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О протоколе для Smartcard  ISO 7816

 

     
  ===============================================================================
ISO7816 asynchronous smartcard information
===============================================================================

(C) Stephane BAUSSON - (95)
Version 1.00 (Last revised: 12-06-1995)

4, Rue de Grand
F-88630 Chermisey
France

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>> Any suggestions or comments about phonecards and smartcards are welcome <<<
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Document History:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Version 1.00 : First version of the document.

Glossary of terms:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
TBC : to be confirmed
TBD : to be defined
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

* Content *
~~~~~~~~~~~
I ) Introduction of the ISO7816 standard


II ) Summury of the ISO7816 standard

2.1 - ISO7816-1 Standard

2.2.1) Minimal Contact Size
2.2.2) Pin's position


2.2 - ISO7816-2 Standard

2.2.3) Pin Assignement
2.2.4) Contact Location


2.3 - ISO7816-3 Standard

2.3.1) Electrical Signals Description:
2.3.2) Voltage and current values:
2.3.3) Operating procedure for integrated circuit(s) cards:
2.3.4) Answer to Reset:

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I ) Introduction of the ISO7816 standard:
====================================


II ) Summury of the ISO7816 standard:
===============================

The ISO7816 standard are separated in 3 different parts

- ISO7816-1 which define the physical characteristics of the card.
- ISO7816-2 which define dimension and contact position of the card.
- ISO7816-3 which define the electical signals and transmission protocols.

The following organisations should be contacted for more details:

- CEN (Comit‚ Eurp‚en de Normalisation)
rue Br‚derote 2
B-1000 Brussels
Belgium

- ISO (International Standard Institute)
Case postale 56
CH-1211 GenЉve 20
Switzerland



2.1 - ISO7816-1 Standard
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The ISO7816 Standard define many physical features, but here we are only
going to describe the more intesting features.

* Ultra violet light :
Any protection beyond the ambiant UV light level shall be to the
responsability of the card manufacturer.

* X-rays :
Exposure of either side of the card to a dose of 0.1 Gy relative to a
medium-energy X radiation of 70 to 140 Kv (cumulative dose per year)
shall not cause malfunction of the card.

* Surface profile of the contacts :
The difference in level between all contacts and the adjacent card
surface shall be less than 0.1 mm.

* Mecanical strenght (of the card and contact)

The card shall resist damage to its surface and any components contained
in it and shall remain intact during normal use, storage and handling.

surface (with pins) must not be damaged by a pression caused by a steel
ball of 1.5 mm diameter on which is applied a strenght of 1.5 N.

* Electrical resistance : All the resistances measured between any two
points of the pins must not be over 0.5 Ohm, with any current value
from 50 uA to 300 mA.

* Magnetic field : The chip of the card must not be damaged by a static
magnetic field of 79500 A.tr/m

* Static electricity : The card must not be damaged by a electrical
discharge of 1500 V of a 100 pF capacitor trought a 1500 Ohm resistance.

* card maximal bending :


__________
___,---' '---,___ ^
_,--' '--,_ | f
,' ', v


a - large side of the card
- deformation (f) : 2 cm
- periodicity : 30 bendings a minute

b - short side of the card
- deformation (f) : 1 cm
- periodicity : 30 bendings a minute

Acceptance: The card must work correctly and must not have any crackings
after 1000 bendings.




2.2 - ISO7816-2 Standard
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2.2.1) Minimal Contact Size :

,-------------, ^
| | |
| | | 1.7mm
| | |
'-------------' v
:<----------->:
2mm


2.2.2) Pin's position :


,-----------------------------------------------------------------
| : :
| : C
| D :
| : ---- ,----, ,----,
| : | C8 | | C4 | -,
| ------- '----' '----' |
| ,----, ,----, |
| | C7 | | C3 | |
| '----' '----' |
| ,----, ,----, | AFNOR position
| | C6 | | C2 | |
| '----' '----' |
| ,----, ,----, |
| | C5 | | C1 | -'
| '----' '----'
| ,----, ,----,
| | C1 | | C5 | -,
| '----' '----' |
| ,----, ,----, |
| | C2 | | C6 | |
| '----' '----' | ISO7816 position
| ,----, ,----, |
| | C3 | | C7 | |
| '----' '----' |
| ,----, ,----, |
| | C4 | | C8 | -'
| '----' '----'
| : :
| A : :
|<------------------------------>: :
| :
| B :
|<----------------------------------->:
|


2.2.3) Pin Assignement: C1 : Vcc = 5V C5 : Gnd
--------------- C2 : Reset C6 : Vpp
C3 : Clock C7 : I/O
C4 : RFU C8 : RFU


2.2.4) Contact Location:
-----------------

All the sizes are in milimeters

| A B C D | A B C D
----+------------------------------- ----+-------------------------------
C1 | 10.25 12.25 19.23 20.93 C1 | 17.87 19.87 16.69 18.39
C2 | 10.25 12.25 21.77 23.47 C2 | 17.87 19.87 14.15 15.85
C3 | 10.25 12.25 24.31 26.01 C3 | 17.87 19.87 11.61 13.31
C4 | 10.25 12.25 26.85 28.55 C4 | 17.87 19.87 9.07 10.77
C5 | 17.87 19.87 19.23 20.93 C5 | 10.25 12.25 16.69 18.39
C6 | 17.87 19.87 21.77 23.47 C6 | 10.25 12.25 14.15 15.85
C7 | 17.87 19.87 24.31 26.01 C7 | 10.25 12.25 11.61 13.31
C8 | 17.87 19.87 28.85 28.55 C8 | 10.25 12.25 9.07 10.77
----+------------------------------- ----+-------------------------------
ISO7816 location AFNOR location


NB: The AFNOR location is transitional, and has been used for compatibility
