Patents by Inventor George A. Rudeseal
George A. Rudeseal 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).
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Patent number: 7185168Abstract: A direct access storage system includes at least one disk and a controller. The at least one disk physically may be partitioned into at least one first access performance partition and at least one other access performance partition. The controller may be configured to process I/O accesses to the first access performance partition without regulation and regulate I/O accesses to the at least one other access performance partition.Type: GrantFiled: December 2, 2005Date of Patent: February 27, 2007Assignee: Storage Technology CorporationInventors: George A. Rudeseal, Robert F. Walsh, Stephen S. Selkirk
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Publication number: 20060143315Abstract: A direct access storage system includes at least one disk and a controller. The at least one disk physically may be partitioned into at least one first access performance partition and at least one other access performance partition. The controller may be configured to process I/O accesses to the first access performance partition without regulation and regulate I/O accesses to the at least one other access performance partition.Type: ApplicationFiled: December 2, 2005Publication date: June 29, 2006Applicant: Storage Technology CorporationInventors: George Rudeseal, Robert Walsh, Stephen Selkirk
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Patent number: 7000088Abstract: A direct access storage system includes at least one disk and a controller. The at least one disk physically may be partitioned into at least one first access performance partition and at least one other access performance partition. The controller may be configured to process I/O accesses to the first access performance partition without regulation and regulate I/O accesses to the at least one other access performance partition.Type: GrantFiled: December 27, 2002Date of Patent: February 14, 2006Assignee: Storage Technology CorporationInventors: George A. Rudeseal, Robert F. Walsh, Stephen S. Selkirk
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Patent number: 5632012Abstract: One or more background processes that references data storage volumes and cylinders that are to be scrubbed to ensure the integrity of the data stored thereon. A priority scrubbing process is also available to note data storage volumes that have recently had data written thereon by the host processor and which require a more timely review of the data than less frequently used volumes.Type: GrantFiled: March 6, 1996Date of Patent: May 20, 1997Assignee: Storage Technology CorporationInventors: Jay S. Belsan, Alan R. Permut, George A. Rudeseal
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Patent number: 5581724Abstract: A data storage subsystem dynamically maps a virtual data storage device image presented to associated processors to physical data storage devices used to implement the data storage subsystem. Multiple destage memory elements are concurrently active to increase an aggregate destage data transfer rate and to allow data to be stored on various memory elements appropriate to the type of data contained in each stored virtual object. An open logical cylinder list is used to maintain data integrity among multiple open destage memory elements. Memory elements are also selected to function as archive memory. The data storage subsystem includes a plurality of data storage elements configured into at least two redundancy groups, each redundancy group including n+m of the data storage elements, and a cache memory connected to the redundancy groups and a host processor interface.Type: GrantFiled: May 12, 1995Date of Patent: December 3, 1996Assignee: Storage Technology CorporationInventors: Jay S. Belsan, George A. Rudeseal, Charles A. Milligan
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Patent number: 5459857Abstract: A pair of operationally independent disk drive array data storage subsystems are used to emulate one or more physical devices shared between two control modules. The storage control units of the two data storage subsystems are interconnected by at least one data link to exchange control and data signals therebetween. The storage control units of both data storage subsystems are synchronized to maintain identical virtual device images of certain assigned virtual devices both of the data storage subsystems wherein the duplicated data records of the single virtual device are stored. The data records are therefore stored in available memory on both of the two data storage subsystems. Data is exchanged over the data link to maintain consistency of the two sets of mapping tables.Type: GrantFiled: September 27, 1994Date of Patent: October 17, 1995Assignee: Storage Technology CorporationInventors: Henry S. Ludlam, Charles A. Milligan, George A. Rudeseal, Paul R. Swiatek
