Network Working Group                                       Y. Kawatsura
Request for Comments: 3867                                       Hitachi
Category: Informational                                        M. Hiroya
                                                     Technoinfo Service
                                                            H. Beykirch
                                                            Atos Origin
                                                          November 2004


      Payment Application Programmers Interface (API) for v1.0
                Internet Open Trading Protocol (IOTP)

Status of this Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
  not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this
  memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004).

Abstract

  The Internet Open Trading Protocol (IOTP) provides a data exchange
  format for trading purposes while integrating existing pure payment
  protocols seamlessly.  This motivates the multiple layered system
  architecture which consists of at least some generic IOTP application
  core and multiple specific payment modules.

  This document addresses a common interface between the IOTP
  application core and the payment modules, enabling the
  interoperability between these kinds of modules.  Furthermore, such
  an interface provides the foundations for a plug-in-mechanism in
  actual implementations of IOTP application cores.

  Such interfaces exist at the Consumers', the Merchants' and the
  Payment Handlers' installations connecting the IOTP application core
  and the payment software components/legacy systems.












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Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3
      1.1.  General payment phases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  5
      1.2.  Assumptions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6
  2.  Message Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
      2.1.  Authentication Documentation Exchange. . . . . . . . . . 15
      2.2.  Brand Compilation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
      2.3.  Brand Selection. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
      2.4.  Successful Payment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
      2.5.  Payment Inquiry. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
      2.6.  Abnormal Transaction Processing. . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
            2.6.1.  Failures and Cancellations . . . . . . . . . . . 30
            2.6.2.  Resumption . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
      2.7.  IOTP Wallet Initialization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
      2.8.  Payment Software Management. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
  3.  Mutuality. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
      3.1.  Error Codes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
      3.2.  Attributes and Elements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
      3.3.  Process States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
            3.3.1.  Merchant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
            3.3.2.  Consumer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
            3.3.3.  Payment Handler. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
  4.  Payment API Calls. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66
      4.1.  Brand Compilation Related API Calls. . . . . . . . . . . 66
            4.1.1.  Find Accepted Payment Brand. . . . . . . . . . . 66
            4.1.2.  Find Accepted Payment Protocol . . . . . . . . . 68
            4.1.3.  Get Payment Initialization Data. . . . . . . . . 70
            4.1.4.  Inquire Authentication Challenge . . . . . . . . 72
            4.1.5.  Authenticate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
            4.1.6.  Check Authentication Response. . . . . . . . . . 74
      4.2.  Brand Selection Related API Calls. . . . . . . . . . . . 76
            4.2.1.  Find Payment Instrument. . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
            4.2.2.  Check Payment Possibility. . . . . . . . . . . . 78
      4.3.  Payment Transaction Related API calls. . . . . . . . . . 80
            4.3.1.  Start Payment Consumer . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
            4.3.2.  Start Payment Payment Handler. . . . . . . . . . 82
            4.3.3.  Resume Payment Consumer. . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
            4.3.4.  Resume Payment Payment Handler . . . . . . . . . 85
            4.3.5.  Continue Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86
            4.3.6.  Change Process State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
      4.4.  General Inquiry API Calls. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
            4.4.1.  Remove Payment Log . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
            4.4.2.  Payment Instrument Inquiry . . . . . . . . . . . 90
            4.4.3.  Inquire Pending Payment. . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
      4.5.  Payment Related Inquiry API Calls. . . . . . . . . . . . 93
            4.5.1.  Check Payment Receipt. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93
            4.5.2.  Expand Payment Receipt . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94



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            4.5.3.  Inquire Process State. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96
            4.5.4.  Start Payment Inquiry. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
            4.5.5.  Inquire Payment Status . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98
      4.6.  Other API Calls. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99
            4.6.1.  Manage Payment Software. . . . . . . . . . . . . 99
  5.  Call Back Function . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .101
  6.  Security Considerations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .103
  7.  References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .103
      7.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .103
      7.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .104
  Acknowledgement. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .105
  Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .105
  Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .106

1.  Introduction

  Common network technologies are based on standardized and established
  Internet technologies.  The Internet technologies provide mechanisms
  and tools for presentation, application development, network
  infrastructure, security, and basic data exchange.

  Due to the presence of already installed trading roles' systems with
  their own interfaces (Internet shop, order management, payment,
  billing, and delivery management systems, or financial institute's
  legacy systems), IOTP has been limited to the common external
  interface over the Internet. However, some of these internal
  interfaces might be also standardized for better integration of IOTP
  aware components with of the existing infrastructure and its cost
  effective reuse. For more information on IOTP, see [IOTP] and
  [IOTPBOOK].

  The typical Payment Handlers (i.e., financial institutes or near-bank
  organizations) as well as Merchants require an IOTP aware application
  that easily fits into their existing financial infrastructure.  The
  Payment Handler might even insist on the reuse of special in-house
  solutions for some subtasks of the IOTP aware application, e.g.,
  reflecting their cryptography modules, gateway interfaces, or
  physical environment.  Therefore, their IOTP aware implementation
  really requires such clear internal interfaces.

  More important, consumers demand modularization and clear internal
  interfaces: Their IOTP application aims at the support of multiple
  payment methods.  Consumers prefer the flexible use of different
  seamless integrating payment methods within one trading application
  with nearly identical behavior and user interface.  The existence of
  a well-defined interface enables payment software developers to bolt
  on their components to other developer's general IOTP Application
  Core.



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  Initially, this consideration leads to the two-level layered view of
  the IOTP software for each role, consisting of:

  o  some generic IOTP system component, the so-called IOTP application
     core - providing IOTP based gateway services and generic business
     logic and

  o  the trading roles' specific back-end systems implementing the
     specific trading transaction types' functionality.

  In order to isolate the changes on the infrastructure, the IOTP
  trading application has been three-layered:

  o  the IOTP Application Core processes the generic parts of the IOTP
     transaction and holds the connection to the Internet,

  o  the Existing Legacy System or Existing Payment Software which
     processes the actual transaction type, and particular payment
     transaction, and

  o  the IOTP Middle-ware or IOTP Payment Bridge which glues the other
     two possibly incompatible components.  It brokers between the
     specific interface of the Existing Legacy System and the
     standardized interfaces of the IOTP Application Core.

  As IOTP extends payment schemes to a trading scheme, primarily, this
  document focuses on payment modules, i.e., the interface between the
  IOTP Payment Bridge and the IOTP Application Core.  It provides a
  standard method for exchanging payment protocol messages between the
  parties involved in a payment.  But, it does not specify any
  interface for order or delivery processing.