reasons with existing magnetic stripe cards.



2.3 - ISO7816-3 Standard
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

2.3.1) Electrical Signals Description:
------------------------------

I/O : Input or Output for serial data to the integrated circuit inside
the card.

VPP : Programing voltage input (optional use by the card).

GND : Ground (reference voltage).

CLK : Clocking or timing signal (optional use by the card).

RST : Either used itself (reset signal supplied from the interface device)
or in combination with an interal reset control circuit (optional use
by the card). If internal reset is implemented, the voltage supply on
Vcc is mandatory.

VCC : Power supply input (optional use by the card).


NOTE - The use of the two remaining contacts will be defined in the
appropriate application standards.


2.3.2) Voltage and current values:
--------------------------

Abbreviations:

Vih : High level input voltage
Vil : Low level input voltage
Vcc : Power supply voltage at VCC
Vpp : Programming voltage at VPP
Voh : High level output voltage
Vol : Low level output voltage
tr : Rise time between 10% and 90% of signal amplitude
tf : Fall time between 90% and 10% of signal amplitude
Iih : High level input current
Iil : Low level input current
Icc : Supply current at VCC
Ipp : Programming current at VPP
Ioh : High level output current
Iol : Low level output current
Cin : Input capacitance
Cout: Output capacitance


* I/O

This contact is used as input (reception mode) or output (transmission
mode) for data exchange. Two possible states exist for I/O:

- mark or high state (State Z), if the card and the interface device are
in reception mode or if the state is imposed by the transmitter.
- space or low state (State A), if this state is imposed by the
transmitter.

When the two ends of the line are in reception mode, the line shall be
maintained in state Z. When the two ends are in non-matced transmit mode,
the logic state of the line may be indeterminate. During operations, the
interface device and the card shall not both be in transmit mode.


Table 1 - Electrical characteristics of I/O under normal
operation conditions.
,--------+--------------------------------+---------+---------+------,
| Symbol | Conditions | Minimum | Maximum | Unit |
+--------+--------+-----------------------+---------+---------+------+
| | Either | Iih max = +/- 500uA | 2 | VCC | V |
| Vih | (1) +-----------------------+---------+---------+------+
| | or | Iih max = +/- 50uA | 0.7 VCC | VCC (3) | V |
+--------+--------+-----------------------+---------+---------+------+
| Vil | Iil max = 1mA | 0 | 0.8 | V |
+--------+--------------------------------+---------+---------+------+
| | Either | Iol max = +/- 100uA | 2.4 | VCC | V |
| Voh | +-----------------------+---------+---------+------+
| (2) | or | Iol max = +/- 20uA | 3.8 | VCC | V |
+--------+--------+-----------------------+---------+---------+------+
| Vol | Iol max = 1mA | 0 | 0.4 | V |
+--------+--------------------------------+---------+---------+------+
| tr, tf | Cin = 30pF; Cout = 30pF | | 1 | us |
+--------+--------------------------------+---------+---------+------+
| (1) For the interface device, take into account both conditions. |
| (2) It is assumed that a pull up resistor is used in the interface |
| device (recommended value 20k Ohm. |
| (3) The voltage on I/O shall remain between 0.3V and VCC+0.3V. |
'--------------------------------------------------------------------'


* VPP

This contact may be to supply the voltage required to program or to erase
the internal non-volatile memory. Two possible states exists for VPP:
Idle state and active state, as defined in table 2. The idle state shall
be maintained by the interface device unless the active state is required.


Table 2 : Electrical characteristics of VPP under normal
operation conditions.
,--------+--------------------------------+---------+---------+------,
| Symbol | Conditions | Minimum | Maximum | Unit |
+--------+--------------------------------+---------+---------+------+
| Vpp | Idle State | 0.95*Vcc| 1.05*Vcc| V |
| Ipp | (programming non active) | | 20 | mA |
+--------+--------------------------------+---------+---------+------+
| Vpp | Active State | 0.975*P | 1.025*P | V |
| Ipp | (programming the card) | | I | mA |
+--------+--------------------------------+---------+---------+------+
| The card provides the interface with the values of P and I |
| (default values: P=5 and I=50) |
'--------------------------------------------------------------------'

Rise of fall time : 200 us maximum. The rate of change of Vpp shall not
exceed 2V/us.
The maximum power Vpp*Ipp shall not exceed 1.5W when averaged over any
period of 1s.


* CLK

The actual frequency, delivered by the interface device on CLK, is
designated either by fi the initial frequency during the answer to reset,
or by fs the subsequent frequency during subsequent transmission.

Duty cycle for asynchronous operations shall be between 45% and 55% of the
period during stable operation. Care shall be taken when switching
frequencies (from fi to fs) to ensure that no pulse is shorter than 45% of
the shorter period.


Table 3 - Electrical characteristics of CLK under normal
operation conditions.
,--------+--------------------------------+---------+---------+------,
| Symbol | Conditions | Minimum | Maximum | Unit |
+--------+--------+-----------------------+---------+---------+------+
| | Either | Iih max = +/- 200uA | 2.4 | VCC (2) | V |
| | (1) +-----------------------+---------+---------+------+
| Vih | or | Iih max = +/- 20uA | 0.7*VCC | VCC (2) | V |
| | (1) +-----------------------+---------+---------+------+
