Patents by Inventor Richard S. Reid

Richard S. Reid 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: 8239580
    Abstract: In a Local Area Network (LAN) system, an Ethernet adapter exchanges data with a host through programmed I/O (PIO) and FIFO buffers. The receive PIO employs a DMA ring buffer backup so incoming packets can be copied directly into host memory when the PIO FIFO buffer is full. The adapter may be programmed to generate early receive interrupts when only a portion of a packet has been received from the network, so as to decrease latency. The adapter may also be programmed to generate a second early interrupt so that the copying of a large packet to the host may overlap reception of the packet end. The adapter to begin packet transmission before the packet is completely transferred from the host to the adapter, which further reduces latency.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 4, 2010
    Date of Patent: August 7, 2012
    Assignee: U.S. Ethernet Innovations, LLC
    Inventors: Richard Hausman, Paul William Sherer, James P. Rivers, Cynthia Zikmund, Glenn W. Connery, Niles E. Strohl, Richard S. Reid
  • Patent number: 7899937
    Abstract: In a Local Area Network (LAN) system, an ethernet adapter exchanges data with a host through programmed I/O (PIO) and FIFO buffers. The receive PIO employs a DMA ring buffer backup so incoming packets can be copied directly into host memory when the PIO FIFO buffer is full. The adapter may be programmed to generate early receive interrupts when only a portion of a packet has been received from the network, so as to decrease latency. The adapter may also be programmed to generate a second early interrupt so that the copying of a large packet to the host may overlap reception of the packet end. The adapter to begin packet transmission before the packet is completely transferred from the host to the adapter, which further reduces latency.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 21, 2000
    Date of Patent: March 1, 2011
    Assignee: U.S. Ethernet Innovations, LLC
    Inventors: Richard Hausman, Paul William Sherer, James P. Rivers, Cynthia Zikmund, Glenn W. Connery, Niles E. Strohl, Richard S. Reid
  • Publication number: 20110047302
    Abstract: In a Local Area Network (LAN) system, an Ethernet adapter exchanges data with a host through programmed I/O (PIO) and FIFO buffers. The receive PIO employs a DMA ring buffer backup so incoming packets can be copied directly into host memory when the PIO FIFO buffer is full. The adapter may be programmed to generate early receive interrupts when only a portion of a packet has been received from the network, so as to decrease latency. The adapter may also be programmed to generate a second early interrupt so that the copying of a large packet to the host may overlap reception of the packet end. The adapter to begin packet transmission before the packet is completely transferred from the host to the adapter, which further reduces latency.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 4, 2010
    Publication date: February 24, 2011
    Applicant: U.S. ETHERNET INNOVATIONS
    Inventors: Richard Hausman, Paul William Sherer, James P. Rivers, Cynthia Zikmund, Glenn W. Connery, Niles E. Strohl, Richard S. Reid
  • Patent number: 6385672
    Abstract: The present invention provides a device which facilitates communications between a computer system and a data network by buffering data in transit between the computer system and the data network in a single buffer memory which can be flexibly partitioned into separate transmit and receive buffers. This flexible partitioning allows the relative sizes of the transmit and receive buffers to be optimized across a wide range of buses, data networks and network usage patterns. The transmit and receive buffers are structured as ring buffers within respectively allocated portions of the buffer memory. The buffer memory is controlled by a simple finite state machine controller, which is free from the performance impediments and higher cost associated with a microprocessor-based controller. The present invention also provides support for retransmission of packets that encounter transmission problems such as collisions during transmissions on the data network.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 20, 1997
    Date of Patent: May 7, 2002
    Assignee: 3Com Corporation
    Inventors: Chi-Lie Wang, Richard S. Reid
  • Patent number: 6112252
    Abstract: In a Local Area Network (LAN) system, an ethernet adapter exchanges data with a host through programmed I/O (PIO) and FIFO buffers. The receive PIO employs a DMA ring buffer backup so incoming packets can be copied directly into host memory when the PIO FIFO buffer is full. The adapter may be programmed to generate early receive interrupts when only a portion of a packet has been received from the network, so as to decrease latency. The adapter may also be programmed to generate a second early interrupt so that the copying of a large packet to the host may overlap reception of the packet end. The adapter to begin packet transmission before the packet is completely transferred from the host to the adapter, which further reduces latency.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 23, 1998
