Patents by Inventor Andrew J Kulich

Andrew J Kulich 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: 6704812
    Abstract: A redundancy manager preferably in an I/O adapter has been disclosed to manage commands to peripheral devices in a computer system. These peripheral devices have multiple ports and may have a different bus associated with each port. The buses, referred to as independent pathways, moreover, need not have the same protocol. The redundancy manager determines the number of independent pathways connected to the peripheral device, presents only one logical device to the operating system and any device driver and any other command or device processing logic in the command path before the redundancy manager. For each incoming command, the redundancy manager determines which pathways are properly functioning and selects the best pathway for the command based on load balancing considerations and any ordering semantics that must be preserved in the incoming command and any outstanding commands and associated data that have not yet executed.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 30, 2000
    Date of Patent: March 9, 2004
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: Brian Eric Bakke, Scott Alan Bauman, Frederic Lawrence Huss, Andrew J Kulich, Laurel Scaife, Timothy Jerry Schimke
  • Publication number: 20020065962
    Abstract: A redundancy manager preferably in an I/O adapter has been disclosed to manage commands to peripheral devices in a computer system. These peripheral devices have multiple ports and may have a different bus associated with each port. The buses, referred to as independent pathways, moreover, need not have the same protocol. The redundancy manager determines the number of independent pathways connected to the peripheral device, presents only one logical device to the operating system and any device driver and any other command or device processing logic in the command path before the redundancy manager. For each incoming command, the redundancy manager determines which pathways are properly functioning and selects the best pathway for the command based on load balancing considerations and any ordering semantics that must be preserved in the incoming command and any outstanding commands and associated data that have not yet executed.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 30, 2000
    Publication date: May 30, 2002
    Applicant: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: Brian Eric Bakke, Scott Alan Bauman, Frederic Lawrence Huss, Andrew J. Kulich, Laurel Scaife, Timothy Jerry Schimke