  Such a Payment Application Programmers Interface (API) must suit for
  a broad range of payment methods: (1) software based like Credit Card
  SET or CyberCoin, (2) chip card based like Mondex or GeldKarte, and
  (3) mimicries of typical and traditional payment methods like money
  transfer, direct debit, deposit, withdrawal, money exchange and value
  points.  It should support both payments with explicit consumer
  acknowledge and automatic repeated payments, which have been consumer
  approved in advance.  For more information on SET, see [SET].

  The following discussion focuses on the Consumer's point of view and
  uses the associated terminology.  When switching to Merchants' or
  Delivery Handlers' IOTP aware applications, the payment related
  components should be implicitly renamed by Existing Legacy Systems to
  the IOTP Middle-ware.





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  The next two sub-sections describe the general payment scenario and
  several assumptions about the coarsely sketched software components.

  Section 2 illustrates the payment transaction progress and message
  flow of different kinds of transaction behavior.  Sections 3 to 4
  provide the details of the API functions and Section 5 elaborates the
  call back interface.

1.1.  General payment phases

  The following table sketches the four logical steps of many payment
  schemes.  The preceding agreements about the goods, payment method,
  purchase amount, or delivery rules are omitted.

  Payment State  Party             Example Behavior
  -------------  -----             ----------------

  Mutual         Payment Handler   Generation of identification
  Authentication                   request, solvency request, or
  and                              some nonce
  Initialization Consumer          Responses to the requests and
                                   generation of own nonce

  Authorization  Payment Handler   Generation of the authorization
                                   request (for consumer)
                 Consumer          Agreement to payment (by
                                   reservation of the Consumer's
                                   e-money)
                 Payment Handler   Acceptance or rejection of the
                                   agreement (consumer's
                                   authorization response),
                                   generation of the authorization
                                   request (for issuer/acquirer),
                                   and processing of its response

  Capture                          Generation of the capture
                                   request (for issuer/acquirer)
                 Consumer          Is charged
                 Payment Handler   Acceptance or rejection of the
                                   e-money, close of the payment
                                   transaction

  Reversal                         On rejection (online/delayed):
                                   generation of the reversal data
                 Consumer          Receipt of the refund






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  However, some payment schemes:

  o  limit themselves to one-sided authentication,
  o  perform off-line authorization without any referral to any
     issuer/acquirer,
  o  apply capture processing in batch mode, or
  o  do not distinguish between authorization and capture,
  o  lack an inbound mechanism for reversals or implement a limited
     variant.

  This model applies not only to payments at the typical points of
  sales but extends to refunds, deposits, withdrawals, electronic
  cheques, direct debits, and money transfers.

1.2.  Assumptions

  In outline, the IOTP Payment Bridge processes some input sequence of
  payment protocol messages being forwarded by the IOTP Application
  Core.  It (1) disassembles the messages, (2) maps them onto the
  formats of the Existing Payment Software, (3) assembles its
  responses, and (4) returns another sequence of payment protocol
  messages that is mostly intended for transparent transmission by the
  IOTP Application Core to some IOTP aware remote party.  Normally,
  this process continues between the two parties until the Payment
  Handler's Payment API signals the payment termination.
  Exceptionally, each system component may signal failures.

  The relationship between the aforementioned components is illustrated
  in the following figure.  These components might be related to each
  other in a flexible n-to-m-manner:

  o  One IOTP Application Core may manage multiple IOTP Payment Bridges
     and the latter might be shared between multiple IOTP Application
     Cores.
  o  Each Payment Bridge may manage multiple Existing Payment Software
     modules and the latter might be shared between multiple Payment
     Bridges.
  o  Each Existing Payment Software may manage multiple payment schemes
     (e.g., SET) and the latter might be supported by multiple Existing
     Payment Software modules.  For more information on SET see [SET].

  o  Each payment scheme may support multiple payment instruments
     (e.g., particular card) or methods (e.g., Visa via SET) and the
     latter might be shared by multiple Existing Payment Software
     Components.






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  *+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*
  IOTP client (consumer)  <--------------->  IOTP server (merchant)
  (      contains             Internet       (      contains
  IOTP Application Core)                     IOTP Application Core)
        ^                                          ^
        | IOTP Payment                             | IOTP Payment
        |    API                                   |    API
        v                                          v
  IOTP Payment Bridge                        IOTP Payment Bridge
       ^                                           ^
       | Existing Payment APIs, e.g.,              |
       | SET, Mondex, etc.                         |
       v                                           v
  Existing Payment Software               Existing Payment Software
  *+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*

                Figure 1: Relationship of the Components

  The Payment API considers the following transaction types of Baseline
  IOTP:

     o  Baseline Purchase,
     o  Baseline Refund,
     o  Baseline Value Exchange,
     o  Baseline Withdrawal, and
     o  Baseline (Payment) Inquiry.

  For more information on Baseline IOTP, see [IOTP] and [IOTPBOOK].

  First, the authors' vision of the IOTP aware application's and its
  main components' capabilities are clarified: On the one hand, the
  Payment API should be quite powerful and flexible for sufficient
  connection of the generic and specific components.  On the other
  hand, the Payment API should not be overloaded with nice-to-haves
  being unsupported by Existing Payment Software.

  Despite the strong similarities on the processing of successful
  payments, failure resolution and inquiry capabilities differ
  extremely among different payment schemes.  These aspects may even
  vary between different payment instrument using the same payment
  schemes.  Additionally, the specific requirements of Consumers,
  Merchants and Payment Handlers add variance and complexity.
  Therefore, it is envisioned that the IOTP Application Core provides
  only very basic inquiry mechanisms while complex and payment scheme
  specific inquiries, failure analysis, and failure resolution are
  fully deferred to the actual Existing Payment Software - including
  the user interface.




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  The IOTP Application Core processes payments transparently, i.e., it
  forwards the wrapped payment scheme specific messages to the
  associated IOTP Payment Bridge/Existing Payment Software.  The
  Existing Payment Software might even use these messages for inbound
  failure resolution.  It reports only the final payment status to the
  IOTP Application Core or some intermediate - might be also final -
  status on abnormal interruption.

