Automatic identification equipment and IC cards
First Claim
1. An IC card equipped with a writable memory and accessed by at least two types of interrogators, comprising:
- authentication keys, the number of which is equal to the number of the types of said interrogators, wherein a memory space of said memory has a plurality of data areas to each of which a plurality of flags are assigned, each of said flags being composed of one bit, being assigned in correspondence to the type of interrogator, and indicating whether or not the corresponding type of interrogator is permitted to access the corresponding data area; and
an area, in which after writing data into said memory in response to an instruction from one interrogator of said interrogators, an ID of said one interrogator and a writing memory address are stored in a portion of said memory.
0 Assignments
0 Petitions
Accused Products
Abstract
In a conventional method which defines an authentication key for each record, as the number of the records is increased in an access right management for records in a memory of an IC card, the number of the types of authentication keys is also increased to require a larger memory area for storing the authentication keys, thus causing lower memory efficiency. In order to solve such a problem, terminal types (ex. “0H”-“7H”) are defined for interrogators, so that only the number of authentication keys equal to the number of the terminal types are stored. Each record has the number of access permission bits equal to the number of the terminal types, and specifies terminal types, to which an access is permitted, by setting the bits ON or OFF.
14 Citations
2 Claims
-
1. An IC card equipped with a writable memory and accessed by at least two types of interrogators, comprising:
-
authentication keys, the number of which is equal to the number of the types of said interrogators, wherein a memory space of said memory has a plurality of data areas to each of which a plurality of flags are assigned, each of said flags being composed of one bit, being assigned in correspondence to the type of interrogator, and indicating whether or not the corresponding type of interrogator is permitted to access the corresponding data area; and
an area, in which after writing data into said memory in response to an instruction from one interrogator of said interrogators, an ID of said one interrogator and a writing memory address are stored in a portion of said memory. - View Dependent Claims (2)
said portion of said memory for storing the ID of said one interrogator and said writing memory address is formed as a ring buffer.
-
Specification