Patents Assigned to Alacritech, Inc.
  • Publication number: 20040054813
    Abstract: A system for protocol processing in a computer network has an intelligent network interface card (INIC) or communication processing device (CPD) associated with a host computer. The INIC provides a fast-path that avoids protocol processing for most large multi-packet messages, greatly accelerating data communication. The INIC also assists the host for those message packets that are chosen for processing by host software layers. A communication control block for a message is defined that allows DMA controllers of the INIC to move data, free of headers, directly to or from a destination or source in the host. The context is stored in the INIC as a communication control block (CCB) that can be passed back to the host for message processing by the host. The INIC contains specialized hardware circuits that are much faster at their specific tasks than a general purpose CPU.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 17, 2002
    Publication date: March 18, 2004
    Applicant: Alacritech, Inc.
    Inventors: Laurence B. Boucher, Stephen E. J. Blightman, Peter K. Craft, David A. Higgen, Clive M. Philbrick, Daryl D. Starr
  • Patent number: 6697868
    Abstract: A host CPU runs a network protocol processing stack that provides instructions not only to process network messages but also to allocate processing of certain network messages to a specialized network communication device, offloading some of the most time consuming protocol processing from the host CPU to the network communication device. By allocating common and time consuming network processes to the device, while retaining the ability to handle less time intensive and more varied processing on the host stack, the network communication device can be relatively simple and cost effective. The host CPU, operating according to instructions from the stack, and the network communication device together determine whether and to what extent a given message is processed by the host CPU or by the network communication device.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 29, 2002
    Date of Patent: February 24, 2004
    Assignee: Alacritech, Inc.
    Inventors: Peter K. Craft, Clive M. Philbrick, Laurence B. Boucher, David A. Higgen
  • Patent number: 6687758
    Abstract: At least one intelligent network interface card (INIC) is coupled to a host computer to offload protocol processing for multiple network connections, reducing the protocol processing of the host. Plural network connections can maintain, via plural INIC ports and a port aggregation switch, an aggregate connection with a network node, increasing bandwidth and reliability for that aggregate connection. Mechanisms are provided for managing this aggregate connection, including determining which port to employ for each individual network connection, and migrating control of an individual network connection from a first INIC to a second INIC.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 7, 2001
    Date of Patent: February 3, 2004
    Assignee: Alacritech, Inc.
    Inventors: Peter K. Craft, Clive M. Philbrick, Laurence B. Boucher, Daryl D. Starr, Stephen E. J. Blightman, David A. Higgen
  • Publication number: 20040003126
    Abstract: An intelligent network interface card (INIC) or communication processing device (CPD) works with a host computer for data communication. The device provides a fast-path that avoids protocol processing for most messages, greatly accelerating data transfer and offloading time-intensive processing tasks from the host CPU. The host retains a fallback processing capability for messages that do not fit fast-path criteria, with the device providing assistance such as validation even for slow-path messages, and messages being selected for either fast-path or slow-path processing. A context for a connection is defined that allows the device to move data, free of headers, directly to or from a destination or source in the host. The context can be passed back to the host for message processing by the host. The device contains specialized hardware circuits that are much faster at their specific tasks than a general purpose CPU.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 7, 2001
    Publication date: January 1, 2004
    Applicant: Alacritech, Inc.
    Inventors: Laurence B. Boucher, Stephen E. J. Blightman, Peter K. Craft, David A. Higgen, Clive M. Philbrick, Daryl D. Starr
  • Patent number: 6658480
    Abstract: A system for protocol processing in a computer network has an intelligent network interface card (INIC) or communication processing device (CPD) associated with a host computer. The CPD provides a fast-path that avoids protocol processing for most large multipacket messages, greatly accelerating data communication. The CPD also assists the host CPU for those message packets that are chosen for processing by host software layers. A context for a message is defined that allows DMA controllers of the CPD to move data, free of headers, directly to or from a destination or source in the host. The context can be stored as a communication control block (CCB) that is controlled by either the CPD or by the host CPU. The CPD contains specialized hardware circuits that process media access control, network and transport layer headers of a packet received from the network, saving the host CPU from that processing for fast-path messages.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 9, 2001
    Date of Patent: December 2, 2003
    Assignee: Alacritech, Inc.
