Summary
This work illustrates a flexible and convenient method to build a multimode narrowband receiver RF front‐end by means of controlled switches, switched capacitors, and switched inductors. The front‐end comprises a dual‐gain‐mode narrowband low‐noise amplifier (LNA) and a dual‐linearity‐mode mixer. A four‐mode receiver RF front‐end constructed with the dual‐gain‐mode LNA and the dual‐linearity‐mode mixer operating in frequency band range from 1800 to 2050 MHz was demonstrated with an IBM 90‐nm CMOS process. The front‐end achieves a 1/1.6 dB noise figure, 30/20 dB power gain, and 16/−10 dBm third‐order input intercept point while draws a 5.9/3.6 mA current from a 1.8‐V supply voltage at the low noise mode and high linearity mode, respectively. The proposed technique can be employed to build an intelligent mobile system.
The data contents of an information system may be corrupted due to security breaches or human errors. This project focuses on intrusion tolerance techniques that speed up the process of repairing a damaged file system. The proposed system, called Repairable File Service (or RFS), is specifically designed to facilitate the repair of compromised network file servers. An architectural innovation of RFS is that it is decoupled from and requires no modifications on the shared file server that is being protected. RFS supports fine-grained logging to allow roll-back of any file update operation, and keeps track of inter-process dependencies to quickly determine the extent of system damage after an attack/error. Compared with the current practice of manual post-intrusion damage repair, RFS significantly reduces the mean time to repair and thus improves the overall system availability. Performance overhead of RFS is less than 6%.0-7695-1959-8/03 $17.00 (c) 2003 IEEE
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