| | or | Iih max = +/- 10uA | VCC-0.7 | VCC (2) | V |
+--------+--------+-----------------------+---------+---------+------+
| Vil | Iil max = +/-200 uA | 0 (2) | 0.5 | V |
+--------+--------------------------------+---------+---------+------+
| tr, tf | Cin = 30pF | |9% of the period|
| | | |with a max:0.5us|
+--------+--------------------------------+---------+---------+------+
| (1) For the interface device, take into account three conditions. |
| (2) The voltage on CLK shall remain between 0.3V and Vcc+0.3V. |
'--------------------------------------------------------------------'


* RST

Table 4 - Electrical characteristics of RST under normal
operation conditions.
,--------+--------------------------------+---------+---------+------,
| Symbol | Conditions | Minimum | Maximum | Unit |
+--------+--------+-----------------------+---------+---------+------+
| | Either | Iih max = +/- 200uA | 4 | VCC (2) | V |
| Vih | (1) +-----------------------+---------+---------+------+
| | or | Iih max = +/- 10uA | VCC-0.7 | VCC (2) | V |
+--------+--------+-----------------------+---------+---------+------+
| Vil | Iil max = +/- 200uA | 0 (2) | 0.6 | V |
+--------+--------------------------------+---------+---------+------+
| (1) For the interface device, take into account both conditions. |
| (2) The voltage on RST shall remain between 0.3V and VCC+0.3V. |
'--------------------------------------------------------------------'

* VCC

This contact is used to supply the power voltage Vcc.


Table 5 - Electrical characteristics of VCC under normal
operation conditions.
,--------+---------+---------+-------,
| Symbol | Minimum | Maximum | Unit |
+--------+---------+---------+-------+
| Vcc | 4.75 | 5.25 | V |
| Icc | | 200 | mA |
'--------+---------+---------+-------'

2.3.3) Operating procedure for integrated circuit(s) cards:
---------------------------------------------------
This operating procedure applies to every integrated circuit(s) card with
contacts:

The dialogue between the interface device and the the card shall be
conducted through the consecutive operations:

- connection and activation of the contacts by the interface device.
- reset of the card.
- answer to reset by the card.
- subsequent information exchange between the card and the interface
device.
- desactivation of the contacts by the interface device.

These operations are specified in the following subclauses.

NOTE : An active state on VPP should not only be provided and maintained
when requested by the card.

a - Connection and activation of the contacts:
-----------------------------------------

The electrical circuits shall not be activated until the contacts are
connected to the interface device so as to avoid possible damage to any
card meeting these standards.

The activation of the contacts by the interface device shall consist of the
consecutive operations:

- RST is in state L;
- VCC shall be powered;
- I/O in the interface device shall be put in reception mode;
- VPP shall be raised to idle state;
- CLK shallbe provided with a suitable and stable clock.


b - Reset of the card:
-----------------
A card reset is initiated by the interface device, whereupon the card shall
respond with an Answer to Reset as describe in 2.4.

By the end of the activation of the contacts (RST is in L, VCC powered and
stable, I/O in reception mode in the interface device, VPP stable at idle
level, CLK provided with a suitable and stable clock), the card answering
asynchronously is ready for reset.

The clock signal is applied to CLK at time T0. The I/O line shall be set to
state Z within 200 clcok cycles of the clock signal (t2) being applied to
CLK (time t2 after T0).

An internally reset card reset after a few cycles of clock signal. The
Answer to Reset on I/O shall begin between 400 and 40 000 clock cycles (t1)
after the clock signal is applied to CLK (time t1 after T0).

A card with an active low reset is reset by maintaining RST in state L for
at least 40 000 clock cycles (t3) after the clock signal is applied on CLK
(time t3 after T0). Thus if no Answer to Reset begind within 40 000 clock
cycles (t3) with RST in state L, RST is put to state H (at time T1). The
Answer to Reset on I/O shall begin between 400 and 40 000 clock cycles (t1)
after the rising edge of the signal on RST (time t1 after T1).

If the Anwser to Reset does not begin within 40 000 clock cycles (t3) with
RST in state H (t3 after T1), the signal on RST shall be returned to state
L (at time T2) and the contacts shall be desactivated by the interface
device.



GND __________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________
VCC ___| : :|___
:_______________________________________________________________:
VPP ____|: |____
: t3 t3 :
:<--------------------------->:<------------------------------->:
: :_________________________________:
RST _____:_____________________________| |____
: : :
CLK _____|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||____
: t1 : :
:<-------------->: : :
: __________:____________:_________________________________:
I/O ____XXXXXXXX |____________:_______Answer____________________:XXXX
(IR) : : : :
: t2 : : t1 :
:<---->: :<---------->: :
: _______________________:_________________________________:
I/O ____XXXXXXXX : |______Answer________:XXXX
(AL) : t2 : : :
:<---->: : :
: :_________________________________:
I/O ____XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX: :XXXXX
(SH) : : :
T0 T1 T2

IR : Internal Reset t2 <= 200/fi
AL : Asynchronous Reset 400/fi <= t1 <= 40000/fi
SH : Syncronous Reset 40000/fi <= t3

Figure1 : Reset of the card
~~~~~~~