    Inventors: Laurence B. Boucher, Clive M. Philbrick, Daryl D. Starr, Stephen E. J. Blightman, Peter K. Craft, David A. Higgen
  • Publication number: 20030200284
    Abstract: A transmit offload engine (TOE) such as an intelligent network interface device (INIC), video controller or host bus adapter (HBA) that can communicate data over transport protocols such as Transport Control Protocol (TCP) for a host. Such a device can send and receive data for the host to and from a remote host, over a TCP connection maintained by the device. For sending data, the device can indicate to the host that data has been transmitted from the device to a network, prior to receiving, by the device from the network, an acknowledgement (ACK) for all the data, accelerating data transmission. The greatest sequence number for which all previous bytes have been ACKed can be provided with a response to a subsequent command, with the host maintaining a table of ACK values to complete commands when appropriate.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 14, 2003
    Publication date: October 23, 2003
    Applicant: Alacritech, Inc.
    Inventors: Clive M. Philbrick, Peter K. Craft
  • Publication number: 20030167346
    Abstract: At least one intelligent network interface card (INIC) is coupled to a host computer to offload protocol processing for multiple network connections, reducing the protocol processing of the host. Plural network connections can maintain, via plural INIC ports and a port aggregation switch, an aggregate connection with a network node, increasing bandwidth and reliability for that aggregate connection. Mechanisms are provided for managing this aggregate connection, including determining which port to employ for each individual network connection, and migrating control of an individual network connection from a first INIC to a second INIC.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 7, 2001
    Publication date: September 4, 2003
    Applicant: Alacritech, Inc.
    Inventors: Peter K. Craft, Clive M. Philbrick, Laurence B. Boucher, Daryl D. Starr, Stephen E.J. Blightman, David A. Higgen
  • Publication number: 20030140124
    Abstract: TCP/IP traffic passing over a TCP connection is initially load balanced by a TCP offload network interface device (NID) in fast-path between multiple ports of an aggregation team. A failure then occurs on one of the ports. Processing of the TCP connection then switches to slow-path. The function of the failed port is then assumed by another functioning port of the team such that fast-path processing of the TCP connection by the TCP offload NID automatically resumes. The two ports of the TCP offload NID (the failed port and the port that assumes its functionality) use different MAC addresses. Fast-path load balancing and fail-over are therefore possible without the use of a Fast-Etherchannel switch that would have required the two ports to use the same MAC address.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 27, 2002
    Publication date: July 24, 2003
    Applicant: Alacritech, Inc.
    Inventor: David A. Burns
  • Patent number: 6591302
    Abstract: A network interface device provides a fast-path that avoids most host TCP and IP protocol processing for most messages. The host retains a fallback slow-path processing capability. In one embodiment, generation of a response to a TCP/IP packet received onto the network interface device is accelerated by determining the TCP and IP source and destination information from the incoming packet, retrieving an appropriate template header, using a finite state machine to fill in the TCP and IP fields in the template header without sequential TCP and IP protocol processing, combining the filled-in template header with a data payload to form a packet, and then outputting the packet from the network interface device by pushing a pointer to the packet onto a transmit queue. A transmit sequencer retrieves the pointer from the transmit queue and causes the corresponding packet to be output from the network interface device.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 6, 2002
    Date of Patent: July 8, 2003
    Assignee: Alacritech, Inc.
    Inventors: Laurence B. Boucher, Stephen E. J. Blightman, Peter K. Craft, David A. Higgen, Clive M. Philbrick, Daryl D. Starr
  • Publication number: 20030079033
    Abstract: A host CPU runs a network protocol processing stack that provides instructions not only to process network messages but also to allocate processing of certain network messages to a specialized network communication device, offloading some of the most time consuming protocol processing from the host CPU to the network communication device. By allocating common and time consuming network processes to the device, while retaining the ability to handle less time intensive and more varied processing on the host stack, the network communication device can be relatively simple and cost effective. The host CPU, operating according to instructions from the stack, and the network communication device together determine whether and to what extent a given message is processed by the host CPU or by the network communication device.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 29, 2002
    Publication date: April 24, 2003
    Applicant: Alacritech, Inc.
    Inventors: Peter K. Craft, Clive M. Philbrick, Laurence B. Boucher, David A. Higgen
  • Publication number: 20020156927
    Abstract: A system for protocol processing in a computer network has a TCP/IP Offload Network Interface Device (TONID) associated with a host computer. The TONID provides a fast-path that avoids protocol processing for most large multi-packet messages, greatly accelerating data communication. The TONID also assists the host for those message packets that are chosen for processing by host software layers. A communication control block for a message is defined that allows DMA controllers of the TONID to move data, free of headers, directly to or from a destination or source in the host. The context is stored in the TONID as a communication control block (CCB) that can be passed back to the host for message processing by the host. The TONID contains specialized hardware circuits that are much faster at their specific tasks than a general purpose CPU.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 12, 2002
    Publication date: October 24, 2002
    Applicant: Alacritech, Inc.
