Patents by Inventor Mark Neal Ziebarth
Mark Neal Ziebarth 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: 8285872Abstract: A router receives a transaction message. The router determines whether the transaction message may include an affinity indicating a preference regarding processing of the transaction message. The transaction message may be modified to include an identification of a server system to process the modified transaction message based on the determination of the affinity. The router may route the modified transaction message to a coupling facility. A notification message may be received from the coupling facility, where the notification message requests a server associated with or including the router to send a bid to process the modified transaction message. The router may send the bid to process the modified transaction message to the coupling facility. An authorization message, to process the modified transaction message, may be received from the coupling facility based on a timestamp of the bid.Type: GrantFiled: January 23, 2012Date of Patent: October 9, 2012Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Michael Bruce Kennedy, Robert Mark Magid, Mark Neal Ziebarth
-
Publication number: 20120124237Abstract: A router receives a transaction message. The router determines whether the transaction message may include an affinity indicating a preference regarding processing of the transaction message. The transaction message may be modified to include an identification of a server system to process the modified transaction message based on the determination of the affinity. The router may route the modified transaction message to a coupling facility. A notification message may be received from the coupling facility, where the notification message requests a server associated with or including the router to send a bid to process the modified transaction message. The router may send the bid to process the modified transaction message to the coupling facility. An authorization message, to process the modified transaction message, may be received from the coupling facility based on a timestamp of the bid.Type: ApplicationFiled: January 23, 2012Publication date: May 17, 2012Applicant: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Michael Bruce Kennedy, Robert Mark Magid, Mark Neal Ziebarth
-
Patent number: 8131872Abstract: A transaction message is received at a router. A determination is made whether the transaction message includes an affinity. The affinity indicates an administrator-specified preference regarding processing of the transaction message. When the transaction message includes the affinity, a server system to process the transaction message is identified based on the affinity and based on a system affinity of the server system. The system affinity specifies processing characteristics of the server system. The server system includes a set of servers. The transaction message is modified to identify the server system and routed to a message queue.Type: GrantFiled: May 30, 2008Date of Patent: March 6, 2012Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Michael Bruce Kennedy, Robert Mark Magid, Mark Neal Ziebarth
-
Patent number: 7814176Abstract: A system for satisfying a request from a client for a send-then-commit transaction includes a front-end information management system (IMS) server. Shared message queues (SMQ) communicate with the front-end IMS server and plural back-end IMS. The front-end IMS server receives the request from the client and transmits the request to the SMQ. A back-end IMS server accesses the SMQ and generates a transaction output in response to the request. The back-end IMS server transmits the result to the front-end IMS server and the front-end IMS server interfaces with the client to communicate the response thereto. The back-end IMS server and front-end IMS server operate in separate system images, but work together in a resource recovery services (RRS) environment to commit or backout the transaction output.Type: GrantFiled: May 30, 2008Date of Patent: October 12, 2010Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Steven Michael Bock, Thomas Phillip Bridges, Richard G. Hannan, Steve T. Kuo, Richard Schneider, Judy Y. Tse, Vern Lee Watts, Jack Chiu-Chiu Yuan, Jerome Joseph Zentner, Mark Neal Ziebarth
-
Publication number: 20090296711Abstract: A transaction message is received at a router. A determination is made whether the transaction message includes an affinity. The affinity indicates an administrator-specified preference regarding processing of the transaction message. When the transaction message includes the affinity, a server system to process the transaction message is identified based on the affinity and based on a system affinity of the server system. The system affinity specifies processing characteristics of the server system. The server system includes a set of servers. The transaction message is modified to identify the server system and routed to a message queue.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 30, 2008Publication date: December 3, 2009Applicant: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Michael Bruce Kennedy, Robert Mark Magid, Mark Neal Ziebarth
-
Publication number: 20080228872Abstract: A system for satisfying a request from a client for a send-then-commit transaction includes a front-end information management system (IMS) server. Shared message queues (SMQ) communicate with the front-end IMS server and plural back-end IMS. The front-end IMS server receives the request from the client and transmits the request to the SMQ. A back-end IMS server accesses the SMQ and generates a transaction output in response to the request. The back-end IMS server transmits the result to the front-end IMS server and the front-end IMS server interfaces with the client to communicate the response thereto. The back-end IMS server and front-end IMS server operate in separate system images, but work together in a resource recovery services (RRS) environment to commit or backout the transaction output.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 30, 2008Publication date: September 18, 2008Inventors: Steven Michael Bock, Thomas Phillip Bridges, Richard G. Hannan, Steve T. Kuo, Richard Schneider, Judy Y. Tse, Vern Lee Watts, Jack Chiu-Chiu Yuan, Jerome Joseph Zentner, Mark Neal Ziebarth
-
Patent number: 7406511Abstract: A system for satisfying a request from a client for a send-then-commit transaction includes a front-end information management system (IMS) server. Shared message queues (SMQ) communicate with the front-end IMS server and plural back-end IMS. The front-end IMS server receives the request from the client and transmits the request to the SMQ. A back-end IMS server accesses the SMQ and generates a transaction output in response to the request. The back-end IMS server transmits the result to the front-end IMS server and the front-end IMS server interfaces with the client to communicate the response thereto. The back-end IMS server and front-end IMS server operate in separate system images, but work together in a resource recovery services (RRS) environment to commit or backout the transaction output.Type: GrantFiled: August 26, 2002Date of Patent: July 29, 2008Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Steven Michael Bock, Thomas Phillip Bridges, Richard G. Hannan, Steve T. Kuo, Richard Schneider, Judy Y. Tse, Vern Lee Watts, Jack Chiu-Chiu Yuan, Jerome Joseph Zentner, Mark Neal Ziebarth
-
Publication number: 20040039777Abstract: A system for satisfying a request from a client for a send-then-commit transaction includes a front-end information management system (IMS) server. Shared message queues (SMQ) communicate with the front-end IMS server and plural back-end IMS. The front-end IMS server receives the request from the client and transmits the request to the SMQ. A back-end IMS server accesses the SMQ and generates a transaction output in response to the request. The back-end IMS server transmits the result to the front-end IMS server and the front-end IMS server interfaces with the client to communicate the response thereto. The back-end IMS server and front-end IMS server operate in separate system images, but work together in a resource recovery services (RRS) environment to commit or backout the transaction output.Type: ApplicationFiled: August 26, 2002Publication date: February 26, 2004Applicant: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Steven Michael Bock, Thomas Phillip Bridges, Richard G. Hannan, Steve T. Kuo, Richard Schneider, Judy Y. Tse, Vern Lee Watts, Jack Chiu-Chiu Yuan, Jerome Joseph Zentner, Mark Neal Ziebarth