  The IOTP Application Core implements the generic and payment scheme
  independent part of the IOTP transaction processing and provides the
  suitable user interface.  Focusing on payment related tasks, it

  o  manages the registered IOTP Payment Bridges and provides a
     mechanism for their registration - the latter is omitted by this
     document.

  o  assumes that any IOTP Payment Bridge is a passive component, i.e.,
     it strictly awaits input data and generates one response to each
     request,

  o  supports the payment negotiation (Consumer: selection of the
     actual payment instrument or method; Merchant: selection of the
     payment methods being offered to the Consumer) preceding the
     payment request,

  o  requests additional payment specific support from the Existing
     Payment Software via the selected and registered the IOTP Payment
     Bridge,

  o  initializes and terminates the Existing Payment Software via the
     IOTP Payment Bridge,

  o  inquires authentication data (for subsequent request or response)
     from the Existing Payment Software, specific authentication
     component - omitted in this document - or Consumer (by a suitable
     user interface),

  o  supervises the online transaction process and traces its progress,

  o  stores the transaction data being exchanged over the IOTP wire -
     payment scheme specific data is handled transparently,

  o  relates each payment transaction with multiple payment parameters
     (IOTP Transaction Identifier, Trading Protocol Options, Payment
     Instrument/Method, Offer Response, IOTP Payment Bridge, and Wallet
     Identifier, associated remote Parties).  The relation might be





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     lowered to the party's Payment Identifier, IOTP Payment Bridge,
     Wallet Identifier, and the remote parties when the actual payment
     transaction has been successfully started.

  o  implements a payment transaction progress indicator,

  o  enables the inquiry of pending and completed payment transactions,

  o  implements generic dialogs, e.g., brand selection, payment
     acknowledge, payment suspension / cancellation, receipt
     visualization, basic transaction inquiry, balance inquiry, or
     receipt validation,

  o  defers payment specific processing, supervision, validation, and
     error resolution to the Existing Payment Software.  It is
     expected, that the Existing Payment Software will try to resolve
     many errors first by the extended exchange of Payment Exchange
     messages.  The most significant and visible failures arise from
     sudden unavailability or lapses of the local or opposing payment
     component.

  o  supports the invocation of any Existing Payment Software in an
     interactive mode, which might be used (1) for the payment scheme
     specific post-processing of a (set of) payment transactions, (2)
     for the analysis of a payment instrument, (3) for the registration
     of a new payment instrument/scheme, or (4) re-configuration of a
     payment instrument/scheme.

  o  exports call back functions for use by the IOTP Payment Bridge or
     Existing Payment Software for progress indication.

  In addition, the IOTP Application Core

  o  manages the IOTP message components and IOTP message blocks
     exchanged during the transaction which may be referenced and
     accessed during the processing of subsequent messages, e.g., for
     signature verification.  In particular, it stores named Packaged
     Content elements exchanged during payments.

  o  manages several kinds of identifiers, i.e., transaction, message,
     component, and block identifiers,

  o  implements a message caching mechanism,

  o  detects time-outs at the protocol and API level reflecting the
     communication with both the IOTP aware remote party and the
     Payment API aware local periphery, e.g., chip card (reader) may
     raise time-outs.



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  However, the IOTP Payment Bridge and Existing Payment Software do not
  have to rely on all of these IOTP Application Core's capabilities.
  E.g., some Consumer's Existing Payment Software may refuse the
  disclosure of specific payment instruments at brand selection time
  and may delay this selection to the "Check Payment Possibility"
  invocation using its own user interface.

  The IOTP Payment Bridge's capabilities do not only deal with actual
  payments between the Consumer and the Payment Handler but extend to
  the following:

  o  translation and (dis)assemblage of messages between the formats of
     the IOTP Payment API and those of the Existing Payment Software.
     Payment API requests and response are strictly 1-to-1 related.

  o  Consumer's payment instrument selection by the means of an
     unsecured/public export of the relationship of payment brands,
     payment protocols, and payment instruments (identifiers).
     Generally, this includes not just the brand (Mondex, GeldKarte,
     etc.) but also which specific instance of the instrument and
     currency to use (e.g., which specific Mondex card and which
     currency of all those available).

  However, some Existing Payment Software may defer the selection of
  the payment instrument to the actual payment carrying-out or it may
  even lack any management of payment instruments.  E.g., chip card
  based payment methods may offer - Point of Sale like - implicit
  selection of the payment instrument by simple insertion of the chip
  card into the chip card reader or it interrogates the inserted card
  and requests an acknowledge (or selection) of the detected payment
  instrument(s).

  o  payment progress checks, e.g., is there enough funds available to
     carry out the purchase, or enough funds left for the refund,

  o  IOTP Payment Receipt checks which might be performed over its
     Packaged Content or by other means.

  o  recoding of payment scheme specific receipts into a format which
     can be displayed to the user or printed,

  o  cancellation of payment, even though it is not complete,

  o  suspension and resumption of payment transactions.  Two kinds of
     failures the Existing Payment Software might deal with are (1) the
     time-out of the network connection and (2) lack of funds.  For
     resolution, the IOTP Application Core may try the suspension with
     a view to later possible resumption.



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  o  recording the payment progress and status on a database.  E.g.,
     information about pending payments might be used to assist their
     continuation when the next payment protocol message is received.

  o  payment transaction status inquiry, so that the inquirer - IOTP
     Application Core or User - can determine the appropriate next
     step.

  o  balance inquiry or transaction history, e.g., consumers may
     interrogate their chip card based payment instrument or remotely
     administer some account in advance of a payment transaction
     acknowledge,

  o  inquiry on abnormal interrupted payment transactions, which might
     be used by the IOTP Application Core to resolve these pending
     transactions at startup (after power failure).

  o  payment progress indication.  This could be used to inform the end
     user of details on what is happening with the payment.

  o  payment method specific authentication methods.

  Existing Payment Software may not provide full support of these
  capabilities.  E.g., some payment schemes may not support or may even
  prevent the explicit transaction cancellation at arbitrary phases of
  the payment process.  In this case, the IOTP Payment Bridge has to
  implement at least skeletons that signal such lack of support by the
  use of specific error codes (see below).

  The Existing Payment Software's capabilities vary extremely.  It

  o  supports payment scheme specific processing, supervision,
     validation, and error resolution.  It is expected, that many
     errors are tried to be resolved first by the extended exchange of
     Payment Exchange messages.

  o  provides hints for out-of-band failure resolution on failed
     inbound resolution - inbound resolution is invisible to the IOTP
     Application Core.

  o  may implement arbitrary transaction data management and inquiry
     mechanisms ranging from no transaction recording, last transaction
     recording, chip card deferred transaction recording, simple
     transaction history to sophisticated persistent data management
     with flexible user inquiry capabilities.  The latter is required
     by Payment Handlers for easy and cost effective failure
     resolution.