With a card answering synchonously, the interface device sets all the lines
to state L (See figure 2). VCC is the powered, VPP is set to idle state, CLK
and RST remain in L state, I/O is put in reception mode in the interface
device, RST shall be maintained in state H for at least 50 us (t12), before
returning to state L again.

The clock pulse is applied after an interval (t10) from the rising edge of
the reset signal. The duration of the state H of the clock pulse can be any
value between 10 us and 50 us ; no more than one clock pulse during reset
high is allowed. The time interval between the falling edges on CLK and RST
is t11.

The first data bit is obtained as an answer to reset on I/O while CLK is in
state L and is valid after an interval t13 from the falling edge on RST.

______________________________________________________________________
VCC ___/

_____________________________________________________________________
VPP ____/
t12
:<---------------->:
:__________________:
RST ______/: \_______________________________________________
: :
: t10 t11 : t15 t16
:<---->: :<---->: t14 :<---->: :<---->:
: ____ : :<---->: :______: : : _______
CLK_______________:/ 1 \:______:______:/ 2 \:______:/ 3 \_______
: :
: t13 : t17
:<---->: :<---->:
_____________________________ :______________ :______________ ___
I/O ____//////////////////////////////\:_______1______X-X_______2_______X-X___


5us <= t10 10us <= t14 <= 100us Clock low after RST
5us <= t11 10us <= t15 <= 50us Clock High
50us <= t12 ........ Reset High 10us <= t16 <= 100us Clock Low
t13 <= 10us Propagation delay t17 <= 10us Propagation delay

Figure2 : Reset of the card when a synchronous answer is expected.
~~~~~~~


NOTES:

1 - The internal state of the card is assumed not to be defined before
reset. Therefore the design of the card has to avoid inproper operation.

2 - In order to continue the dialogue with the card, RST shall be maintained
in the state where an answer occurs on I/O.

3 - Reset of a card can be initiated by the interface device at its
discetion at any time.

4 - Interface devices may support one or more of these types of reset
behaviour. The priority of testing for asynchronous or synchronous cards is
not defined in this standard.


c - Deactivation of the contacts
----------------------------
When informations exchange is terminated or aborted (unresponsive card or
detection of card removal), the electrical contacts shall be desactivated.

The deactivation by the interface device shall consist of the consecutive
operations:

- State L on RST;
- State L on CLK;
- Vpp inactive;
- State A on I/O;
- VCC inactive;

2.3.4) Answer to Reset:
---------------
Two types of transmissions are considered:

* Asynchronous transmission:
In this type of transmission, characters are transmitted on the I/O line
in an asynchronous half duplex mode. Each character includes an 8bit byte.


* Synchronous transmission:
In this type of transmission, a serie of bits is transmitted on the I/O
line in half duplex mode in synchronisation with the clock signal on CLK.

a - Answer to Reset in asynchronous transmission
--------------------------------------------

* Bit duration
""""""""""""
The nominal bit duration used on I/O is defined as one Elementary Time
Unit (etu).

For cards having internal clock, the initial etu is 1/9600 s.

For cards using the external clock, there is a linear relationship between
the Elementary Time Unit used on I/O and the period provided by the
interface device on CLK.

The initial etu is 372/fi s where fi is in Hertz.

The initial frequency fi is provided by the interface device on CLK during
the Answer to Reset.

In order to read the initial character (TS), all cards shall initially be
operated with fi in the range of 1 MHz to 5 MHz.

* Character frame during answer to reset
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
Prior to the transmission of a character, I/O shall be in state Z.

A character consists of ten consecutive bits:

- a start bit in state A;
- eight bits of information, designated ba to bh and conveying a
data byte;
- a tenth bit bi used for even parity checking.

A data byte consists of 8 bits designated b1 to b8, from the least
significant bit (lsb, b1) to the most significant bit (msb, b8).

Conventions (level coding, connecting levels Z/A to digits 1 or 0: and a
bit significance, connecting ba...bh to b1...b8) are specified in the
initial character, call TS, which is transmitted by the card in response
to reset.

Parity is correct when the number of ONES is even in the sequence from
ba to bi.

Whithin a character, the time from the leading edge of the start bit to
the trailing edge of the nth bit shall equal (n+/-0.2) etu.

When searching for a start, the receiver samples I/O periodically. The
time origin being the mean between last observation of level Z and first
observation of level A, the start shall be verified before 0.7 etu, and
then ba is received at (1.5 +/-0.2) etu. Parity is checked on the fly.

NOTE : When searching for a start, the sampling time shall be less than
0.2 etu so that all the test zones are distinct from the transition zones.

The delay between two consecutives characters (between start leading
edges) is at least 12 etu, including a character duration (10+/-0.2) etu
plus a guardtime, the interface device and the card reamain both in
reception, so that I/O is in state Z.

Start Parity Next
bit <----- 8 data bits -----> bit Start bit
Z ____ ________________________________......______ __
| | | | | | | | | | | | |
I/O | |ba|bb|bc|bd|be|bf|bg|bh|bi| Guardtime | |
|___|__|__|__|__|__|__|__|__|__| |___|_
A : : : :
0 t1 : t10
: :
:<---- (n+/-0.2) etu --->:


Figure 3: Character frame
~~~~~~~~

During the Answer to Reset, the delay between the start leading edges of
two consecutives characters from the card shall not exeed 9600 etu. This
maximum is named initial waiting time.

* Error detection and character repetition
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
During the answer to reset, the following characters repetition procedure
depends on the protocol type. This procedure is mandatory for cards using
the protocol type T=0; it is optional for the interface device and for the
other cards.

The transmitter tests I/O (11+/-0.2) etu after the start leading edge:
- If I/O is in state Z, the correct reception is assumed.
- If I/O is in state A, the transmission is assumed to have been
incorrect. The disputed character shall be repeated after a delay
of at least 2 etu after detection of the error signal.

