Enter an ATR (Answer To Reset) and I will parse it for you.
Parsing ATR:
TS = 0x3B | Direct Convention |
---|---|
T0 = 0x7F | Y(1): b0111, K: 15 (historical bytes) |
TA(1) = 0x96 | Fi=512, Di=32, 16 cycles/ETU (250000 bits/s at 4.00 MHz, 312500 bits/s for fMax=5 MHz) |
TB(1) = 0x00 | VPP is not electrically connected |
TC(1) = 0x00 | Extra guard time: 0 |
---- | |
Historical bytes | 80 31 80 65 B0 84 41 3D F6 12 0F FE 82 90 00 |
Category indicator byte: 0x80 | (compact TLV data object) Tag: 3, Len: 1 (card service data byte) Card service data byte: 128 - Application selection: by full DF name - EF.DIR and EF.ATR access services: by GET RECORD(s) command - Card with MF Tag: 6, Len: 5 (pre-issuing data) Data: B0 84 41 3D F6 "..A=." Tag: 1, Len: 2 (country code, ISO 3166-1) Country code: 0F FE Tag: 8, Len: 2 (status indicator) SW: 90 00 |
Possibly identified card:
3B 7F .. 00 00 80 31 80 65 B0 .. .. .. .. 12 0F FE 82 90 00
IDPrime MD 8840, 3840, 3810, 840 and 830 Cards T=0
IDPrime 930 (JavaCard)
3B 7F 96 00 00 80 31 80 65 B0 84 41 3D F6 12 0F FE 82 90 00
Gemalto IDPrime MD
The parsing code is part of pyscard and is available at parseATR.py.
The list of known ATR is also available online at smartcard_list.txt.
My blog contains a serie of artickes about ATR bytes.