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  o  implements the payment scheme specific dialog boxes.

  Even the generic dialog boxes of the IOTP Application Core might be
  unsuitable: Particular (business or scheme) rules may require some
  dedicated appearance / structure / content or the dialog boxes, may
  prohibit the unsecured export of payment instruments, or may
  prescribe the pass phrase input under its own control.

2.  Message Flow

  The following lists all functions of the IOTP Payment API:

     o  Brand Compilation Related API Functions

  "Find Accepted Payment Brand" identifies the accepted payment brands
  for any indicated currency amount.

  "Find Accepted Payment Protocol" identifies the accepted payment
  protocols for any indicated currency amount (and brand) and returns
  payment scheme specific packaged content for brand selection
  purposes.

  This function might be used in conjunction with the aforementioned
  function or called without any brand identifier.

  "Get Payment Initialization Data" returns additional payment scheme
  specific packaged content for payment processing by the payment
  handler.

  "Inquire Authentication Challenge" returns the payment scheme
  specific authentication challenge value.

  "Check Authentication Response" verifies the returned payment scheme
  specific authentication response value.

  "Change Process State" is used (here only) for abnormal termination.
  (cf. Payment Processing Related API Functions).

     o  Brand Selection Related API Functions

  "Find Payment Instrument" identifies which instances of a payment
  instrument of a particular payment brand are available for use in a
  payment.

  "Check Payment Possibility" checks whether a specific payment
  instrument is able to perform a payment.





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  "Authenticate" forwards any payment scheme specific authentication
  data to the IOTP Payment Bridge for processing.

  "Change Process State" is used (here only) for abnormal termination.
  (cf. Payment Processing Related API Functions).

     o  Payment Processing Related API Functions

  "Start or Resume Payment Consumer/Payment Handler" initiate or resume
  a payment transaction.  There exist specific API functions for the
  two trading roles Consumer and Payment Handler.

  "Continue Process" forwards payment scheme specific data to the
  Existing Payment Software and returns more payment scheme specific
  data for transmission to the counter party.

  "Change Process State" changes the current status of payment
  transactions.  Typically, this call is used for termination or
  suspension without success.

     o  General Inquiry API Functions

  "Remove Payment Log" notifies the IOTP Payment Bridge that a
  particular entry has been removed from the Payment Log of the IOTP
  Application Core.

  "Payment Instrument Inquiry" retrieves the properties of Payment
  Instruments.

  "Inquire Pending Payment" reports any abnormal interrupted payment
  transaction known by the IOTP Payment Bridge.

  Payment Processing Related Inquiry API Functions

  "Check Payment Receipt" checks the consistency and validity of IOTP
  Payment Receipts, received from the Payment Handler or returned by
  "Inquire Process State" API calls.  Typically, this function is
  called by the Consumer during the final processing of payment
  transactions.  Nevertheless, this check might be advantageous both
  for Consumers and Payment Handlers on failure resolution.

  "Expand Payment Receipt" expands the Packaged Content of IOTP Payment
  Receipts as well as payment scheme specific payment receipts into a
  form which can be used for display or printing purposes.

  "Inquire Process State" responds with the payment state and the IOTP
  Payment Receipt Component.  Normally, this function is called by the
  Payment Handler for final processing of the payment transaction.



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  "Start Payment Inquiry" prepares the remote inquiry of the payment
  transaction status and responds with payment scheme specific data
  that might be needed by the Payment Handler for the Consumer
  initiated inquiry processing.

  "Inquire Payment Status" is called by the Payment Handler on Consumer
  initiated inquiry requests.  This function returns the payment scheme
  specific content of the Inquiry Response Block.

  "Continue Process" and "Change Process State" (cf. Payment Processing
  Related API Calls)

     o  Other API Functions

  "Manage Payment Software" enables the immediate activation of the
  Existing Payment Software.  Further user input is under control of
  the Existing Payment Software.

  "Call Back" provides a general interface for the visualization of
  transaction progress by the IOTP Application Core.

  The following table shows which API functions must (+), should (#),
  or might (?) be implemented by which Trading Roles.

  API function                  Consumer  Payment Handler  Merchant
  ------------                  --------  ---------------  --------

  Find Accepted Payment Brand                                 +
  Find Accepted Payment Protocol                              #
  Find Payment Instrument          +

  Get Payment Initialization Data                             +
  Check Payment Possibility        +

  Start Payment Consumer           +
  Start Payment Payment Handler                  +
  Resume Payment Consumer          #
  Resume Payment Payment Handler                 #

  Continue Process                 +             +
  Inquire Process State            +             +            ?
  Change Process State             +             +            ?
  Check Payment Receipt            +             ?
  Expand Payment Receipt           #             ?

  Remove Payment Log               ?             ?            ?

  Inquire Authentication Challenge                            ?



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  Authenticate                     +
  Check Authentication Response                               ?

  Payment Instrument Inquiry       ?
  Inquire Pending Payment          #             #
  Start Payment Inquiry            ?
  Inquire Payment Status                         ?

  Manage Payment Software          #             ?            ?

  Call Back                        #

       Table 1: Requirements on API Functions by the Trading Roles

  The next sections sketch the relationships and the dependencies
  between the API functions.  They provide the informal description of
  the progress alternatives and depict the communication and
  synchronization between the general IOTP Application Core and the
  payment scheme specific modules.

2.1.  Authentication Documentation Exchange

  This section describes how the functions in this document are used
  together to process authentication.

  *+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*
  Authenticator   Inquire Authentication Challenge(Alg1*)   -> IPB
                  Inq. Auth. Challenge Response(Alg1,Ch1)   <- IPB
                  . . .
                  Inquire Authentication Challenge(Algn*)   -> IPB
                  Inq. Auth. Challenge Response(Algn,Chn)   <- IPB
                  Create and transmit Authentication Request Block
  Authenticatee   Authenticate(Alg1, Ch1)                   -> IPB
                  AuthenticateResponse(...)                 <- IPB
                  . . .
                  Authenticate(Algm, Chm)                   -> IPB
                  AuthenticateResponse(Res)                 <- IPB
                  Create and transmit Authentication Response Block
  Authenticator   Check Authentication Response(Algm,Chm,Res)->IPB
                  Check Auth. Response()                     <-IPB
                  Create and transmit Authentication Status Block
  *+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*

                 Figure 2. Authentication Message Flows







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  1. (Authenticator Process) None, one or multiple IOTP Payment Bridges
     (IPB) are requested for one or multiple authentication challenge
     values ("Inquire Authentication Challenge").  Each value is
     encapsulated in an IOTP Authentication Request Component.  In
     addition, the IOTP Application Core may add payment scheme
     independent authentication methods.  All of them form the final
     IOTP Authentication Request Block, which describes the set of
     authentication methods being supported by the authenticator and
     from which the Authenticatee has to choose one method.