When parity is incorrect, from (10.5+/-0.2) etu, the receiver transmits
an error signal at state A for 1 etu minimum and 2 etu maximum. The
receiver then shall expect a repetition of the disputed character (see
figure 8).

If no character repetition is provided by the card,
- The card ignores and shall not suffer damage from the error signal
coming from the interface device.
- The interface device shall be able to initiate the reception and the
whole Answer to Reset response sequence.

* Structures and content
""""""""""""""""""""""
A reset operation results in the answer from the card consisting of the
initial character TS followed by at most 32 characters in the following
order:

- T0 ................... Format character (Mandatory)
- TAi, TBi, TCi, TDi ... Interface characters (Optional)
- T1, T2, ... ,TK ...... Historical characters (Optional)
- TCK .................. Check character (Conditional)


Reset
|
| _________________________________________ _______ _________
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
'-->| TS| T0|TA1|TB1|TC1|TD1|TA2|TB2|TC2|TD2| ......... | T1| ... | TK|TCK|
|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|___|_ _|___|_ _|__ |___|

TS : Initial character
TO : Format character
TAi : Interface character [ codes FI,DI ]
TBi : Interface character [ codes II,PI1 ]
TCi : Interface character [ codes N ]
TDi : Interface character [ codes Yi+1, T ]
T1, ... , TK : Historical characters (max,15)
TCK : Check character

Figure 4 : General configuration of the Answer to Reset
~~~~~~~~


The interface characters specify physical parameters of the integrated
circuit in the card and logical characteristics of the subsequent exchange
protocol.

The historical characters designate general information, for exemple, the
card manufacturer, the chip inserted in the card, the masked ROM in the
chip, the state of the life of the card. The specification of the
historical characters falls outside the scope of this part of ISO/IEC7816.

For national simplicity, T0, TAi, ... ,TCK will designate the bytes as
well as the characters in which they are contained.

Structure of TS, the initial character
--------------------------------------
The initial character TS provides a bit shynchronisation sequence and
defines the conventions to code data bytes in all subsequent characters.
These conventions refer to ISO1177.

I/O is initially in state Z. A bit synchronisation sequence (Z)AZZA is
defined for the start bit and bits ba bb bc (see figure 5).

The last 3 bits bg bh bi shall be AAZ for checking parity.

NOTE : This allows the interface device to determinate the etu initially
used by the card. An alternate measurement of etu is a third of the delay
between the first two falling edges in TS. Transmission and reception
mechanisms in the card shall be consistent with the alternate definition
of etu.

The two possible values of TS (ten consecutive bits from start to bi and
corresponding hexadecimal value) are

- Inverse convention : (Z)ZZAAAAAZ
where logic level ONE is A, ba is b8 (msb is first), equal to $3F
when decoded by inverse convention.

- Direct convention : (Z)ZZAZZZAAZ
where logic level ONE is Z, ba is b1 (lsb first), equal to $3B
when decoded by direct convention.


Start ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi
Z ____ _______ ___________ ______
| | | | | Z Z Z | | | |
(Z)| A | Z Z | A | or | | Z (Z)
A |___| |___|_A___A___A_|___|___|

Figure 5 : Initial character TS
~~~~~~~~

Structure of the subsequent characters in the Answer to Reset
-------------------------------------------------------------
The initial character TS is followed by a variable number of subsequent
characters in the following order: The format character T0 and, optionally
the interface characters TAi, TBi, TCi, TDi and the historical characters
T1, T2, ... , TK and conditionally, the check character TCK.

The presence of the interface characters is indicated by a bit map
technique explained below.

The presence of the historical characters is indicated by the number of
bytes as specified in the format character defined below.

The presence of the check character TCK depends on the protocol type(s)
as defined as below.

- Format character T0
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The T0 character contains two parts:

- The most significant half byte (b5, b6, b7, b8) is named Y1 and
indicates with a logic level ONE the presence of subsequent characters
TA1, TB1, TC1, TD1 respectively.

- The least significant half byte (b4 to b1) is named K and indicates
the number (0 to 15) of historical characters.


,----,----,----,----,----,----,----,----,
| b8 | b7 | b6 | b5 | b4 | b3 | b2 | b1 |
'----'----'----'----'----'----'----'----'
:<------- Y1 ------>:<-------- K ------>:

Y1 : indicator for the presence of the interface characters
TA1 is transmitted when b5=1
TB1 is transmitted when b6=1
TC1 is transmitted when b7=1
TD1 is transmitted when b8=1

K : number of hitorical characters

Figure 6 : Informations provided by T0
~~~~~~~~


- Interface characters TAi, TBi, TCi, TDi
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
TAi, TBi, TCi (i=1, 2, 3, ... ) indicate the protocol parameters.
TDi indicates the protocol type T and the presence of subsequent
characters.

Bits b5, b6, b7, b8 of the byte containing Yi (T0 contains Y1; TDi
contains Yi+1) state whelther character TAi for b5, character TBi for b6,
character TCi for b7, character TDi for b8 are or are not (depending on
whelther the relevant bit is 1 or 0) transmitted subsequently in this
order after the character containing Yi.

When needed, the interface device shall attribute a default value to
information corresponding to a non transmitted interface character.

When TDi is not transmitted, the default value of Yi+1 is null, indicating
that no further interface characters TAi+j, TBi+j, TCi+j, TDi+j will be
transmitted.


,----,----,----,----,----,----,----,----,
| b8 | b7 | b6 | b5 | b4 | b3 | b2 | b1 |
'----'----'----'----'----'----'----'----'
:<------ Yi+1 ----->:<------- T ------->:

Yi+1 : indicator for the presence of the interface characters
TAi+1 is transmitted when b5=1
TBi+1 is transmitted when b6=1
TCi+1 is transmitted when b7=1
TDi+1 is transmitted when b8=1

T : Protocol type for subsequent transmission.

Figure 7 : Informations provided by TDi
~~~~~~~~


- Historical characters T1, T2, ... ,TK
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
When K is not null, the answer to reset is continued by transmitting K
historical characters T1, T2, ... , TK.