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Patent number: 5430855Abstract: The data storage subsystem is implemented using an array of data storage elements which vary in data storage characteristics and/or data storage capacity. Control apparatus automatically compensates for any nonuniformity among the data storage elements by selecting a set of physical characteristics that define a common data storage element format. The selected set of physical characteristics may not match any of the disk drives but each disk drive can emulate these selected characteristics. This capability enables the disk drives in the data storage subsystem to be replaced by nonidentical disk drives in a nondisruptive manner to provide continuous data availability.Type: GrantFiled: August 31, 1994Date of Patent: July 4, 1995Assignee: Storage Technology CorporationInventors: Robert Walsh, George A. Rudeseal, Jay S. Belsan
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Patent number: 5410667Abstract: The disk drive array data storage subsystem maps between virtual and physical data storage devices and schedules the writing of data to these devices. The data storage subsystem functions as a conventional large form factor disk drive memory, using an array of redundancy groups, each containing N+M disk drives. This system copies data records by simply creating a duplicate data record pointer in a virtual track directory to reference the original data record. This enables the host processor to access the data record via two virtual addresses while only a single physical copy of the data record resides in the data storage subsystem.Type: GrantFiled: April 17, 1992Date of Patent: April 25, 1995Assignee: Storage Technology CorporationInventors: Jay S. Belsan, Charles A. Milligan, John T. O'Brien, George A. Rudeseal
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Patent number: 5403639Abstract: This file server system appears to the host computer to be a plurality of data storage devices which are directly addressable by the host computer using the native data management and access structures of the host computer. The file server however is an intelligent data storage subsystem that defines, manages and accesses synchronized sets of data and maintains these synchronized sets of data external from the host computer system's data management facilities in a manner that is completely transparent to the host computer. This is accomplished by the use of the snapshot application data group that extends the traditional sequential data set processing concept of generation data groups.Type: GrantFiled: September 2, 1992Date of Patent: April 4, 1995Assignee: Storage Technology CorporationInventors: Jay S. Belsan, Jeffrey S. Laughlin, Mogens H. Pedersen, Robert J. Raicer, George A. Rudeseal, Charles P. Schafer, Barbara L. Steele, Patrick J. Tomsula
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Patent number: 5247638Abstract: The use of a dynamically mapped virtual memory system permits the storage of data so that each data record occupies only the physical space required for the data. Furthermore, the data storage subsystem manages the allocation of physical space on the disk drives and does not rely on the file extent defined in the count key data format. Data compaction apparatus is provided to remove the gaps contained in the stream of count key data records received from the host processor. A data compression algorithm is then used to compress the received data into a compressed format for storage on the disk drives. It is the compacted, compressed data that is finally stored on the disk drives. Furthermore, any data record received from the host processor absent data in the user data field therein is simply listed in the virtual memory map as a null field occupying no physical space on the disk drives.Type: GrantFiled: June 18, 1990Date of Patent: September 21, 1993Assignee: Storage Technology CorporationInventors: John T. O'Brien, George A. Rudeseal, Charles A. Milligan, Craig A. Buhlman
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Patent number: 5239659Abstract: This apparatus makes use of a disk drive array to store data records for an associated host processor. This disk drive array emulates the operation of a large form factor disk drive by using a plurality of interconnected small form factor disk drives. These small form factor disk drives are configured into redundancy groups, each of which contains n+m disk drives for storing data records and redundancy information thereon. The use of this configuration is significantly more reliable than a large form factor disk drive. However, in order to maintain compatibility with host processors that request the duplex copy group feature, the phantom duplex copy group apparatus of the present invention mimics the creation of a duplex copy group in this dynamically mapped data storage subsystem using a disk array and a phantom set of pointers that mimic the data storage devices on which the data records are stored.Type: GrantFiled: June 19, 1991Date of Patent: August 24, 1993Assignee: Storage Technology CorporationInventors: George A. Rudeseal, Henry S. Ludlam, Jay S. Belsan
