Ex Parte Allen et alDownload PDFPatent Trials and Appeals BoardMay 12, 201411011244 - (D) (P.T.A.B. May. 12, 2014) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ____________________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ____________________ Ex parte JAMES P. ALLEN, DANIEL G. EISENHAUER, GILES ROGER FRAZIER, ROBERT GEORGE KOVACS, and SATYA PRAKESH SHARMA ____________________ Appeal 2011-012458 Application 11/011,244 Technology Center 2400 ____________________ Before: JOHN C. KERINS, ANNETTE R. REIMERS, and JILL D. HILL, Administrative Patent Judges. HILL, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appeal 2011-012458 Application 11/011,244 2 STATEMENT OF THE CASE James P. Allen et al. (Appellants) appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134 from the Examiner’s decision rejecting claims 43-72. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We AFFIRM-IN-PART. The Claimed Subject Matter Claims 43, 48, 53, 58, 63, and 68 are independent. Claim 43, reproduced below, is illustrative of the claimed subject matter, with disputed limitations emphasized. 43. A method for migrating an operating system from a source computer to a destination computer, the method comprising: identifying a destination adapter of the destination computer that is coupled for data communications to a storage area network that is also coupled for data communications to a source adapter of the source computer; identifying a zone of the storage area network for the source adapter; removing the source adapter from the zone; adding the destination adapter to the zone; after adding the destination adapter to the zone, logging off the source adapter from a login manager of the storage area network; after logging off the source adapter from the login manager and after the operating system has been transferred from the source computer to the destination computer, logging on the destination adapter to the login manager. Evidence The Examiner relied on the following evidence in rejecting the claims on appeal: Husain US 2008/0034249 A1 Feb. 7, 2008 Appeal 2011-012458 Application 11/011,244 3 Nahum US 7,437,753 B2 Oct. 14, 2008 Rejection Claims 53-57 and 68-72 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 101 as directed to non-statutory subject matter. Ans. 3. Claims 43-72 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Husain and Nahum. Ans. 3. OPINION 101 Rejection Appellants argue that independent claims 53 and 68 recite a computer- readable recording medium, and the Specification provides examples of recording media as a magnetic medium and an optical medium, which are not signal media, such that “recording medium” should not be construed to encompass transitory signals. App. Br. 7 (citing Spec., p. 6, ll. 12-13). We are not persuaded by Appellants’ arguments because the definition of recording medium is open ended and not limited to such non-transitory media as magnetic and optical media. We sustain the rejection under 35 U.S.C. § 101. Appellants state that claims 53 and 68 were amended in an Amendment filed on February 21, 2011 to recite a non-transitory medium, and that if those amendments were entered, the rejections under §101 should be withdrawn since the amended claims recite “non-transitory” as requested by the Office. Id. According to Appellants, 37 C.F.R. § 41.33(a) requires that “submissions after the date of filing an appeal pursuant to § 41.31 (a)(1) through (a)(3) and prior to the date a brief is filed pursuant to § 41.37 may be admitted as provided in § 1.116.” Appellants argue that, because the Appeal 2011-012458 Application 11/011,244 4 Amendment was filed prior to Appellants’ brief and either complies “‘with any requirement of form expressly set forth in a previous Office action’” or presents “‘rejected claims in better form for consideration on appeal,’” the Amendment can and should be entered to overcome the Examiner’s rejection. Reply Br. 2 (citing 37 C.F.R. § 1.116(b)(1) and 1.116(b)(2)). Entry or non-entry of amendments is not an appealable matter, but rather is a petitionable matter, and thus is not within the jurisdiction of the Board. See In re Berger, 279 F.3d 975, 984 (Fed. Cir. 2002); and In re Mindick, 371 F.2d 892, 894 (CCPA 1967) (refusal of examiner to enter an amendment of claims is reviewable by petition under 37 C.F.R. § 1.181, and not by appeal to the Board). 