- Check character TCK
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The value of TCK shall be such that the exclusive-oring of all bytes from
T0 to TCK included is null.

The answer to reset is complete 12 etu after the leading edge of the last
character.


Protocol type T
---------------
The four least significant bits of any interface character TDi indicate a
protocol type T, specifying rules to be used to process transmission
protocols. When TDi is not transmitted, T=0 is used.

T=0 is the asynchronous half duplex character transmission protocol.
T=1 is the asynchronous half duplex block transmission protocol.
T=2 and T=3 are reserved for future full duplex operations.
T=4 is reserved for an enhanced asynchronous half duplex character
transmission protocol.
T=5 to T=13 are reserved for future use.
T=14 is reserved for protocols standardized by ISO.
T=15 is reserved for future extension.

NOTE : If only T=0 is indicated, TCK shall not be sent. In all other cases
TCK shall be sent.

Specifications of the global interface bytes
--------------------------------------------
Among the interface bytes possibly transmitted by the card in answering to
reset, this subclaus defines only the global interface bytes TA1, TB1,
TC1, TD1.

These global interface bytes convey information to determine parameters
which the interface device shall take into account.

- Parameters F, D, I, P, N
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This initial etu is used during answer to reset is replaced by the work
etu during subsequent transmission. F is the clock rate conversion factor
and D is the bit rate adjustment factor to determine the work etu in
subsequent transmissions.

For internal clock cards:

initial etu = 1/9600 s work etu = (1/D)*(1/9600) s

For external clock cards:

initial etu = 372/fi s work etu = (1/D)*(F/fs) s

The minimum value of fs shall be 1MHz.
The maximum value of fs is given by table 6.

I and P define the active state at VPP.
- Maximum programming current : Ipp = 1mA
- Programming voltage : Vpp = P.V

N is an extra guardtime requested by the card. Before receiving the next
character, the card requires a delay of at least (12+N) etu from the start
leading edge of the previous character. No extra guardtme is used to send
characters from the card to the interface device.

The default values of these parameters are:
F = 372 ; D = 1 ; I = 50 ; P = 5 ; N = 0


- Integer values in global interface bytes
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The global interface bytes, TA1, TB1, TC1, TB2 code integer values FI, DI
II, PI1, N, PI2 which are either equal to or used to compute the values of
the parameters F, D, I, P, N presented above.

TA1 codes FI over the most significant half byte (b8 to b5) and DI over
the least significant half byte (b4 to b1).

TB1 codes II over the bits b7 and b6, and PI1 over the 5 least significant
bits b5 to b1. The most significant bit b8 equals to 0.

NOTE : The interface device may ignore the bit b8 of TB1.

TC1 codes N over the eight bits (b8 to b1).

TB2 codes PI2 over the eight bits (b8 to b1).


Table 6: Clock rate conversion factor F
~~~~~~~
----------------------------------------------------------------------
FI | 0000 0001 0010 0011 0100 0101 0110 0111
--------------+-------------------------------------------------------
F | Internal clk 372 558 744 1116 1488 1860 RFU
--------------+-------------------------------------------------------
fs (max) MHz | - 5 6 8 12 16 20 -
----------------------------------------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------
FI | 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111
--------------+------------------------------------------------
F | RFU 512 768 1024 1536 2048 RFU RFU
--------------+------------------------------------------------
fs (max) MHz | - 5 7.5 10 15 20 - -
---------------------------------------------------------------
RFU : Reserved for Future Use


Table 7: Bit rate afjustment factor D
~~~~~~~
-------------------------------------------------------
DI | 0000 0001 0010 0011 0100 0101 0110 0111
------+------------------------------------------------
D | RFU 1 2 4 8 16 RFU RFU
-------------------------------------------------------

-------------------------------------------------------
DI | 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111
------+------------------------------------------------
D | RFU RFU 1/2 1/4 1/8 1/16 1/32 1/64
-------------------------------------------------------
RFU : Reserved for Future Use


- Programming voltage factor P
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
PI1 from 5 to 25 gives the value of P in volts. PI1=0 indicates that VPP
is connected in the card which generates an internal programming voltage
from VCC. Other values of PI1 are reserved for future use.

When PI2 is present, the indication of PI1 should be ignores. PI2 from 50
to 250 gives the value of P in 0.1V. Other values of PI2 are reserved for
future use.