     Note that the interface of the API function is limited to the
     response of exactly one algorithm per call.  If the IOTP
     Application Core provides a choice of algorithms for input, this
     choice should be reduced successively by the returned algorithm
     ({Alg(i+1)*} is subset of {Algi*}).

     During the registration of new Payment Instruments, the IOTP
     Payment Bridge notifies the IOTP Application Core about the
     supported authentication algorithms.

  2. On the presence of an IOTP Authentication Block within the
     received IOTP message, the Authenticatee's IOTP Application Core
     checks whether the IOTP transaction type in the current phase
     actually supports the authentication process.

     For each provided Authentication Request Component, the IOTP
     Application Core analyzes the algorithms' names, the transaction
     context, and optionally user preferences in order to determine the
     system components which are capable to process the authentication
     request items.  Such system components might be the IOTP
     Application Core itself or any of the registered IOTP Payment
     Bridges.

     Subsequently, the IOTP Application Core requests the responses to
     the supplied challenges from the determined system components in
     any order.  The authentication trials stop with the first
     successful response, which is included in the IOTP Authentication
     Response Block.

     Alternatively, the IOTP Application might ask for a user
     selection.  This might be appropriate, if two or more
     authentication algorithms are received that require explicit user
     interaction, like PIN or chip card insertion.

     The Authenticatee's organizational data is requested by an IOTP
     Authentication Request Block without any content element.  On
     failure, the authentication (sequence) might be retried, or the
     whole transaction might be suspended or cancelled.



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  3. (Authenticator Process) The IOTP Application Core checks the
     presence of the IOTP Authentication Response Component in the
     Authentication Response Block and forwards its content to the
     generator of the associated authentication challenge for
     verification ("Check Authentication Response").

     On sole organizational data request, its presence is checked.

     Any verification must succeed in order to proceed with the
     transaction.

2.2.  Brand Compilation

  The following shows how the API functions are used together so that
  the Merchant can (1) compile the Brand List Component, (2) generate
  the Payment Component, and (3) adjust the Order Component with
  payment scheme specific packaged content.


































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  *+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*
  Merchant      For each registered IOTP Payment Bridge
                |  Find Accepted Payment Brand()             -> IPB
                |  Find Accepted Payment Brand Response (B*) <- IPB
                |  Find Accepted Payment Protocol(B1)        -> IPB
                |  Find Accepted Payment Protocol Res.(P1*)  <- IPB
                |  . . .
                |  Find Accepted Payment Protocol(Bn)        -> IPB
                |  Find Accepted Payment Protocol Res.(Pn*)  <- IPB
                Create one Brand List Component, ideally sharing
                  common Brand, Protocol Amount, Currency Amount,
                  and Pay Protocol Elements
                Create Trading Protocol Options Block
                On brand independent transactions
                |  Create Brand Selection Component, implicitly
                |  Get Payment Initialization Data(B1,P1)   -> IPB
                |  Get Payment Initialization Data Res.()   <- IPB
                |  Optionally
                |  |  Inquire Process State()               -> IPB
                |  |  Inquire Process State Response(State) <- IPB
                |  Create Offer Response Block
                Transmit newly created Block(s)
  Consumer      Consumer selects Brand (Bi)/Currency/Protocol (Pj)
                  from those that will work and generates Brand
                  Selection Component - at least logically
                On brand dependent transaction
                |  Transmit Brand Selection Component
  Merchant      On brand dependent transaction
                |  Get Payment Initialization Data(Bi,Pj)   -> IPB
                |  Get Payment Initialization Data Res.()   <- IPB
                |  Optionally
                |  |  Inquire Process State()               -> IPB
                |  |  Inquire Process State Response(State) <- IPB
                |  Create Offer Response Block
                |  Transmit newly created Block
  *+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*

                Figure 3. Brand Compilation Message Flows

  1.  The Merchant's commerce server controls the shopping dialog with
      its own mechanisms until the Consumer checks out the shopping
      cart and indicates the payment intention.  The notion shopping
      subsumes any non-IOTP based visit of the Merchant Trading Role's
      (which subsumes Financial Institutes) web site in order to
      negotiate the content of the IOTP Order Component.  The
      subsequent processing switches to the IOTP based form by the
      activation of the Merchant's IOTP aware application.




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  2.  The IOTP Application Core inquires for the IOTP level trading
      parameters (Consumer's shopping identifier, payment direction,
      initial currency amounts, discount rates, Merchant's and Delivery
      Handler's Net Locations, Non-Payment Handler's Organizational
      Data, initial order information, ....).

  3.  The registered IOTP Payment Bridges are inquired by the IOTP
      Application Core about the accepted payment brands ("Find
      Accepted Payment Brand").  Their responses provide most of the
      attribute values for the compilation of the Brand List
      Component's Brand Elements.  The IOTP Application Core might
      optionally match the returned payment brands with Merchant's
      general preferences.

      The IOTP Application Core must provide any wallet identifiers, if
      they are required by the IOTP Payment Bridges which signal their
      need by specific error codes (see below).  Any signaled error
      that could not be immediately solved by the IOTP Application Core
      should be logged - this applies also to the subsequent API calls
      of this section.  In this case, the IOTP Application Core creates
      an IOTP Error Block (hard error), transmits it to the Consumer,
      and terminates the current transaction.

  4.  The IOTP Application Core interrogates the IOTP Payment Bridges
      for each accepted payment brand about the supported payment
      protocols ("Find Accepted Payment Protocol").  These responses
      provide the remaining attribute values of the Brand Elements as
      well as all attribute values for the compilation of the Brand
      List Component's Protocol Amount and Pay Protocol Elements.

      Furthermore, the organisational data about the Payment Handler is
      returned.  The IOTP Application Core might optionally match the
      returned payment brands with Merchant's general preferences.