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Patent number: 5210866Abstract: The parallel disk drive array data storage subsystem dynamically maps between virtual and physical data storage devices and schedules the writing of data to these devices. The data storage subsystem functions as a conventional large form factor disk drive memory, using an array of redundancy groups, each containing N+M disk drives. The data storage subsystem does not modify data stored in a redundancy group but simply writes the modified data as a new record in available memory space on another redundancy group. The original data is flagged as obsolete. A mapping table is maintained to identify portions of these redundancy groups which contain newly written or modified virtual track instances. These marked virtual track instances are written to backup medium as a background process and the mapping table is updated to clear the flags that identify these virtual track instances as having been modified.Type: GrantFiled: September 12, 1990Date of Patent: May 11, 1993Assignee: Storage Technology CorporationInventors: Charles A. Milligan, George A. Rudeseal, Jay S. Belsan
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Patent number: 5193184Abstract: The deleted dataset space release system provides facilities in a dynamically mapped virtual memory data storage subsystem to immediately release the physical space occupied by a deleted dataset for use by the data storage subsystem to store subsequently received data files. This system also provides data security by preventing the unauthorized access to the data of scratched data files, both in cache memory and on the data storage devices. The deleted dataset space release system utilizes a user exit in the host processor data file scratch routine to transmit information to the data storage subsystem indicative of the host processor data file scratch activity. Existing channel command words are used in a manner that is transparent to the host processor. The data storage subsystem thereby immediately receives an indication that the host processor is scratching a data file from the volume table of contents of a virtual volume.Type: GrantFiled: June 18, 1990Date of Patent: March 9, 1993Assignee: Storage Technology CorporationInventors: Jay S. Belsan, George A. Rudeseal, Charles A. Milligan, Mogens H. Pedersen, John F. Kitchen, Henry S. Ludlam
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Patent number: 5155845Abstract: A disk storage system that writes multiple copies of records directed to user-specified volumes. A plurality of spaced apart control units interconnected by direct data links and a corresponding plurality of sets of recording means communicate over the direct data links when a write request is received by one control unit to cause one volume in each set of recording means to write a copy of the received record.Type: GrantFiled: June 15, 1990Date of Patent: October 13, 1992Assignee: Storage Technology CorporationInventors: David G. Beal, Fred C. Eifert, Henry S. Ludlam, Charles A. Milligan, George A. Rudeseal, Paul R. Swiatek
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Patent number: 5124987Abstract: The parallel disk drive array data storage subsystem maps between virtual and physical data storage devices and schedules the writing of data to these devices. The data storage subsytem functions as a conventional large form factor disk drive memory, using an array of redundancy groups, each containing N+M disk drives. A performance improvement is obtained by eliminating redundancy data updates in the redundancy group by writing modified virtual track instances into previously emptied logical tracks and marking the data contained in the previous virtual track instance location as invalid. Logical cylinders containing a mixture of valid and invalid virtual tracks are emptied by writing all the valid virtual tracks into a previously emptied logical cylinder as a background process.Type: GrantFiled: April 16, 1990Date of Patent: June 23, 1992Assignee: Storage Technology CorporationInventors: Charles A. Milligan, George A. Rudeseal
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Patent number: 5077736Abstract: The disk drive memory of the present invention uses a large plurality of small form factor disk drives to implement an inexpensive, high performance, high reliability disk drive memory that emulates the format and capability of large form factor disk drives. The plurality of disk drives are switchably interconnectable to form redundancy groups of N+M parallel connnected disk drives to store data thereon. The N+M disk drives are used to store the N segments of each data word plus M redundancy segments. In addition, a pool of R backup disk drives is maintained to automatically substitute a replacement disk drive for a disk drive in a redundancy group that fails during operation. The number N of data segments in each data redundancy group can be varied throughout the disk drive memory to thereby match the characteristics of the input data or operational parameters within the disk drive memory.Type: GrantFiled: February 13, 1990Date of Patent: December 31, 1991Assignee: Storage Technology CorporationInventors: Robert H. Dunphy, Jr., Robert Walsh, John H. Bowers, George A. Rudeseal