Patents by Inventor Robert H. Beers

Robert H. Beers 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).

  • Publication number: 20080162661
    Abstract: A system and method for implementing a cache coherency protocol are described. The system includes a first caching agent to send a first cache request to a home agent. The system also includes the home agent including a queue to store the first cache request.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 29, 2006
    Publication date: July 3, 2008
    Inventors: Phanindra K. Mannava, Robert H. Beers, SeungJoon Park, Brannon Baxton
  • Patent number: 6954829
    Abstract: A conflict resolution technique provides consistency such that all conflicts can be detected by at least one of the conflicting requestors if each node monitors all requests after that node has made its own request. If a line is in the Exclusive, Modified or Forward state, conflicts are resolved at the node holding the unique copy. The winner of the conflict resolution, and possibly the losers, report the conflict to the home node, which pairs conflict reports and issues forwarding instructions to assure that all requesting nodes eventually receive the requested data. If a requested cache line is either uncached or present only in the Shared state, the home node provides a copy of the cache node and resolves conflicts. In one embodiment, a blackout period after all responses until an acknowledgement message has been received allows all conflicting nodes to be aware of conflicts in which they are involved.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 19, 2002
    Date of Patent: October 11, 2005
    Assignee: Intel Corporation
    Inventors: Robert H. Beers, Herbert H. J. Hum, James R. Goodman
  • Publication number: 20040123052
    Abstract: A conflict resolution technique provides consistency such that all conflicts can be detected by at least one of the conflicting requestors if each node monitors all requests after that node has made its own request. If a line is in the Exclusive, Modified or Forward state, conflicts are resolved at the node holding the unique copy. The winner of the conflict resolution, and possibly the losers, report the conflict to the home node, which pairs conflict reports and issues forwarding instructions to assure that all requesting nodes eventually receive the requested data. If a requested cache line is either uncached or present only in the Shared state, the home node provides a copy of the cache node and resolves conflicts. In one embodiment, a blackout period after all responses until an acknowledgement message has been received allows all conflicting nodes to be aware of conflicts in which they are involved.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 19, 2002
    Publication date: June 24, 2004
    Inventors: Robert H. Beers, Herbert H.J. Hum, James R. Goodman
  • Publication number: 20040122966
    Abstract: A conflict resolution technique provides consistency such that all conflicts can be detected by at least one of the conflicting requesters if each node monitors all requests after that node has made its own request. If a line is in the Exclusive, Modified or Forward state, conflicts are resolved at the node holding the unique copy. The winner of the conflict resolution, and possibly the losers, report the conflict to the home node, which pairs conflict reports and issues forwarding instructions to assure that all requesting nodes eventually receive the requested data. If a requested cache line is either uncached or present only in the Shared state, the home node provides a copy of the cache node and resolves conflicts. In one embodiment, a blackout period after all responses until an acknowledgement message has been received allows all conflicting nodes to be aware of conflicts in which they are involved.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 19, 2002
    Publication date: June 24, 2004
    Inventors: Herbert H. J. Hum, James R. Goodman, Robert H. Beers, Rajnish Ghughal