      Alternatively, the IOTP Application Core might skip the calls of
      "Find Accepted Payment Brands" (cf. Step 3) and issue the "Find
      Accepted Payment Protocol" call without any Brand given on the
      input parameter list.  In this case, the IOTP Payment Bridge
      responds to the latter call with the whole set of payment schemes
      supported w.r.t. the other input parameters.

  5.  The steps 3 and 4 are repeated during IOTP Value Exchange
      transactions - these steps are omitted in the previous figure.

  6.  The IOTP Application Core compiles the Brand List Component(s)
      and the IOTP Trading Protocol Options Block.  It is recommended
      that the "equal" items returned by IOTP Payment Bridge function
      calls are shared due to the extensive linking capabilities within



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      the Brand List Component.  However, the compilation must consider
      several aspects in order to prevent conflicts - sharing detection
      might be textual matching (after normalization):

     o  Packaged Content Elements contained in the Brand List Component
        (and subsequently generated Payment and Order Components) might
        be payment scheme specific and might depend on each other.

     o  Currently, IOTP lacks precise rules for the content of the
        Packaged Content Element.  Therefore, transaction / brand /
        protocol / currency amount (in)dependent data might share the
        same Packaged Content Element or might spread across multiple
        Packaged Content Elements.

     o  The Consumer's IOTP Application Core transparently passes the
        Packaged Content Elements to the IOTP Payment Bridges which
        might not be able to handle payment scheme data of other
        payment schemes, accurately.

      The rules and mechanisms of how this could be accomplished are
      out of the scope of this document.  Furthermore, this document
      does not define any further restriction to the IOTP
      specification.

  7.  The IOTP Application Core determines whether the IOTP message can
      be enriched with an Offer Response Block.  This is valid under
      the following conditions:

     o  All payment alternatives share the attribute values and
        Packaged Content Elements of the subsequently generated IOTP
        Payment and Order Components.

     o  The subsequently generated data does not depend on any IOTP
        BrandSelInfo Elements that might be reported by the consumer
        within the TPO Selection Block in the brand dependent variant.

      If both conditions are fulfilled, the IOTP Application Core might
      request the remaining payment scheme specific payment
      initialization data from the IOTP Payment Bridge ("Get Payment
      Initialization Data") and compile the IOTP Offer Response Block.

      Optionally, the IOTP Application Core might request the current
      process state from the IOTP Payment Bridge and add the inferred
      order status to the IOTP Offer Response Block.  Alternatively,
      IOTP Application might determine the order status on its own.

      As in step 6, the rules and mechanisms of how this could be
      accomplished are out of the scope of this document.



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  8.  The IOTP Application Core compiles the IOTP TPO Message including
      all compiled IOTP Blocks and transmits the message to the
      Consumer.  The IOTP Application Core terminates if an IOTP Offer
      Response Block has been created.

  9.  The Consumer performs the Brand Selection Steps (cf. Section 2.3)
      and responds with a TPO Selection Block if no IOTP Offer Response
      Block has been received.  Otherwise, the following step is
      skipped.

  10. On brand dependent transactions, the IOTP Application Core
      requests the remaining payment scheme specific payment
      initialization data from the IOTP Payment Bridge ("Get Payment
      Initialization Data"), compiles the IOTP Offer Response Block,
      transmits it to the Consumer, and terminates.  Like Step 7, the
      IOTP Application Core might access the current process state of
      the IOTP Payment Bridge for the compilation of the order status.

  Any error during this process raises an IOTP Error Block.

2.3.  Brand Selection

  This section describes the steps that happen mainly after the
  Merchant's Brand Compilation (in a brand independent transaction).
  However, these steps might partially interlace the previous process
  (in a brand dependent transaction).

  *+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*
  Merchant      Merchant generates Brand List(s) containing
                  Brands, Payment Protocols and Currency Amounts
                On brand independent transactions
                |  Merchant generates Offer Response Block
  Consumer      Compile set(s) of Brands B/Protocols P
                for each set
                |  Find Payment Instrument(B, P, C)        -> IPB
                |  Find Payment Instrument Response (PI*)    <- IPB
                Consumer selects Brand/Currency/Payment Instrument
                  from those that will work and generates Brand
                  Selection Component
                For the Selection
                |  Get Payment Initialization Data(B,C,PI,P) -> IPB
                |  Get Payment Initialization Data Response()<- IPB
                On brand dependent transaction
                |  Generate and transmit TPO Selection Block
  Merchant      On brand dependent transaction
                |  Merchant checks Brand Selection and generates
                |  and transmits Offer Response Block
  *+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*



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                 Figure 4. Brand Selection Message Flows

  1. The Merchant's commerce server controls the shopping dialog with
     its own mechanisms until the Consumer checks out the shopping cart
     and indicates his payment intention.  The subsequent processing
     switches to the IOTP based form by the activation of the
     Merchant's IOTP aware application.

  2. The IOTP Application Core compiles the IOTP Trading Protocol
     Options Block which contains the IOTP Brand List Component(s)
     enumerating Merchant's accepted payment brands and payment
     protocols and initiates the Brand Selection process.

  3. This first IOTP message activates the Consumer's IOTP aware
     application, e.g., the Web browser invokes a helper application
     (e.g., Java applet or external application).  Its IOTP Application
     Core

     o  infers the accepted payment brands, payment protocols, payment
        direction, currencies, payment amounts, any descriptions etc.,
        and their relationships from the IOTP message,

     o  determines the registered IOTP Payment Bridges,

     o  compiles one or multiple sets of brand and protocol such that
        the join of all sets describes exactly the payment alternatives
        being offered by the Merchant.

     o  inquires payment (protocol) support and the known payment
        instruments from each registered IOTP Payment Bridge for each
        compiled set ("Find Payment Instrument").  However, some IOTP
        Payment Bridges may refuse payment instrument distinction.

     The payment protocol support may differ between payment
     instruments if the IOTP Payment Bridge supports payment instrument
     distinction.

     These API calls are used to infer the payment alternatives at the
     startup of any payment transaction (without user unfriendly
     explicit user interaction).

     The IOTP Application Core must provide wallet identifiers, if they
     are requested by the IOTP Payment Bridges which signal their need
     by specific error codes (see below).

     It is recommended that the IOTP Application Core manages wallet
     identifiers.  But for security reasons, it should store pass
     phrases in plain text only in runtime memory.  Developers of IOTP



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     Payment Bridges and payment software modules should provide a thin
     and fast implementation - without lengthy initialization processes
     - for this initial inquiry step.