    Inventors: Laurence B. Boucher, Stephen E. J. Blightman, Peter K. Craft, David A. Higgen, Clive M. Philbrick, Daryl D. Starr
  • Patent number: 6470415
    Abstract: A device for queuing information combines the speed of SRAM with the low cost and low power consumption of DRAM, affording substantial expansion of high-speed data storage in queues without corresponding increases in costs. The queues have a variable size, and provide fast, flexible and efficient data storage via an SRAM interface and a DRAM body. The queues may hold pointers to buffer addresses or other data that allow manipulation of information in the buffers via manipulation of the queues. Particular utility for this mechanism exists in situations for which high-speed access to queues is beneficial, flexible queue size is advantageous, and/or the smaller size and lower cost of DRAM compared to SRAM is of value.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 13, 1999
    Date of Patent: October 22, 2002
    Assignee: Alacritech, Inc.
    Inventors: Daryl D. Starr, Clive M. Philbrick
  • Patent number: 6434620
    Abstract: An intelligent network interface card (INIC) or communication processing device (CPD) works with a host computer for data communication. The device provides a fast-path that avoids protocol processing for most messages, greatly accelerating data transfer and offloading time-intensive processing tasks from the host CPU. The host retains a fallback processing capability for messages that do not fit fast-path criteria, with the device providing assistance such as validation even for slow-path messages, and messages being selected for either fast-path or slow-path processing. A context for a connection is defined that allows the device to move data, free of headers, directly to or from a destination or source in the host. The context can be passed back to the host for message processing by the host. The device contains specialized hardware circuits that are much faster at their specific tasks than a general purpose CPU.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 27, 1999
    Date of Patent: August 13, 2002
    Assignee: Alacritech, Inc.
    Inventors: Laurence B. Boucher, Stephen E. J. Blightman, Peter K. Craft, David A. Higgen, Clive M. Philbrick, Daryl D. Starr
  • Patent number: 6427173
    Abstract: An intelligent network interface card (INIC) or communication processing device (CPD) works with a host computer for data communication. The device provides a fast-path that avoids protocol processing for most messages, greatly accelerating data transfer and offloading time-intensive processing tasks from the host CPU. The host retains a fallback processing capability for messages that do not fit fast-path criteria, with the device providing assistance such as validation even for slow-path messages, and messages being selected for either fast-path or slow-path processing. A context for a connection is defined that allows the device to move data, free of headers, directly to or from a destination or source in the host. The context can be passed back to the host for message processing by the host. The device contains specialized hardware circuits that are much faster at their specific tasks than a general purpose CPU.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 15, 1999
    Date of Patent: July 30, 2002
    Assignee: Alacritech, Inc.
    Inventors: Laurence B. Boucher, Stephen E. J. Blightman, Peter K. Craft, David A. Higgen, Clive M. Philbrick, Daryl D. Starr
  • Patent number: 6427171
    Abstract: A host CPU runs a network protocol processing stack that provides instructions not only to process network messages but also to allocate processing of certain network messages to a specialized network communication device, offloading some of the most time consuming protocol processing from the host CPU to the network communication device. By allocating common and time consuming network processes to the device, while retaining the ability to handle less time intensive and more varied processing on the host stack, the network communication device can be relatively simple and cost effective. The host CPU, operating according to instructions from the stack, and the network communication device together determine whether and to what extent a given message is processed by the host CPU or by the network communication device.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 28, 2000
    Date of Patent: July 30, 2002
    Assignee: Alacritech, Inc.
