Patents by Inventor Casper A. Scalzi

Casper A. Scalzi 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: 5023773
    Abstract: A program authorization mechanism for authorizing access to an address space in the main memory of a computer system by a program being run under a multiple address space facility. An access-list entry is associated with each address space, each access-list entry being designated by an access-list-entry token contained in an access register. Each access-list entry includes a private indicator which indicates if the associated address space can be accessed by all programs from this access-list entry or if the associated address space can only be accessed by an authorized program. For program to be authorized, an extended authorization index in a control register must match an access-list extended authorization index in the access-list entry, or the extended authorization index value must be authorized in an authority table associated with the address space. An instruction for testing a given extended authorization index for a given access-list-entry is also disclosed.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 10, 1988
    Date of Patent: June 11, 1991
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: Richard I. Baum, Terry L. Borden, Justin R. Butwell, Carl E. Clark, Alan G. Ganek, James Lum, Michael G. Mall, David R. Page, Kenneth E. Plambeck, Casper A. Scalzi, Richard J. Schmalz
  • Patent number: 5008811
    Abstract: Within a data processing system, a control mechanism for supporting a data space without common segments in addition to traditional address spaces containing common segments. Logic for eliminating duplication of lookaside table entries for virtual addresses within shared segments, but not for identical virtual addresses within data address spaces is provided, as well as for overriding low address protection for store operations into data spaces. Thus, the entire virtual addressing range is available to programs wishing to use such data spaces for data isolation and data sharing.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 10, 1988
    Date of Patent: April 16, 1991
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corp.
    Inventors: Casper A. Scalzi, Richard J. Schmalz
  • Patent number: 4979098
    Abstract: A method and apparatus is provided to translate the contents of access registers into information for use in performing addressing functions for multiple virtual address spaces. The access registers represent the full addressing capability of the system but do not directly contain the addressing information. The system has a plurality of general purpose registers, a plurality of access registers associated with the general registers, an access list having access list entries which is addressed by the contents of the access register, memory storage for holding address space number second table entries (ASTE), where the contents of the access list entry locate the ASTE and where the ASTE contains the addressing information needed to translate a virtual address when combined with the contents of a general purpose register. Access register translation (ART) consists of the process of determining addressing information by using the access list entry and the ASTE.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 8, 1990
    Date of Patent: December 18, 1990
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: Richard I. Baum, Terry L. Borden, Justin R. Butwell, Carl E. Clark, Alan G. Ganek, James Lum, Michael G. Mall, Kenneth E. Plambeck, Casper A. Scalzi, Richard J. Schmalz, Ronald M. Smith, Julian Thomas
  • Patent number: 4843541
    Abstract: The embodiment discloses a method and means for partitioning the resources in a data processing system into a plurality of logical partitions. Host control code may be embodied in programming, microcode, or by special hardware to enable highly efficient operation of a plurality of preferred guest programming systems in the different partitions of the system. The main storage, expanded storage, the channel, and subchannel resources of a system are assigned to the different logical partitions in the system to enable a plurality of preferred guest programming systems to run simultaneously in the different partitions. This invention automatically relocates the absolute addresses of the I/O channel and subchannel resources in the system to their assigned partitions. Also the absolute and virtual addresses of the different guest programming systems are relocated into, as well as page addresses for any expanded storage, their assigned partitions.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 29, 1987
    Date of Patent: June 27, 1989
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: George H. Bean, Terry L. Borden, Mark S. Farrell, Peter H. Gum, Roger E. Hough, Francis E. Johnson, Donald W. McCauley, Mark E. Rakhmilevich, John C. Rathjen, Casper A. Scalzi, John F. Scanlon, Leslie W. Wyman
  • Patent number: 4564903
    Abstract: The disclosure provides a unique multiprocessing (MP) method for executing on plural CPUs of the MP a uniprocessor system (UPS) program not written to run on a MP system. Separate copies of the UPS are provided in the shared main storage (MS) of the MP. A hypervisor type of control program (called a partitioned multiprocessing system, PMP) uses the MP method to enable simultaneous execution of the plural copies of a UPS on different CPUs of the MP as UPS guest virtual machines. PMP can dedicate any CPU to the sole execution of a particular copy of UPS. The copies of the UPS run on the different CPUs independently of each other, but they may share I/O devices.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 5, 1983
    Date of Patent: January 14, 1986
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: Richard R. Guyette, Eddie T. Hall, Allan S. Meritt, Stephen R. Newson, Casper A. Scalzi, Glenn W. Sears, Jr.
  • Patent number: 4521846
    Abstract: The disclosure provides a general purpose register (GR) mask which associates predesignated address spaces with respective GRs assigned to contain a base value for calculating logical addresses within the address spaces. An address space mask register has a plurality of digit positions which receive the respective digit values comprising a particular GR mask. A respective digit position is selected by a base GR address signal provided by a storage address request from a CPU instruction decoder. The particular value of the selected digit in the mask register controls the selection among a plurality of STO registers, which designate a plurality of simultaneously available address spaces. The selected base GR is used in a System/370 B, D or X, B, D type of logical storage address representation. A base GR explicitly contains an intra-address-space base value.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 20, 1981
    Date of Patent: June 4, 1985
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: Casper A. Scalzi, Richard J. Schmalz
  • Patent number: 4355355
    Abstract: The detailed embodiment associates access registers (AR's) with the general purpose registers (GPR's) in a data processor. The AR's are each loaded with a unique STD (segment table descriptor). The STD comprises a segment table address in main storage and a segment table length field. There are 15 AR's associated respectively with 15 GPR's in a processor to define a subset of up to 15 data address spaces. The STD in an AR is selected for address translation when the associated GPR is selected as a storage operand base register, such as being the GPR selected by the B-field in an IBM System/370 instruction. The invention allows each AR to specify that it does not use the STD in its associated AR to define its data address space, but instead uses the STD in the program address space AR.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 19, 1980
    Date of Patent: October 19, 1982
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corp.
    Inventors: Justin R. Butwell, Casper A. Scalzi, Richard J. Schmalz