Search

Karl R Huppler

from Mantorville, MN
Age ~71

Karl Huppler Phones & Addresses

  • 60752 262Nd Ave, Mantorville, MN 55955 (507) 635-5468
  • 614 Walnut St, Mantorville, MN 55955
  • Kasson, MN
  • 60752 262Nd Ave, Mantorville, MN 55955

Publications

Us Patents

Method For Performing Dynamic Simulations Within Virtualized Environment

View page
US Patent:
7562003, Jul 14, 2009
Filed:
Sep 30, 2005
Appl. No.:
11/241696
Inventors:
Judith H. Bank - Cary NC, US
James N. Chen - Austin TX, US
Steven E. Froehlich - Danbury CT, US
Karl R. Huppler - Mantorville MN, US
Elisabeth R. Stahl - Shaker Heights OH, US
Assignee:
International Business Machines Corporation - Armonk NY
International Classification:
G06F 9/45
US Classification:
703 22
Abstract:
A method and apparatus for and article of manufacture for simulating workloads experienced by multiple partitions in a virtualized system are provided. A master workload driver initiates, coordinates and regulates one or more workload drivers that execute one or more workload simulation tasks in a logical partition. Further, each workload driver may be configured to report a measure of performance regarding the workload to the master control driver where results of many workload drivers may be correlated and analyzed. A configuration file specifies the characteristics of each simulation. Further, the rate and nature of workloads may be adjusted dynamically during a given simulation to model the performance under different real-world scenarios of different computational loads that may be experienced by the virtualized system.

Performing Dynamic Simulations Within Virtualized Environment

View page
US Patent:
8214194, Jul 3, 2012
Filed:
Jul 14, 2009
Appl. No.:
12/502815
Inventors:
Judith H. Bank - Cary NC, US
James N. Chen - Austin TX, US
Steven E. Froehlich - Danbury CT, US
Karl R. Huppler - Mantorville MN, US
Elisabeth R. Stahl - Shaker Heights OH, US
Assignee:
International Business Machines Corporation - Armonk NY
International Classification:
G06F 9/45
US Classification:
703 22, 709201, 718105
Abstract:
A method and apparatus for and article of manufacture for simulating workloads experienced by multiple partitions in a virtualized system are provided. A master workload driver initiates, coordinates and regulates one or more workload drivers that execute one or more workload simulation tasks in a logical partition. Further, each workload driver may be configured to report a measure of performance regarding the workload to the master control driver where results of many workload drivers may be correlated and analyzed. A configuration file specifies the characteristics of each simulation. Further, the rate and nature of workloads may be adjusted dynamically during a given simulation to model the performance under different real-world scenarios of different computational loads that may be experienced by the virtualized system.

Dynamic Allocation Of Computer Resources Based On Thread Type

View page
US Patent:
20040143833, Jul 22, 2004
Filed:
Jan 16, 2003
Appl. No.:
10/346147
Inventors:
Peter Heyrman - Rochester MN, US
Karl Huppler - Mantorville MN, US
Henry May - Mantorville MN, US
Kenneth Vossen - Mantorville MN, US
Assignee:
International Business Machines Corporation - Armonk NY
International Classification:
G06F009/46
US Classification:
718/100000
Abstract:
An apparatus, program product and method dynamically assign threads to computer resources in a multithreaded computer including a plurality of physical subsystems based upon specific “types” associated with such threads. In particular, thread types are allocated resources that are resident within the same physical subsystem in a computer, such that newly created threads and/or reactivated threads of those particular thread types are dynamically assigned to the resources allocated to their respective thread types. As such, those threads sharing the same type are generally assigned to computer resources that are resident within the same physical subsystem of a computer, which often reduces cross traffic between multiple physical subsystems resident in a computer, and thus improves overall system performance.
Karl R Huppler from Mantorville, MN, age ~71 Get Report