Patents by Inventor David S. Bakin

David S. Bakin has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 7844972
    Abstract: Resource management architectures implemented in computer systems to manage resources are described. In one embodiment, a general architecture includes a resource manager and multiple resource providers that support one or more resource consumers such as a system component or application. Each provider is associated with a resource and acts as the manager for the resource when interfacing with the resource manager. The resource manager arbitrates access to the resources provided by the resource providers on behalf of the consumers. A policy manager sets various policies that are used by the resource manager to allocate resources. One policy is a priority-based policy that distinguishes among which applications and/or users have priority over others to use the resources. A resource consumer creates an “activity” at the resource manager and builds one or more “configurations” that describe various sets of preferred resources required to perform the activity.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 27, 2006
    Date of Patent: November 30, 2010
    Assignee: Microsoft Corporation
    Inventors: Jayachandran Raja, Jai Srinivasan, Mukund Sankaranarayan, David S. Bakin, Sean C. McDowell, Robin C. B. Speed
  • Patent number: 7451450
    Abstract: Resource management architectures implemented in computer systems to manage resources are described. In one embodiment, a general architecture includes a resource manager and multiple resource providers that support one or more resource consumers such as a system component or application. Each provider is associated with a resource and acts as the manager for the resource when interfacing with the resource manager. The resource manager arbitrates access to the resources provided by the resource providers on behalf of the consumers, e.g., using a priority-based policy. A resource consumer creates an “activity” at the resource manager and builds one or more “configurations” that describe various sets of preferred resources required to perform the activity. Each resource consumer can specify one or more configurations, which may be ranked, for each activity. This allows the resource consumers to be dynamically changed from one configuration to another as operating conditions change.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 31, 2004
    Date of Patent: November 11, 2008
    Assignee: Microsoft Corporation
    Inventors: Mukund Sankaranarayan, Forrest C. Foltz, George Shaw, Dale A. Sather, Andy R. Raffman, Jai Srinivasan, Terje K. Backman, William G. Parry, David S. Bakin, Michael B. Jones, Sean C. McDowell, Jayachandran Raja, Robin Speed
  • Patent number: 7337446
    Abstract: Resource management architectures implemented in computer systems to manage resources are described. In one embodiment, a general architecture includes a resource manager and multiple resource providers that support one or more resource consumers such as a system component or application. Each provider is associated with a resource and acts as the manager for the resource when interfacing with the resource manager. The resource manager arbitrates access to the resources provided by the resource providers on behalf of the consumers. A policy manager sets various policies that are used by the resource manager to allocate resources. One policy is a priority-based policy that distinguishes among which applications and/or users have priority over others to use the resources. A resource consumer creates an “activity” at the resource manager and builds one or more “configurations” that describe various sets of preferred resources required to perform the activity.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 31, 2004
    Date of Patent: February 26, 2008
    Assignee: Microsoft Corporation
    Inventors: Mukund Sankaranarayan, Forrest C. Foltz, George Shaw, Dale A. Sather, Andy R. Raffman, Jai Srinivasan, Terje K. Backman, William G. Parry, David S. Bakin, Michael B. Jones, Sean C. McDowell, Jayachandran Raja, Robin Speed
  • Patent number: 7316020
    Abstract: Resource management architectures implemented in computer systems to manage resources are described. In one embodiment, a general architecture includes a resource manager and multiple resource providers that support one or more resource consumers such as a system component or application. Each provider is associated with a resource and acts as the manager for the resource when interfacing with the resource manager. The resource manager arbitrates access to the resources provided by the resource providers on behalf of the consumers. A policy manager sets various policies that are used by the resource manager to allocate resources. One policy is a priority-based policy that distinguishes among which applications and/or users have priority over others to use the resources. A resource consumer creates an “activity” at the resource manager and builds one or more “configurations” that describe various sets of preferred resources required to perform the activity.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 27, 2006