Table 8 : Maximum programming current factor I
~~~~~~~
-------------------------------
II | 00 01 10 11
-----+-------------------------
I | 25 50 100 RFU
-------------------------------

- Extra guardtime N
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
N codes directly the extra guard time, from 0 to 254 etu. N=255 indicates
that the minimum delay between the start edges of two consecutives
characters is reduced to 11 etu.


b - Answer to Reset in synchronous transmission
-------------------------------------------
* Clock frequency and bit rate
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
There is a linear relationship between the bit rate on the I/O line and
the clock frequency provided by the clock interface device on CLK.

Any clock frequency between 7kHz and 50kHz may be chosen for the reset
sequence. A clock frequency of 7kHz corresponds to 7kbit/s, and values
of the clock frequency up to 50kHz cause corresponding bit rates to be
transmitted.

* Structure of the header of the Answer to Reset
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
The reset operation results in an answer from the card containing a header
transmitted from the card to the interface. The header has a fixed length
of 32 bits and begins with two mandatory fields of 8 bits, H1 and H2.

The chronological order of transmission of information bits shall
correcpond to bit identification b1 to b32 with the least significant bit
transmitted first. The numerical meaning corresponding to each information
bit considered in isolation is that of the digit.

- 0 for a unit corresponding to state A (space)
- 1 for a unit corresponding to state Z (mark)

* Timing of the haeder
""""""""""""""""""""
After the reset procedure, the output information is controlled by clock
pulses. The first clock pulse is applied between 10us and 100us (t14)
after the falling edge on RST to read the data bits from the card. State H
of the clock pulses can be varied between 10us and 50us (t15) and state L
between 10us and 100us (t16).

The first data bit is obtained on I/O while the clock is low and is valid
10us (t13) at least after the falling edge on RST. The following data bits
are valid 10us (t17) at least after the falling edge on CLK. Each data bit
is valid until the next falling edge the following clock pulse on CLK. The
data bits can therefore be sampled at the rising edge of the following
clock pulses.

* Data content of the header
""""""""""""""""""""""""""
The header allows a quick determination of whelther the card and the
interface device are compatible. If there is no compatibility, the
contacts shall be desactivated.

The first field H1 codes the protocol type. The values of the codes and
the corresponding protocol type are

Hexadecimal value protocol type
-----------------------------------
00 and ff not to be used
01 to FE each value is assigned
by ISO/IEC JTC1/SC17 to
one protocol type

The second field H2 codes parameters for the protocol type coded in field
H1. The values of H2 are to be assigned by ISO/IEC JTC1/SC17.


2.3.5) Protocol type selection (PTS)
-----------------------------
If only one protocol type and FI=D=1 (default value of TA1) and N smaller
than 255 is indicated in the answer to reset. The transmission protocol
associated to the protocol type may be started immediately after the
transmission of answer to reset.

If more than one protocol type and/or TA1 parameter values other than the
default values and/or N equeal to 255 is/are indicated in the answer to
reset, the card shall know unambiguously, after having sent the answer to
reset, which protocol type or/and transmission parameter values (FI, D, N)
will be used. Consequently a selection of the protocol type and/or the
transmission parameters values shall be specified.

If the card is able to process more than one protocol type and if one of
those protocol types is indicated as T=0, then the protocol type T=0 shall
indicated in TD1 as the first offered protocol, and is assumed if no PTS is
performed.

If a card offers more than one protocol and if the interface device supports
only one of these protocols which is not T=0 and does not support PTS, the
interface should reject or reset the card.

2.3.5.a - PTS protocol
------------
Only the interface device is permitted to start a PTS procedure:

- The interface device sends a PTS request to the card.
- If the card receives a correct PTS request, it answers by sending a PTS
confirm, if implemented or the initial waiting time will be exceeded.
- After the succesfull exchange of PTS request and PTS confirm, data
shall be transmitted from the interface device using the selected
protocol type and/or transmission parameters.
- If the card receives an erronous PTS request, it will not send a PTS
confirm.
- If the initial waiting time is exceeded, the interface device should
resetor reject the card.
- If the interface device receives an erroneous PTS confirm, it should
reset or reject the card.

The parameters for the transmission of the PTS request and PTS confirm shall
correspond to those used within the Answer to Reset regarding the bit rate
and the convention detected by TS and possibly modified by TC1.

2.3.5.b - Structure and content of PTS request and PTS confirm
----------------------------------------------------
The PTS request and PTS response each consist of one initial character PTSS,
followed by a format character PTS0, three optional parameter characters
PTS1 PTS2 PTS3, and a character check PCK at the last byte.

PTSS identifies the PTS request or PTS confirm and is coded FF.

PTS0 indicates by the bits b5, b6, b7 set to 1 the presence of the
subsequently sent optional characters PTS1, PTS2, PTS3 respectively. It
codes over the least significant bits b4 to b1 the selected protocol type T
as coded in TD bytes. The most significant bit b8 (default b8=0) is reserved
for future use.

PTS1 codes the parameter values FI and D as coded in TA1. The interface
device may send PTS1 in order to indicate the selection FI and/or D values
to the card. If PTS1 is not sent, FI=1 and D=1 are assumed as defaults. The
card either acknoledges both the FI and D values by echoing PTS1 or does not
send PTS1 indicating the use of the default values.

PTS2 indicates the support of N=255, when bit b1 is set to 1. Bit b1 set to
0 is the default and indicates that the 11 etu period is not used. If bit b2
is set to 1, the card shall use an extra guardtime of 12 etu for its
transmssion of characters to the interface device. Bit b2 set to 0 is the
default and indicates that no extra guardtime is required. Bit b3 to b8 are
reserved for future use.

If PTS2 is sent by the interface device and is not echoed by the card, the
interface device should reject or reset the card.

The coding and use of PTS3 is not defined.

The value of PCK shall be such that the exclusive-oring of all charcters
from PTSS to PCK included is null.


2.3.6) Protocol type T=0, asynchronous half duplex character transmission
protocol----------------------------------------------------------
--------
This clause defines the structure and processing of commands initiated by an
interface device for transmission control and for card specific control in
an asynchronous half duplex character transmission protocol.

This protocol uses the parameters indicated by the answer to reset, unless
modified by the protocol type selection.

2.3.6.a - Specific interface parameters: the work waiting time
----------------------------------------------------
In an answer to reset, the interface character TC2 codes the integer value
WI over eight bits b8 to b1. When no TC2 appears in the answer to reset, the
default value of WI is 10.

The interval between the start leading edge of any character sent by the
card and the start leading edge of the previous character (sent either by
the card or by the interface device) shall not exceed 960*OWI work etu. This
maximum delay is named the work waiting time.

2.3.6.b - Structure and processing of commands
------------------------------------
A command is always initiated by the interface device. It tells the card
what to do in a 5-byte header, and allow a transfer of data bytes under
control of procedure bytes sent by the card.

It is assumed that the card and the interface device know a priori the
direction of data, in order to ditinguish between instructions for incoming
data transfer (where data enter the card during execution) and instructions
for outgoing data transfers (where data leave the card during execution).


without parity error
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Start Start
_____ _____________________________________ ___________
| | | | Byte i | | |P | | | Byte i+1
|__|__|__|__|__|__|__|__|__|__| guartime |__|___________

Even
with a parity error parity
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ bit
Start Start
_____ ______________________________ Error __ ___________
| | | | Byte i | | |P | | signal | | | Byte i+1
|__|__|__|__|__|__|__|__|__|__| |________| |__|___________


Figure 8 : Byte transmission diagram
~~~~~~~~