    Date of Patent: August 29, 2000
    Assignee: 3Com Corporation
    Inventors: Richard Hausman, Paul William Sherer, James P. Rivers, Cynthia Zikmund, Glenn W. Connery, Niles E. Strohl, Richard S. Reid
  • Patent number: 5872920
    Abstract: In a Local Area Network (LAN) system, an ethernet adapter exchanges data with a host through programmed I/O (PIO) and FIFO buffers. The receive PIO employs a DMA ring buffer backup so incoming packets can be copied directly into host memory when the PIO FIFO buffer is full. The adapter may be programmed to generate early receive interrupts when only a portion of a packet has been received from the network, so as to decrease latency. The adapter may also be programmed to generate a second early interrupt so that the copying of a large packet to the host may overlap reception of the packet end. The adapter may also be programmed to begin packet transmission before the packet is completely transferred from the host to the adapter, which further reduces latency.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 18, 1995
    Date of Patent: February 16, 1999
    Assignee: 3Com Corporation
    Inventors: Richard Hausman, Paul William Sherer, James P. Rivers, Cynthia Zikmund, Glenn W. Connery, Niles E. Strohl, Richard S. Reid
  • Patent number: 5485584
    Abstract: In a Local Area Network (LAN) system, an ethernet adapter exchanges data with a host through programmed I/O (PIO) and FIFO buffers. The receive PIO employs a DMA ring buffer backup so incoming packets can be copied directly into host memory when the PIO FIFO buffer is full. The adapter may be programmed to generate early receive interrupts when only a portion of a packet has been received from the network, so as to decrease latency. The adapter may also be programmed to generate a second early interrupt so that the copying of a large packet to the host may overlap reception of the packet end. The adapter to begin packet transmission before the packet is completely transferred from the host to the adapter, which further reduces latency.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 17, 1995
    Date of Patent: January 16, 1996
    Assignee: 3Com Corporation
    Inventors: Richard Hausman, Paul W. Sherer, James P. Rivers, Cynthia Zikmund, Glenn W. Connery, Niles E. Strohl, Richard S. Reid
  • Patent number: 5420987
    Abstract: In a computer system having a central processing unit which employs software drivers as part of a host for controlling peripheral units and including a bus for connecting with adapters for the peripheral units, wherein each adapter has distributed intelligence means for interpreting simple command information and a nonvolatile storage element for storing default configuration information, including a default port address for communication, a method is provided for configuring such intelligent adapters connected to the bus.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 19, 1993
    Date of Patent: May 30, 1995
    Assignee: 3 COM Corporation
    Inventors: Richard S. Reid, Niles Strohl, Glenn W. Connery, Paul W. Sherer, James P. Rivers
  • Patent number: 5412782
    Abstract: In a Local Area Network (LAN) system, an ethernet adapter exchanges data with a host through programmed I/O (PIO) and FIFO buffers. The receive PIO employs a DMA ring buffer backup so incoming packets can be copied directly into host memory when the PIO FIFO buffer is full. The adapter may be programmed to generate early receive interrupts when only a portion of a packet has been received from the network, so as to decrease latency. The adapter may also be programmed to generate a second early interrupt so that the copying of a large packet to the host may overlap reception of the packet end. The adapter may also be programmed to begin packet transmission before the packet is completely transferred from the host to the adapter, which further reduces latency.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 2, 1992
    Date of Patent: May 2, 1995
    Assignee: 3COM Corporation
    Inventors: Richard Hausman, Paul W. Sherer, James P. Rivers, Cynthia Zikmund, Glenn W. Connery, Niles E. Strohl, Richard S. Reid
  • Patent number: 5371892
    Abstract: A computer bus adapter device which is coupled to a true parallel computer bus is automatically set to a pre-determined configuration in response to configuration data provided to the bus by a host process. During a set-up portion of an initialization procedure, the adapter device recognizes a data sequence and uses information based on the recognized data sequence to configure itself to respond to its host process. In a specific embodiment, the desired configuration information is stored in non-volatile storage associated with the host process, such as a magnetic file or a non-volatile random access memory.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 30, 1992
    Date of Patent: December 6, 1994
    Assignee: 3COM Corporation
    Inventors: Brian A. Petersen, Richard S. Reid