<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><head><meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8"> <title> ccid – OpenCT </title><style type="text/css"> @import url(trac.css); </style></head><body><div id="content" class="wiki"> <div class="wikipage searchable"> <h1 id="USBCCIDReaders">USB CCID Readers</h1> <p> CCID is the norm for usb smart card readers. Except for some very old readers, all ccid readers should work fine with OpenCT. </p> <h2 id="Testresults">Test results</h2> <p> If you have tested one of these readers, please add a report here. </p> <ul><li>OMNIKEY CardMan 3021 on Fedora Core 5 with OpenCT 0.6.7: success. </li><li>OMNIKEY CardMan 3121 on Fedora Core 3 with OpenCT 0.6.5: success. </li><li>OMNIKEY CardMan 5121 on Debian with OpenCT 0.6.5: success (only the contact-based part, no RFID) </li><li>SCM SCR331 </li><li>SCM SCR3310 </li><li>HP SmartCard Keyboard </li><li>Cherry Smartboard G83-6744: success (not yet in secure pinpad mode however) </li></ul><h2 id="Issues">Issues</h2> <ul><li>the ccid parameter setting must be done in 2 passes, one that doesn't set Fi/Di to non-default values (before PTS is performed) and one that does (after we know the card accepts the non-default baudrate) </li><li>the pcsc ccid driver does validation of whether the reader supports a given baud rate, rather than blindly assuming that it will be able to deal with whatever preferred/maximum baud rate the card's atr specify's. We should do that too. </li></ul><h2 id="Alternative">Alternative</h2> <p> If openct does not work, Ludovic Rousseau has a driver in ifdhandler format for pcsc-lite at <a class="ext-link" href="http://pcsclite.alioth.debian.org/ccid.html" shape="rect"><span class="icon"> </span>http://pcsclite.alioth.debian.org/ccid.html</a> </p> </div> </div><div class="footer"><hr></hr><p><a href="index.html">Back to Index</a></p></div></body></html>