* Command header sent by the interface device
"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
The interface device transmits a header over five successive bytes
designated CLA, INS, A1, A2, L.

- CLA is an instruction class. The value FF is reserved for PTS.

- INS is an instruction code in the instruction class. The instruction
code is valid only if the least significant bit is 0, and the most
significant half byte is neither 6 nor 9.

- P1, P2 are a reference (e.g. an address) completing the instruction code

- P3 codes the number n of data bytes (D1, ... , Dn) which are to be
transmitted during the command. The direction of movement of these data
is a function of the instruction. In an outgoing data transfer command,
P3=0 introduces a 256 byte data transfer from the card. In an incoming
data transfer command, P3=0 introduces no transfer of data.

All remaining encoding possibilities for the header are specified in
subsequent parts of ISO7816.

After transmission of such 5 byte header, the interface device waits for a
procedure byte.

* Procedure bytes sent by the card
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
The value of the procedure bytes shall indicate the action requested by
the interface device. Three types of procedure bytes are specified:

- ACK : (The seven most significant bits in an ACK byte are all equal or
complementary to those in the INS byte, apart from the values 6x and 9x)
The interface device control VPP state and exchanges data depending on
ACK values.

- NULL : (=$60) This byte is sent by the card to restart the working time,
end to anticipate a subsequent procedure byte. It requests no further
action neither on VPP nor on Data.

- SW1 (= $6x or $9x, expect $60); The interface device maintains or sets
VPP at idle and waits for a SW2 byte to complete the command.

Any transition of VPP state (active/idle) must occur within the guardtime
of the procedure byte, or on the work waiting time overflow.

At each procedure byte, the card can proceed with the command by an ACK or
NULL byte, or show its disaproval by becoming unresponsive, or conclude by
an end sequence SW1-SW2.

Byte | Value | Result
-----+-------+------------------------------------------------------------
| INS | VPP is idle. All remaining data bytes are transferred
| | subsequently.
| |
| INS+1 | VPP is active. All remaining data bytes are transferred
| | subsequently.
ACK | ___ |
| INS | VPP is idle. Next data byte is transferred subsequently.
| _____ |
| INS+1 | VPP is active. Newt data byte is transferred subsequently.
-----+-------+------------------------------------------------------------
NULL | $60 | No futher action on VPP. The interface device waits for a
| | new procedure byte
-----+-------+------------------------------------------------------------
SW1 | SW1 | VPP is idle. The interface device waits for a SW2 byte


Acknoledge bytes
----------------
The ACK bytes are used to control VPP state and data transfer.

- When exclusive-oring the ACK byte with the INS byte gives $00 or $FF,
the interface device maintains or sets VPP as idle.

- When exclusive-oring the ACK byte with the INS byte gives $01 or $FE,
the interface device maintains or sets VPP as active.

- When the seven most significant bits in the ACK byte have the same
value as those in the INS byte, all remaining data bytes (Di, ..., Dn)
if any remain, are transferred subsequently.

- When the seven most significant bits in the ACK byte are complementary
to those in the INS byte, only the next data byte (Di), if one remains
is transferred.

After these actions, the interface device waits for a new procedure.

Null byte (= $60)
-----------------
This byte is sent by the card to reset the workwaiting time and to
anticipate a subsequent procedure byte.

Status bytes (SW1=$6x or $9x, expect $60; SW2 any value)
--------------------------------------------------------
The end sequence SW1-SW2 gives the card status at the end of the command.

The normal ending is indicated by SW1-SW2 = $90-$00.

When the most significant half byte SW1 is $6, the meaning of SW1 is
independant of the application. The following five values are defined:

$6E The card does not support the instruction class.
$6D The instruction code is not programmed or is invalid.
$6B The reference is incorrect.
$67 The length is incorrect.
$6F No precise diagnostic is given.

Other values are reserved for future use by ISO7816.
When SW1 is neither $6E nor $6D, the card support the instruction.
This part of ISO7816 does not interprets neither $9X SW1 bytes, nor SW2
bytes; Their meaning relates to the application itself.


 
 
     

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