  4. The IOTP Application Core verifies the Consumer's payment
     capabilities with the Merchant's accepted payment brands and
     currencies,

     o  displays the valid payment instruments and payment instrument
        independent payment brands (brand and protocol) together with
        their purchase parameters (payment direction, currency,
        amount), and

     o  requests the Consumer's choice or derives it automatically from
        any configured preferences.  Any selection ties one IOTP
        Payment Bridge with the following payment transaction.

     The handling and resolution of unavailable IOTP Payment Bridges
     during the inquiry in Step 3 is up to the IOTP Application Core.
     It may skip these IOTP Payment Bridges or may allow user supported
     resolution.

     Furthermore, it may offer the registration of new payment
     instruments when the Consumer is asked for payment instrument
     selection.

  5. The IOTP Application Core interrogates the fixed IOTP Payment
     Bridge whether the payment might complete with success ("Check
     Payment Possibility").  At this step, the IOTP Payment Bridge may
     issue several signals, e.g.,

     o  payment can proceed immediately,
     o  required peripheral inclusive of some required physical payment
        instrument (chip card) is unavailable,
     o  (non-IOTP) remote party (e.g., issuer, server wallet) is not
        available,
     o  wallet identifier or pass phrase is required,
     o  expired payment instrument (or certificate), insufficient
        funds, or
     o  physical payment instrument unreadable.

     In any erroneous case, the user should be notified and offered
     accurate alternatives.  Most probably, the user might be offered

     o  to resolve the problem, e.g., to insert another payment
        instrument or to verify the periphery,
     o  to proceed (assuming its success),
     o  to cancel the whole transaction, or



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     o  to suspend the transaction, e.g., initiating a nested
        transaction for uploading an electronic purse.

     If the payment software implements payment instrument selection on
     its own, it may request the Consumer's choice at this step.

     If the check succeeds, it returns several IOTP Brand Selection
     Info Elements.

  6. The Steps 2 to 5 are repeated and possibly interlaced for the
     selection of the second payment instrument during IOTP Value
     Exchange transactions - this is omitted in the figure above.

  7. The IOTP Brand Selection Component is generated and enriched with
     the Brand Selection Info elements.  This component is transmitted
     to the Merchant inside a TPO Selection Block if the received IOTP
     message lacks the IOTP Offer Response Block.  The Merchant will
     then respond with an IOTP Offer Response Block (following the
     aforementioned compilation rules).

2.4.  Successful Payment

  An example of how the functions in this document are used together to
  effect a successful payment is illustrated in the Figure 5.  In the
  figure 5, PS0, PS1, ..., and PSn indicate the nth PayScheme Packaged
  Content data, and [ ] indicates optional.

  (Technically, two payments happen during IOTP Value Exchange
  transactions.)

  *+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*
  Consumer        Start Payment Consumer(Amount,[PS0]...)    -> IPB
                  Start Payment Cons. Res.([PS1], CS=Cont.)  <- IPB
                  Create and transmit Payment Request Block
  Payment Handler Start Payment Pay. Handler(Amount, [PS1])  -> IPB
                  Start Payment PH Response(PS2, CS=Cont.)   <- IPB
                  Create and transmit Payment Exchange Block
  Consumer        Continue Process(PS2)                      -> IPB
                  Continue Process Response(PS3, CS=Cont.)   <- IPB

           ... CONTINUE SWAPPING PAYMENT EXCHANGES UNTIL ...

  Payment Handler Continue Process Response([PSn], CS=End)   <- IPB
                  Request any local payment receipt
                  |  Inquire Process State()                 -> IPB
                  |  Inquire Proc. State Resp.(State, [Rcp.])<- IPB
                  Create and transmit Payment Response Block
                  Terminate transaction, actively



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                  |  Change Process State(State)             -> IPB
                  |  Change PS Response(State=CompletedOK)   <- IPB
  Consumer        On receipt of final payment scheme data
                  |  Continue Process(PSn)                   -> IPB
                  |  Continue Process Response(CS=End)       <- IPB
                  Check Payment Receipt(Receipt)             -> IPB
                  Check Payment Receipt Response()           <- IPB
                  Request any local payment receipt
                  |  Inquire Process State()                 -> IPB
                  |  Inquire Proc. State Resp.(State, [Rcp.])<- IPB
                  Terminate transaction, actively
                  |  Change Process State(State)             -> IPB
                  |  Change PS Response(State=CompletedOk)   <- IPB
  *+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*

                 Figure 5. Example Payment Message Flows

  1. After Brand Selection and receipt of the IOTP Offer Response
     Block, the Consumer switches from communicating with the Merchant
     to communicating with the Payment Handler.

     This might be a milestone requiring the renewed Consumer's
     agreement about the payment transaction's continuation.
     Particularly, this is a good moment for payment suspension (and
     even cancellation), which will be most probably supported by all
     payment schemes.  Simply, because the actual payment legacy
     systems have not yet been involved in the current transaction.

     Such an agreement might be explicit per transaction or automatic
     based on configured preferences, e.g., early acknowledgments for
     specific payment limits.

     It is assumed, that the transaction proceeds with minimal user
     (Consumer and Payment Handler) interaction and that its progress
     is controlled by the IOTP Application Core and IOTP Payment
     Bridge.

  2. In order to open the actual payment transaction, the IOTP
     Application Core issues the "Start Payment Consumer" request
     towards the IOTP Payment Bridge.  This request carries the whole
     initialization data of the payment transaction being referred to
     by the IOTP Payment Bridge for subsequent consistency checks:

     o  payment brand and its description from the selected Brand
        Element of the IOTP Brand List Component,
     o  payment instrument from preceding inquiry step,





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     o  further payment parameters (currency, amount, direction,
        expiration) from the selected Currency Amount element, Brand
        List Component, and Payment Component of the IOTP Offer
        Response Block,
     o  payment protocol from the selected IOTP Pay Protocol Element,
     o  order details contained in the IOTP Order Component which might
        be payment scheme specific,
     o  payment scheme specific data inclusive of the payment protocol
        descriptions from the IOTP Protocol Amount Element, and IOTP
        Pay Protocol Element, and
     o  payment scheme specific data inclusive of the payment protocol
        descriptions, in which the name attribute includes the prefix
        as "Payment:" from the Trading Role Data Component.

     Generally, the called API function re-does most checks of the
     "Check Payment Possibility" call due to lack of strong
     dependencies between both requests: There might be a significant
     delay between both API requests.

