions, Comments and Discussion

Ask us and Technical Secretary will try to provide an answer. You can facilitate discussion about the standard in here.

Loading comments...