Patents by Inventor Kenneth P. Siegel

Kenneth P. Siegel 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: 7487250
    Abstract: The invention is directed to techniques for managing communication between a client and multiple servers over a network through an intermediary network device (e.g., content switch). In response to a request for content from a client, the network device selects a server to respond to the request. The network device includes a flow manager that manages the flow of data from the server through the network device to the client. In response to a second request, the network device may select a different server to respond to the request. In this case, the flow manager manages the flow of data from the new server through the network device transparently for the client, so that the client communicates only through the network device regardless of which server is providing the response to the requests.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 20, 2004
    Date of Patent: February 3, 2009
    Assignee: Cisco Technology, Inc.
    Inventor: Kenneth P. Siegel
  • Patent number: 7257634
    Abstract: A content-aware flow switch intercepts a client content request in an IP network, and transparently directs the content request to a best-fit server. The best-fit server is chosen based on the type of content requested, the quality of service requirements implied by the content request, the degree of load on available servers, network congestion information, and the proximity of the client to available servers. The flow switch detects client-server flows based on the arrival of TCP SYNs and/or HTTP GETs from the client. The flow switch implicitly deduces the quality of service requirements of a flow based on the content of the flow. The flow switch also provides the functionality of multiple physical web servers on a single web server in a way that is transparent to the client, through the use of virtual web hosts and flow pipes.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 11, 2005
    Date of Patent: August 14, 2007
    Assignee: Cisco Technology, Inc.
    Inventors: Steven Colby, John J. Krawczyk, Raj Krishnan Nair, Katherine Royce, Kenneth P. Siegel, Richard C. Stevens, Scott Wasson
  • Patent number: 7254639
    Abstract: The invention is directed to techniques for allocating packets received by the flow control processor located on the input/output (I/O) communications interface of the data communications device to a forwarding entity or session processor, chosen from a plurality of session processors, for further processing or routing. The session processors have the same ability to make decisions relating to the processing and routing of the packet as does the flow control processor and can have per second packet processing rates that are different from the flow control processor located on the I/O communications interface of the data communications device. To allocate the packets to the session processors for further processing, the flow control processor processes information located within the header component of the received packet.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 20, 2002
    Date of Patent: August 7, 2007
    Assignee: Cisco Technology, Inc.
    Inventors: Kenneth P. Siegel, John J. Krawczyk
  • Patent number: 6862624
    Abstract: A content-aware flow switch intercepts a client content request in an IP network, and transparently directs the content request to a best-fit server. The best-fit server is chosen based on the type of content requested, the quality of service requirements implied by the content request, the degree of load on available servers, network congestion information, and the proximity of the client to available servers. The flow switch detects client-server flows based on the arrival of TCP SYNs and/or HTTP GETs from the client. The flow switch implicitly deduces the quality of service requirements of a flow based on the content of the flow. The flow switch also provides the functionality of multiple physical web servers on a single web server in a way that is transparent to the client, through the use of virtual web hosts and flow pipes.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 17, 2002
    Date of Patent: March 1, 2005
    Assignee: Cisco Technology, Inc.
    Inventors: Steven Colby, John J. Krawczyk, Raj Krishnan Nair, Katherine Royce, Kenneth P. Siegel, Richard C. Stevens, Scott Wasson
  • Patent number: 6850982
    Abstract: The invention is directed to techniques for managing communication between a client and multiple servers over a network through an intermediary network device (e.g., content switch). In response to a request for content from a client, the network device selects a server to respond to the request. The network device includes a flow manager that manages the flow of data from the server through the network device to the client. In response to a second request, the network device may select a different server to respond to the request. In this case, the flow manager manages the flow of data from the new server through the network device transparently for the client, so that the client communicates only through the network device regardless of which server is providing the response to the requests.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 19, 2000
    Date of Patent: February 1, 2005
    Assignee: Cisco Technology, Inc.
    Inventor: Kenneth P. Siegel
  • Publication number: 20040039820
    Abstract: A content-aware flow switch intercepts a client content request in an IP network, and transparently directs the content request to a best-fit server. The best-fit server is chosen based on the type of content requested, the quality of service requirements implied by the content request, the degree of load on available servers, network congestion information, and the proximity of the client to available servers. The flow switch detects client-server flows based on the arrival of TCP SYNs and/or HTTP GETs from the client. The flow switch implicitly deduces the quality of service requirements of a flow based on the content of the flow. The flow switch also provides the functionality of multiple physical web servers on a single web server in a way that is transparent to the client, through the use of virtual web hosts and flow pipes.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 17, 2002
    Publication date: February 26, 2004
    Applicant: Cisco Systems, Inc.
    Inventors: Steven Colby, John J. Krawczyk, Raj Krishnan Nair, Katherine Royce, Kenneth P. Siegel, Richard C. Stevens, Scott Wasson
  • Patent number: 6449647
    Abstract: A content-aware flow switch intercepts a client content request in an IP network, and transparently directs the content request to a best-fit server. The best-fit server is chosen based on the type of content requested, the quality of service requirements implied by the content request, the degree of load on available servers, network congestion information, and the proximity of the client to available servers. The flow switch detects client-server flows based on the arrival of TCP SYNs and/or HTTP GETs from the client. The flow switch implicitly deduces the quality of service requirements of a flow based on the content of the flow. The flow switch also provides the functionality of multiple physical web servers on a single web server in a way that is transparent to the client, through the use of virtual web hosts and flow pipes.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 21, 1999
    Date of Patent: September 10, 2002
    Assignee: Cisco Systems, Inc.
    Inventors: Steven Colby, John J. Krawczyk, Rai Krishnan Nair, Katherine Royce, Kenneth P. Siegel, Richard C. Stevens, Scott Wasson
  • Patent number: 6006264
    Abstract: A content-aware flow switch intercepts a client content request in an IP network, and transparently directs the content request to a best-fit server. The best-fit server is chosen based on the type of content requested, the quality of service requirements implied by the content request, the degree of load on available servers, network congestion information, and the proximity of the client to available servers. The flow switch detects client-server flows based on the arrival of TCP SYNs and/or HTTP GETs from the client. The flow switch implicitly deduces the quality of service requirements of a flow based on the content of the flow. The flow switch also provides the functionality of multiple physical web servers on a single web server in a way that is transparent to the client, through the use of virtual web hosts and flow pipes.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 30, 1998
    Date of Patent: December 21, 1999
    Assignee: Arrowpoint Communications, Inc.
    Inventors: Steven Colby, John J. Krawczyk, Raj Krishnan Nair, Katherine Royce, Kenneth P. Siegel, Richard C. Stevens, Scott Wasson
  • Patent number: 5073852
    Abstract: An method for interprocess communication and data exchange within a computer's software operating system executing on a computer network protocol translator having a central processing unit and associated memory, which includes encapsulating the message or data to be exchanged within certain header and footer information which defines the context of the transmission. Certain program routines are executed in conjunction with this context information which enable the software processes within the operating system to exchange data and to acknowledge the receipt of messages without having to generate and transmit return messages or pre-empt the operating system's execution sequence.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 16, 1988
    Date of Patent: December 17, 1991
    Assignee: Cayman Systems, Inc.
    Inventors: Kenneth P. Siegel, J. Bradford Parker, John Wroclawski