Patents by Inventor Roger D. Turner

Roger D. Turner 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: 5491693
    Abstract: A multiprotocol transport network (MPTN) gateway provides transparent interconnection of two or more SPTNs running different transport layer protocols to form an integrated heterogeneous MPTN. The MPTN gateway of the present invention has no dependencies on the particular transport protocols running on the SPTNs being interconnected as it utilizes a common transport provider (a Gateway Services Protocol Boundary (GSPB)) between the SPTN transport protocols and the gateway components. The MPTN gateway supports connections between end systems across multiple intermediate networks. The MPTN gateway provides automatic routing based on dynamic participation in the routing protocols of the interconnected SPTNs so that any number of gateways may be interconnected and in any topology desired. As the MPTN gateway has a general architecture and acquires routing information automatically, it supports not only other MPTN nodes and gateways but also non-MPTN nodes and gateways.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 1, 1994
    Date of Patent: February 13, 1996
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: Kathryn H. Britton, Tein-Yaw Chung, Willibald Doeringer, Harold D. Dykeman, Allan K. Edwards, Johny Mathew, Diane P. Pozefsky, Soumitra Sarkar, Roger D. Turner
  • Patent number: 5425028
    Abstract: The present invention is a general solution to the problem address incompatibility between application programs and transport services. The invention may be embodied in a method for mapping the application program address (program address) to the transport services address (transport Provider address). According to the method, a program address is registered in the network so that it becomes available to other programs that understand the address, even if they are running over a transport protocol that does not understand the address format. When a request is made that a connection be established between a program and a program partner or that a datagram be sent therebetween, the program address is mapped to the transport Provider address (if necessary). The program address is then conveyed to the program partner so that it knows who it is talking to.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 16, 1992
    Date of Patent: June 13, 1995
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: Kathryn H. Britton, Tein-Yaw D. Chung, Willibald A. Doeringer, Douglas H. Dykeman, Allan K. Edwards, Johny Mathew, Diane P. Pozefsky, Soumitra Sarkar, Roger D. Turner
  • Patent number: 5361256
    Abstract: Disclosed are a method and a system for transmitting a message or data packet from a single sender (21) to a plurality, i.e. a group of receivers, usually called multicasting, within a conventional unicast transmission network, i.e. a network basically not equipped to handle such multicast transmissions, consisting of a plurality of subnetworks (22-24). The nodes or gateways (25-29) connecting the subnetworks maintain tables of multicast receiving stations (or groups of such) and the header of each message includes information defining the groups of the addressed multicast receiving stations.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 27, 1993
    Date of Patent: November 1, 1994
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: Willibald Doeringer, Douglas Dykeman, Allan K. Edwards, Diane P. Pozefsky, Soumitra Sarkar, Roger D. Turner
  • Patent number: 5224098
    Abstract: A Transport Layer Protocol Boundary (TLPB) architecture is described which will permit an application program to run over a non-native transport protocol without first generating a protocol compensation package tailored to the transport protocols assumed by the program's application programming interface and by the available transport provider. All transport functions required by the program are converted to standardized or TLPB representations. When a connection between the first application program and a second remote application is requested, the individual required TLPB transport functions are compared to corresponding functions supported by the transport provider. Compensations are invoked only where there is a mismatch. The node on which the remote application program runs is informed of the compensations so that necessary de-compensation operations can be performed before the data is delivered to the remote application program.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 17, 1991
    Date of Patent: June 29, 1993
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: Raymond F. Bird, Kathryn H. Britton, Tein-Yaw D. Chung, Allan K. Edwards, Johny Mathew, Diane P. Pozefsky, Soumitra Sarkar, Roger D. Turner, Winston W. Chung, Yue T. Yeung, James P. Gray, Harold D. Dykeman, Willibald A. Doeringer, Joshua S. Auerbach, John H. Wilson