The goal of this project is to demonstrate that gigabit LANs can effectively
replace the system bus in conventional workstations.
By rearchitecting around a network, processors and device resources all
reside in cyberspace.
Reaching a Watershed - Fundamental Shift in Scale
Sub-chip gigabit network interface
Allows use of the Internet inside as well as outside
computer architectures
Allows direct Internet-wide access to major devices
Project Objectives
Interface major device subsystems to a gigabit network
rather than to a system bus
Logically interface those subsystems via protocols
Devices Become Internet Hosts
Devices are not tied to a chassis, but to a network
Not memory-mapped, but network-mapped
Not physically, but logically interfaced
Project Investigations
Gigabit physical interface design
Device security and control
Very high-rate transport protocol and protocol stack design issues
Gregory G. Finn, An Integration of Network Communication with Workstation
Architecture
ACM Computer Communication Review
Oct. 1991,
the seminal Netstation paper abstract/
full paper in postscript
full paper in pdf
Danny Cohen, Gregory G. Finn, Robert Felderman and Annette
Deschon, The Use of Message-Based Multicomputer Components to Construct
Gigabit Networks
ACM Computer Communication Review, July 1993, abstract/
full paper in postscript
full paper in pdf
Netstation Project
presented to the National Storage Industry Consortium's
working group on Network Attached Storage Devices, at
Santa Clara University, Sept. 1, 1995.
Rodney Van Meter, A Brief Survey of Current Work on Network-Attached
Peripherals
ACM Operating Systems Review, January '96.
paper in postscript
paper in pdf
Rodney Van Meter, Steve Hotz and Gregory Finn, Derived Virtual Devices: A Secure Distributed File System
Mechanism
Proc. Fifth NASA Goddard Conference on Mass Storage Systems
and Technologies
Sept. 1996.
also presented at the 1996 Carnegie Mellon University
Parallel Data Systems Workshop and Retreat, at Wisp
Resort, Deep Creek, MD., Sept. 24, 1996.
abstract/
paper in postscript
paper in pdf
presentation slides in postscript
presentation slides in pdf
Gregory Finn, Steve Hotz and Rodney Van Meter, The Impact of a Zero-Scan Internet Checksumming Mechanism
ACM Computer Communication Review,
Oct. 1996.
abstract/
paper in postscript
paper in pdf
Papers, Presentations & Drafts 1997
Rodney Van Meter, Observing the Effects of Multi-Zone Disks
Proc. Usenix 1997 Annual Technical Conference,
Anaheim, Jan. 1997
abstract, paper and source available
here
Rodney Van Meter, Steve Hotz and Gregory G. Finn, Task Force on Network Storage Architecture:
Internet-attached storage devices
Proc. Hawaii International Conference on System
Sciences, Jan. 1997.
Position paper for the task
force that met in conjunction with the conference.
abstract/
one-page PostScript
one-page pdf
Gregory Finn, Craig Milo Rogers and Rodney Van Meter, Datagram Forwarding via Stateless Internetwork
Switching
IEEE Communications Society and NetWorld+Interop '97,
Engineers Conference on Broadband Access - Technologies,
Systems and Services, 7-8 May, 1997, Las Vegas, NV.
abstract
paper in postscript format
paper in pdf foramt presentation slides
Rodney Van Meter, Greg Finn, Steve Hotz and Dave Dyer, Response to the Collapsed LAN
letter to the editor in ACM Computer Architecture
News, Sept. 1997.
in postscript
in pdf
Steve Hotz, Rodney Van Meter, and Gregory Finn, Internet Protocols for Network-Attached Peripherals Sixth NASA Goddard Conference on Mass Storage Systems and
Technologies in conjunction with 15th IEEE Symposium on Mass
Storage Systems, March 1998.
full paper in postscript
full paper in pdf
Houh, H., Adam, J., Ismert, M., Lindblad, C., Tennenhouse, D.
The VuNet Desk Area Network: Architecture, Implementation, and
Experience IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in
Communications, May 1995.