    Date of Patent: January 1, 2008
    Assignee: Microsoft Corporation
    Inventors: Jayachandran Raja, Jai Srinivasan, Mukund Sankaranarayan, David S. Bakin, Sean C. McDowell, Robin C. B. Speed
  • Patent number: 7058947
    Abstract: Resource management architectures implemented in computer systems to manage resources are described. In one embodiment, a general architecture includes a resource manager and multiple resource providers that support one or more resource consumers such as a system component or application. Each provider is associated with a resource and acts as the manager for the resource when interfacing with the resource manager. The resource manager arbitrates access to the resources provided by the resource providers on behalf of the consumers. A policy manager sets various policies that are used by the resource manager to allocate resources. One policy is a priority-based policy that distinguishes among which applications and/or users have priority over others to use the resources. A resource consumer creates an “activity” at the resource manager and builds one or more “configurations” that describe various sets of preferred resources required to perform the activity.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 2, 2000
    Date of Patent: June 6, 2006
    Assignee: Microsoft Corporation
    Inventors: Jayachandran Raja, Jai Srinivasan, Mukund Sankaranarayan, David S. Bakin, Sean C. McDowell, Robin Speed
  • Patent number: 6799208
    Abstract: Resource management architectures implemented in computer systems to manage resources are described. In one embodiment, a general architecture includes a resource manager and multiple resource providers that support one or more resource consumers such as a system component or application. Each provider is associated with a resource and acts as the manager for the resource when interfacing with the resource manager. The resource manager arbitrates access to the resources provided by the resource providers on behalf of the consumers. A policy manager sets various policies that are used by the resource manager to allocate resources. One policy is a priority-based policy that distinguishes among which applications and/or users have priority over others to use the resources. A resource consumer creates an “activity” at the resource manager and builds one or more “configurations” that describe various sets of preferred resources required to perform the activity.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 2, 2000
    Date of Patent: September 28, 2004
    Assignee: Microsoft Corporation
    Inventors: Mukund Sankaranarayan, Forrest C. Foltz, George Shaw, Dale A. Sather, Andy R. Raffman, Jai Srinivasan, Terje K. Backman, William G. Parry, David S. Bakin, Michael B. Jones, Sean C. McDowell, Jayachandran Raja, Robin Speed
  • Patent number: 6763439
    Abstract: A system is configured to prioritize streaming disk I/O over non-streaming disk I/O by providing high priority queuing to streaming disk I/O and/or to throttle non-streaming disk I/O when the total disk I/O (streaming+non-streaming) exceeds a threshold amount for a given time quantum. When disk throttling is utilized, streaming disk I/O is processed in a first time quantum. Non-streaming disk I/O is processed, as much as possible, in the remainder of the first time quantum. Other non-streaming disk I/O remaining to be processed is deferred to a subsequent time quantum.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 1, 2000
    Date of Patent: July 13, 2004
    Assignee: Microsoft Corporation
    Inventors: David S. Bakin, William G. Parry, Mark H. Lucovsky
  • Patent number: 6748443
    Abstract: A system includes a resource manager that provides unenforced allocation of streaming I/O bandwidth from streaming I/O bandwidth providers (e.g., CPU, disk, etc.) to streaming I/O bandwidth consumers (e.g., software application, television, etc.). Unenforced allocation denotes that bandwidth allocation in response to a consumer request is not guaranteed, nor is a consumer guaranteed that, once bandwidth has been allocated, it will not be de-allocated and reclaimed by the resource manager for allocation to another bandwidth consumer, based on a priority assigned to the bandwidth consumers. A bandwidth manager is included in a streaming I/O bandwidth provider that provides unenforced allocation from that particular provider to streaming I/O bandwidth consumers, in the same manner as the resource manager described above.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 30, 2000
    Date of Patent: June 8, 2004
    Assignee: Microsoft Corporation
    Inventors: William G. Parry, David S. Bakin