103 Rejection The Examiner finds that Husain teaches removing a source adapter from a SAN zone and adding a destination adapter to the SAN zone, because “the devices may be switched for one another” within the blade system shown in Figure 2. Ans. 3-4 (citing Husain, para. [0148]). Paragraph [0148] of Husain teaches switching computers in a one-to-one move “by copying at least a portion of the information from the first computer to the second computer and switching the first peripheral device over to the second computer using the peripheral switch.” The Examiner considers the claimed adapters to be met by Husain’s “peripheral device,” and finds that Husain teaches that its blade system can be used with a SAN. Id. (citing Husain, para. [0134]). The Examiner also finds that Nahum teaches, within a SAN network, removing a source adapter from a zone and adding a destination adapter to Appeal 2011-012458 Application 11/011,244 5 the zone. Ans. 4 (citing Nahum, col. 16, ll. 59-65, and col. 13, l. 64 to col. 14, l. 6). Regarding claims 43-57, Appellants argue that Husain and Nahum, alone or in any reasonable combination, fail to teach or suggest “removing the source adapter from the zone” or “adding the destination adapter to the zone.” Reply Br. 2. According to Appellants, column 16, lines 59-65 of Nahum teaches a host booting implementation and a SAN switch 2 being burnt-in to always reside in a default zoning on start-up. Reply Br. 4. A port from which a host 1 is uncoupled immediately returns to a default zone. Id. Appellants argue that Nahum therefore references host coupling/uncoupling and default zoning for a SAN switch, “rather than an adapter of a source or destination computer from or to which an operating system is to be migrated.” Id. Husain teaches a one-to-one move of a computer blade after copying at least some information from an old blade computer to a new blade computer, switching peripherals from the old blade computer to the new blade computer, and the blades being used to augment an existing SAN. Husain, paras. [0134] and [0146] – [0148]. Nahum teaches authenticating hosts that can connect to a SAN, and adding storage devices to the SAN by putting an added storage device into a status map for the SAN. The Examiner has not explained how the references, alone or in combination, teach replacement of a computer having an adapter that is mapped to a SAN zone, wherein the zone of the adapter is identified, the source adapter is removed from the zone, and the destination adapter is added to the zone. While the references teach adding and subtracting devices from a system that include a SAN, none of the references teach how zone migration from a Appeal 2011-012458 Application 11/011,244 6 source computer to a destination computer is handled (besides “default” zone taught in Nahum), much less handling the migration using source and destination adapters. The combination of Husain and Nahum therefore fails to establish prima facie obviousness and we do not sustain the rejection of claims 43-57 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a). Regarding claims 58-72, Appellants argue that the Examiner fails to address certain language recited in these claims. App. Br. 13. Claims 58, 63, and 68 recite logging off a virtual port name of a source adapter from a login manager of a SAN, deregistering the virtual port name from the source adapter, registering the virtual port name with the destination adapter after transferring an operating system from a source computer to a destination computer, and logging on the destination adapter to the login manager with the virtual port name. Id. The Examiner finds that Nahum teaches these logging on, logging off, registering, and deregistering steps. Ans. 8 (citing Nahum, col. 7, ll. 1-4; col. 13, ll. 33-35; col. 13, ll. 64 – col. 14, l. 6; col. 16, ll. 59-65). The Examiner considers Nahum’s teaching of adding a WWN, LUN, and port number of a storage device 4 to a SAN status map, when the storage device 4 is detected to be a SAN work zone member, to teach the logging on, logging off, registering, and deregistering steps of claims 58, 63, and 68. The Examiner further explains that Nahum teaches associating and disassociating port names in teaching that “a port identity may be used in conjunction with a WWN name for each device in the array,” such that “a name may be used with the port identifier, and associated with the port and port manager.” Ans. 13. The Examiner finds that Nahum teaches “a port uncoupling from a host (removing), and returning (adding).” Id. Appeal 2011-012458 Application 11/011,244 7 The Examiner has not explained, however, how adding device information to a SAN status map upon storage device detection teaches logging on a virtual port name, logging off a virtual port name, registering a virtual port name, and deregistering a virtual port name, and we are therefore not persuaded that Nahum teaches or suggests these limitations. We do not sustain the rejection of claims 58-72 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a). DECISION We AFFIRM the rejection of claims 53-57 and 68-72 under 35 U.S.C. § 101 as directed to non-statutory subject matter. We REVERSE the rejection of claims 43-72 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Husain and Nahum. AFFIRMED-IN-PART tkl Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation