Win32_1394ControllerDevice class

The Win32_1394ControllerDevice association WMI class relates the high-speed serial bus (IEEE 1394 Firewire) Controller and the CIM_LogicalDevice instance connected to it. This serial bus provides enhanced connectivity for a wide range of devices, including consumer audio or video components, storage peripherals, other computers, and portable devices. IEEE 1394 has been adopted by the consumer electronics industry and provides a Plug and Play-compatible expansion interface.

The following syntax is simplified from Managed Object Format (MOF) code and includes all of the inherited properties. Properties are listed in alphabetic order, not MOF order.

Syntax

[Dynamic, Provider("CIMWin32"), UUID("{8835CFC9-BAEF-11d2-85E5-0000F8102E5F}"), AMENDMENT]
class Win32_1394ControllerDevice : CIM_ControlledBy
{
  uint32                   NegotiatedDataWidth;
  uint64                   NegotiatedSpeed;
  uint16                   AccessState;
  uint32                   NumberOfHardResets;
  uint32                   NumberOfSoftResets;
  Win32_1394Controller REF Antecedent;
  CIM_LogicalDevice    REF Dependent;
};

Members

The Win32_1394ControllerDevice class has these types of members:

Properties

The Win32_1394ControllerDevice class has these properties.

AccessState

Data type: uint16

Access type: Read-only

Indicates whether the controller is actively commanding or accessing the device. This information is necessary when a logical device can be commanded by, or accessed through, multiple controllers.

This property is inherited from CIM_ControlledBy.

Unknown (0)

Active (1)

Inactive (2)

Antecedent

Data type: Win32_1394Controller

Access type: Read-only

Qualifiers: key, Override ("Antecedent"), MappingStrings ("WMI|Win32_1394Controller")

The Win32_1394Controller antecedent reference represents the 1394 controller associated with this device.

Dependent

Data type: CIM_LogicalDevice

Access type: Read-only

Qualifiers: key, Override ("Dependent"), MappingStrings ("CIM|CIM_LogicalDevice")

The CIM_LogicalDevice dependent reference represents the CIM_LogicalDevice connected to the 1394 controller.

NegotiatedDataWidth

Data type: uint32

Access type: Read-only

Qualifiers: Units ("bits")

When several bus or connection-data widths are possible, this property defines the one in use between the devices. Data width is specified in bits. If data width is not negotiated, or if this information is not available or important to device management, the property should be set to 0 (zero).

This property is inherited from CIM_DeviceConnection.

NegotiatedSpeed

Data type: uint64

Access type: Read-only

Qualifiers: Units ("bits per second")

When several bus or connection speeds are possible, this property defines the one being used between the devices. Speed is specified in bits-per-second. If connection or bus speeds are not negotiated, or if this information is not available or important to device management, the property should be set to 0 (zero).

For more information about using uint64 values in scripts, see Scripting in WMI.

This property is inherited from CIM_DeviceConnection.

NumberOfHardResets

Data type: uint32

Access type: Read-only

Number of hard resets issued by the controller. A hard reset returns the device to its initialization or boot-up state. All internal device state information and data are lost.

This property is inherited from CIM_ControlledBy.

NumberOfSoftResets

Data type: uint32

Access type: Read-only

Number of soft resets issued by the controller. A soft reset does not completely clear current device state and data. Exact semantics are dependent on the device and on the protocols and mechanisms used to communicate to it.

This property is inherited from CIM_ControlledBy.

Remarks

The Win32_1394ControllerDevice class is derived from CIM_ControlledBy.

Examples

The following PowerShell code sample retrieves 1394 controller device information.

# Helper function to return AccessState

function get-WmiAccessState {
param ([uint16] $char)

# parse and return values

If ($char -le 2 -and $char -ge 0) {

switch ($char) {
0 {"00-Reserved"}
1 {"01-Reserved"}
2 {"02-Unknown"}
}
}

Else {
"$char - unknown value"
}
}

# Get 1394 Controller Device information from WMI
$1394Cont = Get-WMIObject Win32_1394ControllerDevice

# Display Details
"Win32_1394ControllerDevice WMI Information"
"=========================================="

foreach ($device in $1394Cont) {

"Device Characteristics - Device {0}" -f ++$i

"Access State : {0}" -f (Get-WmiAccessState($ch))
"Antecedent : {0}" -f $device.Antecedent
"Negotiated Data Width : {0}" -f $device.NegotiatedDataWidth
"Negotiated Speed : {0}" -f $device.NegotiatedSpeed
"Number of Hard Resets : {0}" -f $device.NumberofHardResets
"Number of Soft Resets : {0}" -f $device.NumberofSoftResets
} 

The previous code sample returns the following information:

# Win32_1394ControllerDevice WMI Information

Device Characteristics -Device 1
Access State : 00-Reserved
Antecedent : \\UK0N055\root\CIMV2:Win32_1394Controller.DeviceID="PCI\\VEN_1217&DEV_00F7&SUBSYS_01CC1028
&REV_02\\4&2FE911E8&0&0CF0"
Negotiated Data Width :
Negotiated Speed :
Number of Hard Resets :
Number of Soft Resets :

Requirements

Requirement Value
Minimum supported client
Windows Vista
Minimum supported server
Windows Server 2008
Namespace
Root\CIMV2
MOF
CIMWin32.mof
DLL
CIMWin32.dll

See also

CIM_ControlledBy

Computer System Hardware Classes