    Inventors: Peter K. Craft, Olive M. Philbrick, Laurence B. Boucher, David A. Higgen
  • Publication number: 20020095519
    Abstract: A network interface device has a fast-path ACK generating and transmitting mechanism. ACKs are generated using a finite state machine (FSM). The FSM retrieves a template header and fills in TCP and IP fields in the template. The FSM is not a stack, but rather fills in the TCP and IP fields without performing transport layer processing and network layer processing sequentially as separate tasks. The filled-in template is placed into a buffer and a pointer to the buffer is pushed onto a high-priority transmit queue. Pointers for ordinary data packets are pushed onto a low-priority transmit queue. A transmit sequencer outputs a packet by popping a transmit queue, obtaining a pointer, and causing information pointed to by the pointer to be output from the network interface device as a packet. The sequencer pops the high-priority queue in preference to the low-priority queue, thereby accelerating ACK generation and transmission.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 26, 2002
    Publication date: July 18, 2002
    Applicant: Alacritech, Inc.
    Inventors: Clive M. Philbrick, Laurence B. Boucher, Stephen E.J. Blightman, Peter K. Craft, David A. Higgen, Daryl D. Starr
  • Publication number: 20020091844
    Abstract: A network interface device connected to a host provides hardware and processing mechanisms for accelerating data transfers between the host and a network. Some data transfers are processed using a dedicated fast-path whereby the protocol stack of the host performs no network layer or transport layer processing. Other data transfers are, however, handled in a slow-path by the host protocol stack. In one embodiment, the host protocol stack has an ISCSI layer, but a response to a solicited ISCSI read request command is nevertheless processed by the network interface device in fast-path. In another embodiment, an initial portion of a response to a solicited command is handled using the dedicated fast-path and then after an error condidtion occurs a subsequent portion of the response is handled using the the slow-path. The interface device uses a command status message to communicate status to the host.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 2, 2001
    Publication date: July 11, 2002
    Applicant: Alacritech, Inc.
    Inventors: Peter K. Craft, Clive M. Philbrick, Laurence B. Boucher
  • Publication number: 20020087732
    Abstract: A network interface device provides a fast-path that avoids most host TCP and IP protocol processing for most messages. The host retains a fallback slow-path processing capability. In one embodiment, generation of a response to a TCP/IP packet received onto the network interface device is accelerated by determining the TCP and IP source and destination information from the incoming packet, retrieving an appropriate template header, using a finite state machine to fill in the TCP and IP fields in the template header without sequential TCP and IP protocol processing, combining the filled-in template header with a data payload to form a packet, and then outputting the packet from the network interface device by pushing a pointer to the packet onto a transmit queue. A transmit sequencer retrieves the pointer from the transmit queue and causes the corresponding packet to be output from the network interface device.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 17, 2001
    Publication date: July 4, 2002
    Applicant: Alacritech, Inc.
    Inventors: Laurence B. Boucher, Stephen E.J. Blightman, Peter K. Craft, David A. Higgen, Clive M. Philbrick, Daryl D. Starr
  • Patent number: 6393487
    Abstract: A system for protocol processing in a computer network has an intelligent network interface card (INIC) or communication processing device (CPD) associated with a host computer. The INIC provides a fast-path that avoids protocol processing for most large multi-packet messages, greatly accelerating data communication. The INIC also assists the host for those message packets that are chosen for processing by host software layers. A communication control block for a message is defined that allows DMA controllers of the INIC to move data, free of headers, directly to or from a destination or source in the host. The context is stored in the INIC as a communication control block (CCB) that can be passed back to the host for message processing by the host. The INIC contains specialized hardware circuits that are much faster at their specific tasks than a general purpose CPU.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 12, 2001
    Date of Patent: May 21, 2002
    Assignee: Alacritech, Inc.
    Inventors: Laurence B. Boucher, Stephen E. J. Blightman, Peter K. Craft, David A. Higgen, Clive M. Philbrick, Daryl D. Starr
  • Patent number: 6389479
    Abstract: An intelligent network interface card (INIC) or communication processing device (CPD) works with a host computer for data communication. The device provides a fast-path that avoids protocol processing for most messages, greatly accelerating data transfer and offloading time-intensive processing tasks from the host CPU. The host retains a fallback processing capability for messages that do not fit fast-path criteria, with the device providing assistance such as validation even for slow-path messages, and messages being selected for either fast-path or slow-path processing. A context for a connection is defined that allows the device to move data, free of headers, directly to or from a destination or source in the host. The context can be passed back to the host for message processing by the host. The device contains specialized hardware circuits that are much faster at their specific tasks than a general purpose CPU.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 28, 1998
    Date of Patent: May 14, 2002
    Assignee: Alacritech, Inc.
    Inventors: Laurence B. Boucher, Stephen E. J. Blightman, Peter K. Craft, David A. Higgen, Clive M. Philbrick, Daryl D. Starr