Enter an ATR (Answer To Reset) and I will parse it for you.
Parsing ATR:
TS = 0x3B | Direct Convention |
---|---|
T0 = 0x8F | Y(1): b1000, K: 15 (historical bytes) |
TD(1) = 0x80 | Y(i+1) = b1000, Protocol T=0 |
---- | |
TD(2) = 0x01 | Y(i+1) = b0000, Protocol T=1 |
---- | |
Historical bytes | 80 31 80 65 B0 85 04 00 11 12 0F FF 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 85 04 00 11 "....." Tag: 1, Len: 2 (country code, ISO 3166-1) Country code: 0F FF Tag: 8, Len: 2 (status indicator) SW: 90 00 |
TCK = 0x8A | correct checksum |
Possibly identified card:
3B 8F 80 01 80 31 80 65 B0 85 04 00 11 12 0F FF 82 90 00 8A
Dutch driver licence (eID)
Italian electronic identity card (eID)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_electronic_identity_card
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.