Area:
Electronics and Electrical Engineering
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High-probability grants
According to our matching algorithm, Peter Danzig is the likely recipient of the following grants.
Years |
Recipients |
Code |
Title / Keywords |
Matching score |
1993 — 1997 |
Dubois, Michel [⬀] Danzig, Peter Pedram, Massoud (co-PI) [⬀] Saavedra, Rafael |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
The U.S.C. Multiprocessor Testbed: a Testbed For Scalable Shared-Memory Systems @ University of Southern California
Dubois A testbed for experimenting with memory hierarchies in multiprocessors is being supported. A processor node in the testbed contains cache and memory system controllers made from field-programmable gate arrays. To experiment with a memory control mechanism or coherency technique, the investigators program the gate arrays to implement the mechanism. For software support of experimental techniques, the GNU-C compiler is being modified to generate appropriate code, such as non-blocking prefetches, and the Mach microkernel is being ported to provide thread scheduling.
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1 |
1994 — 1999 |
Danzig, Peter |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Nyi: Flow, Congestion, and Admission Control Protocols For Packet Networks @ University of Southern California
9457518 Danzig This project deals with packet networks for computer communications. A major portion of the project deals with control algorithms, in the context of multimedia traffic, reserved-bandwidth channels, and high-bandwidth and asymmetric-bandwidth paths. Simulation and emulation are the tools utilized for performance evaluation, and the work contributes to as well as utilizes these tools. For the admission control algorithm to meet its delay bounds and maintain high link utilizations, must it know the traffic model a priori or can it adapt to observed traffic behavior? Is "predictive service" only usable with high-levels of multiplexing? What innovations are required for efficiently software implementation? Hybrid-simulations are under development to study high-bandwidth wide area networks. The tools are driven by artificial workload models of TCP/IP traffic. An emulator, consisting of 10-30 workstations configurable into arbitrary topologies, driven by the workload models, has been built and will be used to evaluate reliable multicast and traffic control and load sensitive routing algorithms. ***
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1 |