Patents by Inventor Michael J. Noeth

Michael J. Noeth 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: 10706169
    Abstract: Techniques are presented for implementing a scalable approach to keeping track of the metadata validity of persistently-stored metadata for storage objects. In contrast with prior approaches, improved techniques only store a list of the invalid (or quarantined) objects rather than all objects regardless of validity of their metadata. Under normal circumstances, only a small number of storage objects are invalid at any given time, as the system generally takes steps to repair the invalid objects in the normal course of operation. Thus, the number of invalid objects tends to be small, barring some catastrophic system failure. Only a small amount of expensive privileged persistent storage is therefore needed. A health level may also be used to indicate many failures, indicative of catastrophic system failure.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 31, 2018
    Date of Patent: July 7, 2020
    Assignee: EMC IP Holding Company LLC
    Inventors: Michael Paul Wagner, Michael C. Brundage, Alan L. Taylor, Michael J. Noeth, Peter J. McCann, Steven A. Morley
  • Publication number: 20200210606
    Abstract: Techniques are presented for implementing a scalable approach to keeping track of the metadata validity of persistently-stored metadata for storage objects. In contrast with prior approaches, improved techniques only store a list of the invalid (or quarantined) objects rather than all objects regardless of validity of their metadata. Under normal circumstances, only a small number of storage objects are invalid at any given time, as the system generally takes steps to repair the invalid objects in the normal course of operation. Thus, the number of invalid objects tends to be small, barring some catastrophic system failure. Only a small amount of expensive privileged persistent storage is therefore needed. A health level may also be used to indicate many failures, indicative of catastrophic system failure.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 31, 2018
    Publication date: July 2, 2020
    Inventors: Michael Paul Wagner, Michael C. Brundage, Alan L. Taylor, Michael J. Noeth, Peter J. McCann, Steven A. Morley