Microsoft Sued Over TCP/IP offload technology 19
soldack writes "Microsoft has been working on a technology for full offload of TCP/IP processing in windows to a smart NIC. It was due to arrive in an update to Windows Server 2003 but never made it. Now know why: it appears they have been sued by Alacritech for patent violation and Alacritech has won an injunction.
See
this article on Microsoft Watch for a story on it and here for Alacritech's view on it.
It is pretty interesting to see a little company trying to take on Microsoft for seemingly ripping them off and getting this far. It probably helps that they were founded by Larry Boucher, who "led the engineering team that developed the SCSI interface at Shugart Associates" and also founded Adaptec. See Alacritech's site for more. Lots of TOE/RNIC companies were effected by this since they were depending on Microsoft's software and do not have their own solution. This technology is becoming more important as the industry moves to multiple 1 gigabit interfaces and single or multiple 10 gigabit interfaces. It may be critical for technologies like iWarp (RDMA over TCP/IP) and iSCSI (SCSI over TCP/IP) to perform well."
Greenmail (Score:2)
Re:Greenmail (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Greenmail (Score:2)
"Alacritech claims that it discussed its technology with Microsoft in 1998 and that Microsoft subsequently cut off communication with the company. In May 2003, Microsoft demonstrated a technology it called "Chimney" that Alacritech said was similar to its own intellectual property. Alacritech offered Microsoft a license, but Microsoft rejected Alacritech's terms, and
Re:Greenmail (Score:1)
Re:Greenmail (Score:2)
In your hypothetical world there wouldn't be anything they could sue them about - Microsoft going off and reimplementing someone else's software on their own would be perfectly legal.
Been done. (Score:4, Interesting)
Not with TCP/IP, but I've seen (not worked with) boards to offload network processing from the host machine. They ran in mainframes or VAXen, and other such large machines about 20 years ago. Never caught on though because you still need a reliable protocol to talk to the offload processor. (I was only aware that a box up on the top shelf contained such things, I'm not sure how they work, but could be prior art)
Re:Been done. (Score:2)
Now, Microsoft might say that the technology already existed, but its too specialized, with parts on the CPU and parts on the Network card. I suspect Microsoft will just license the technology and end suit but not after trying years of legal bills.
http://www.alacri [alacritech.com]
Re:Been done. (Score:2)
HPUX (Score:3, Informative)
What the PDP's used in 1969 (Score:1)
A little perspective: A $10 NIC is 'smart' enough with the system turned off to monitor traffic for smart packets meant for its MAC...
Different from 3COM? (Score:2)
Mark
Re:Different from 3COM? (Score:3, Informative)
All of the top NICs (3com, broadcom, intel) support this. Microft was working on offloading all of TCP/IP processing. In theory, the NICs have ASICs and/or network processors that can handle high speed (think > 1 gigabit) TCP/IP processing and the OS just gives it data to send and a place to receive.
Depending on what yo
Dupe (Score:1)