Ex Parte El-Kersh et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardApr 6, 201613406786 (P.T.A.B. Apr. 6, 2016) Copy Citation UNITED STA TES p A TENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE 13/406,786 02/28/2012 46320 7590 04/08/2016 CRGOLAW STEVEN M. GREENBERG 7900 Glades Road SUITE 520 BOCA RATON, FL 33434 FIRST NAMED INVENTOR Ehab El-Kersh UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE United States Patent and Trademark Office Address: COMMISSIONER FOR PATENTS P.O. Box 1450 Alexandria, Virginia 22313-1450 www .uspto.gov ATTORNEY DOCKET NO. FR920090008US2 (7161-664D CONFIRMATION NO. 9457 EXAMINER GIRMA, ANTENEH B ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER OPIM NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 04/08/2016 ELECTRONIC Please find below and/or attached an Office communication concerning this application or proceeding. The time period for reply, if any, is set in the attached communication. Notice of the Office communication was sent electronically on above-indicated "Notification Date" to the following e-mail address( es): docketing@crgolaw.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte EHAB EL-KERSH and MOHAMED REFAAT OBIDE Appeal2014-006016 Application 13/406,786 Technology Center OPIM Before LARRY J. HUME, JOHN P. PINKERTON, and NATHAN A. ENGELS, Administrative Patent Judges. PINKERTON, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appellants 1 appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a) from the Examiner's Final Rejection of claims 1-8 and 17-24. Claims 9-16 are canceled. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We reverse. 1 Appellants identify the real party in interest as International Business Machines Corp. App. Br. 2. Appeal2014-006016 Application 13/406,786 STATEMENT OF THE CASE Introduction Appellants' disclosed and claimed invention is generally directed to an enhanced two phase commit process to perform a transaction started by an application program and involving access to one or more resources managed by respective resource managers. Abstract. 2 Claim 1 is illustrative and reproduced below (with the disputed limitations emphasized in italics): 1. A method of performing a two phase commit process for a transaction started by an application program and involving access to one or more resources managed by respective resource managers, wherein it comprises the steps of: enlisting the resource managers participating in the transaction, each executing in a node comprising a central processing unit (CPU), main memory and fixed storage, said enlisting step including associating a significance-based priority rank with each identified resource manager based on priority rules predefined by the application program to control data inconsistency for a period of time when a failure occurs during a commit phase until recovery happens; sending a prepare signal to said enlisted resource managers to begin the process of committing the transaction; and if a ready signal is received from all resource managers in response to the prepare signal, committing the resource managers in the order defined from the priority ranks associated with the resource managers. 2 Our Decision refers to the Final Action mailed Sept. 5, 2013 ("Final Act."); Appellants' Appeal Brief filed Dec. 30, 2013 ("App. Br."); the Examiner's Answer mailed Feb. 13, 2014 ("Ans."); Appellants' Reply Brief filed Apr. 14, 2014 ("Reply Br."); and, the original Specification filed Feb. 28, 2012 ("Spec."). 2 Appeal2014-006016 Application 13/406,786 Rejections on Appeal Claims 1-8 and 17-24 stand provisionally rejected on the ground of nonstatutory obviousness-type double patenting as being unpatentable over claims 9-16 of copending Application No. 12/891,778.3 Claims 1-3, 7, 8, 17-19, 23, and 24 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over the combination of Parkinson (US 2009/0222823 Al, published Sept. 3, 2009) and Yee (US 2008/0172674 Al, published July 17, 2008). Claims 4 and 20 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over the combination of Parkinson, Yee, Frey (US 2004/0019898 Al, published Jan. 29, 2004), and Hetzel (US 2008/0037571 Al, published Feb. 14, 2008). Claims 5, 6, 21, and 22 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over the combination of Parkinson, Yee, Frey, Hetzel, and Hoffmann (US 2009/0313311 Al, published Dec. 17, 2009). 3 Application No. 12/891,778 was abandoned on Dec. 4, 2013. Accordingly, we do not sustain the Examiner's provisional rejection based on the referenced application. 3 Appeal2014-006016 Application 13/406,786 ANALYSIS The dispositive issue raised by Appellants' briefs is whether Parkinson teaches or suggests "associating a significance-based priority rank with each identified resource manager based on priority rules predefined by the application program to control data inconsistency for a period of time when a failure occurs during a commit phase until recovery happens," as recited in claim 1 and similarly recited in claim 17. In the Final Office Action, the Examiner finds Parkinson teaches managing transaction consistency using a two-phase commit protocol performed by resource managers and Yee teaches assigning priorities and executing based on the priority order. Final Act. 5-7 (citing Parkinson Fig. 2A, i-fi-12, 3, 17, 27, 56; Yee i-fi-1 56, 57). In the Answer, the Examiner cites paragraph 2 of Parkinson as teaching the two-way commit protocol in which a transaction ends in either a commit, which is the successful execution of each step in the transaction, or a rollback which guarantees that none of the steps are executed due to an error in one of those steps. Ans. 3. The Examiner finds paragraph 3 of Parkinson explains that the transactions are either fully completed or fully restored to the state prior to the transaction to avoid inconsistent data. Id. The Examiner then states: "Examiner interprets the two-phase commit protocol as 'rules predefined by the application program to control data inconsistency for a period of time when a failure occurs during a commit phase until recovery happens."' Id. Appellants argue that neither Parkinson nor Yee nor any combination thereof teaches the disputed limitations of claim 1. App. Br. 5-7; Reply Br. 2--4. 4 Appeal2014-006016 Application 13/406,786 We are persuaded by Appellants' arguments the Examiner has erred. Although we agree with the Examiner's finding that Yee teaches associating a significance-based priority rank with a task based on priority rules (Final Act. 6, Ans. 4), the Examiner has failed to provide any reasoning or explanation of how Parkinson or Yee teaches or suggests associating such significance-based priority rank with each identified resource manager "based on priority rules predefined by the application program to control data inconsistency for a period of time when a failure occurs during a commit phase until recovery happens," as recited in claim 1. The Examiner's finding that the two-phase commit protocol of Parkinson teaches or suggests "rules predefined by the application program to control data inconsistency," is not persuasive because we find it to be conclusory, and provides no reasoned analysis of how Parkinson's two-phase commit protocol teaches or suggests associating a significance-based priority rank with each resource manager based on priority rules predefined by the application program. See In re Warner, 379 F.2d 1011, 1017 (CCPA 1967) ("The Patent Office has the initial duty of supplying the factual basis for its rejection. It may not, because it may doubt that the invention is patentable, resort to speculation, unfounded assumptions or hindsight reconstruction to supply deficiencies in its factual basis.") Thus, based on this record, we are persuaded the Examiner erred in finding the combination of Parkinson and Yee teaches or suggests the disputed limitations of claim 1, and in concluding claim 1 is obvious based on the combination of these references. Accordingly, on this record, we cannot sustain the Examiner's rejection of claim 1 and claims 2-8, which 5 Appeal2014-006016 Application 13/406,786 depend therefrom. For the same reasons, we do not sustain the rejection of claim 17 and dependent claims 18-24. DECISION We reverse the Examiner's decision rejecting claims 1-8 and 17-24. We reverse the Examiner's provisional obvious-type double patenting rejection of claims 1-8 and 17-24. REVERSED 6 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation