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Virtual Instruments Assigned Three Patents

VM processor and memory resource coordinator, automatically determining locations of network monitors in communication network, cross silo time stiching

Virtual machine processor and memory resource coordinator
Virtual Instruments Corporation, San Jose, CA, has been assigned a patent (
10,103,956) developed by Niestemski, Francis, Mountain View, CA, and York, Nicholas, San Ramon, CA, for “virtual machine processor and memory resource coordinator.

The abstract of the patent published by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office states: “A network monitor is used to determine resource, (e.g., CPU, memory, storage, or network) utilization of one or more virtual machines on one or more corresponding servers. Using resource utilization data for an original configuration of the virtual machines on the servers, the described system and methods simulate reconfigurations of various VMs on servers, determines resource utilization of the simulated reconfigurations, and proposes a reconfiguration that results in lower resource utilization across the one or more corresponding servers.

The patent application was filed on September 30, 2014 (14/501,820).

Automatically determining locations of network monitors in communication network
Virtual Instruments Corporation, San Jose, CA, has been assigned a patent (10,020,994) developed by Cuni, Genti, Mountain View, CA, Szumel, Leo, South Lake Tahoe, CA, and Schondelmayer, Adam H., Campbell, CA, for an “automatically determining locations of network monitors in a communication network.

The abstract of the patent published by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office states: “Automatically identifying a location of a network monitor within a network topology is described. A location of a network monitor within a network topology, (which can, and often does, change structure, constituent devices, or both) is determined by monitoring transmissions passing through the network link to which the network monitor is connected. The network monitor uses locally unique device identifiers present in a network transmission to identify the devices or ports most commonly communicating with each other.

The patent application was filed on April 15, 2014 (14/253,141).

Cross silo time stiching
Virtual Instruments Corporation, San Jose, CA, has been assigned a patent (10,009,237) developed by Sanders, Derek, Saratoga, CA, Jagannathan, Rangaswamy, Sunnyvale, CA, and Lee, Rosanna, Palo Alto, CA, for a “cross silo time stiching.

The abstract of the patent published by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office states: “A monitoring device responds to status data pushed from a network device, and also manages a link with another network device, the link allowing the monitoring device to pull status data from the second network device. The monitoring device receives packets including status, the data indicating activity for one or more clock ticks. The monitoring device can compute statistical measures, rather than the network device. The monitoring device maintains the status data in a buffer. The monitoring device lags actual activity, but has is more likely to capture delayed packets. The network device sends packets as wrappers, each wrapper indicating sets of status information. When the information in a wrapper crosses a clock tick boundary, the monitoring device allocates reported activity among clock ticks, assuming that activity follows a uniform distribution.

The patent application was filed on August 24, 2015 (14/834,371).

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