     The called API function may return further payment scheme specific
     data being considered as payment specific initialization data for
     the Payment Handler's IOTP Payment Bridge.

     If the fixed Existing Payment Software implements payment
     instrument selection on its own, it may request the Consumer's
     choice at this step.

     The IOTP Payment Bridge reports lack of capability quite similarly
     to the "Check Payment Possibility" request to the IOTP Application
     Core.  The Consumer may decide to resolve the problem, to suspend,
     or to cancel the transaction, but this function call must succeed
     in order to proceed with the transaction.

     Developers of payment modules may decide to omit payment
     instrument related checks like expiration date or refunds
     sufficiency, if such checks are part of the specific payment
     protocol.

     If the IOTP Payment Bridge requests wallet identifiers or pass
     phrases anywhere during the payment process, they should be
     requested by this API function, too.  It is recommended that the
     IOTP Application Core stores plain text pass phrases only in
     runtime memory.

     Finally, the IOTP Application Core generates the IOTP Payment
     Request Block, inserts any returned payment scheme data, and
     submits it to the Payment Handler's system.




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  3. The Payment Handler's IOTP Application Core opens the payment
     transaction calling the "Start Payment Payment Handler" API
     function.  The payment brand, its description, payment protocol,
     payment specific data, payment direction, currency and payment
     amount are determined quite similar to the Consumer's IOTP
     Application Core.  Furthermore, the content of the IOTP Payment
     Scheme Component and the IOTP Brand Selection Info Elements are
     passed to this function.

     On success, the Payment Handler's IOTP Payment Bridge responds
     with payment scheme specific data.  On failures, this non-
     interactive server application has to resolve any problems on its
     own or to give up aborting the payment transaction.  However, the
     Consumer may restart the whole payment transaction.  Anyway, the
     payment log file should reflect any trials of payments.

     Eventually, the Payment Handler informs the Consumer about the
     current IOTP Process State using the IOTP Payment Response or IOTP
     Error Block.

     Note that the "Start Payment Payment Handler" call might return
     the Continuation Status "End" such that payment processing
     proceeds with Step 7.

  4. The IOTP Application Core verifies the presence of the Payment
     Exchange Block in the IOTP message and passes the contained
     payment scheme specific data to the fixed IOTP Payment Bridge
     ("Continue Process") which returns the next IOTP Payment Scheme
     Component.

     This Payment Scheme Component is encapsulated in an IOTP Payment
     Exchange Block and transmitted to the Payment Handler.

  5. The Payment Handler's IOTP Application Core verifies the presence
     of the Payment Exchange Block and passes the contained payment
     scheme specific data to the fixed IOTP Payment Bridge ("Continue
     Process") which returns the next IOTP Payment Scheme Component for
     encapsulation and transmission to the Consumer.

  6. The payment process continues with IOTP Payment Exchange Block
     exchanges, carrying the payment scheme specific data.  Each party
     (1) submits the embedded payment scheme specific data
     transparently to the appropriate IOTP Payment Bridge calling the
     "Continue Process" API function, (2) wraps the returned payment
     scheme specific data into an IOTP Payment Exchange Block, and (3)
     transmits this block to the counter party.





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     However, the processing of the payment scheme specific data may
     fail for several reasons.  These are signaled by specific error
     codes which are transformed to IOTP Payment Response Blocks
     (generated by Payment Handler) or IOTP Error Blocks (both parties
     may generate them) and transmitted to the counter party.

  7. Eventually, the Payment Handler's IOTP Payment Bridge recognizes
     the termination of the payment transaction and reports this by the
     continuation status "End" on the output parameter of "Continue
     Process" (or "Start Payment Payment Handler").  Then, the IOTP
     Application Core issues the "Inquire Process State" API call and
     verifies whether an IOTP Payment Receipt Component has been
     returned.  The IOTP Application Core wraps the payment receipt,
     the status response, and the optional payment scheme specific data
     in an IOTP Payment Response Block and transmits this block to the
     Consumer.

     However, any of these API calls may fail or any response might be
     incomplete (e.g., lack of payment receipt).  Then, the Consumer
     has to be notified about the failed processing by an IOTP Error
     Block.

     Finally, the Payment Handler terminates the payment transaction
     with the "Change Process State" API call without awaiting any
     further response from the Consumer.  Further failures are not
     reported to the Consumer.

     Note that it might be possible that the Consumer's IOTP Payment
     Bridge has returned the previous payment scheme specific data with
     the continuation status "End".  Even in the absence of this
     knowledge - this status is not exchanged between the Consumer and
     the Payment Handler - the Payment Handler must not supply any
     further payment scheme specific data.  Such data will be rejected
     by the Consumer's IOTP Payment Bridge.

  8. The Consumer passes the optional payment scheme specific data and
     the payment receipt to the fixed IOTP Payment Bridge by "Continue
     Process" and "Check Payment Receipt" API calls.

     Afterwards, the IOTP Application Core issues the "Inquire Process
     State" API call and verifies whether extensions to the payment
     receipt have been returned.

     Finally, the transaction is terminated by calling the "Change
     Process State" API function which verifies and synchronizes the
     reported payment status with the local one and signals any
     inconsistencies.  Any Inconsistency and returned status text
     should be displayed to the Consumer.



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     At this point, the payment transaction has already been closed by
     the Payment Handler.  Therefore, any failure has to be resolved
     locally or out-of-band.

2.5.  Payment Inquiry

  In Baseline IOTP, Payment inquiries are initiated by the Consumer in
  order to verify the current payment progress and process state at the
  remote Payment Handler.  In the figure 6, PS1 and PS2 indicate the
  first and second PayScheme Packaged Content data, and [ ] indicates
  optional.

  *+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*
  Consumer        Start Payment Inquiry()                    -> IPB
                  Start Payment Inquiry Response([PS1])      <- IPB
                  Create and transmit Inquiry Request Trading Block
  Payment Handler Inquire Payment Status([PS1])              -> IPB
                  Inquire Payment Status Res.(State, [PS2])  -> IPB
                  Create and transmit Inquiry Response Trading
                    Block
  Consumer        If Payment Scheme Data present
                  |  Continue Process(PS2)                   -> IPB
                  |  Continue Process Response(CS=End)       <- IPB
                  Change Process State(State)                -> IPB
                  Change Process State Response(State)       <- IPB
  *+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*

                 Figure 6. Remote Process State Inquiry

  1. The Consumer might initiate a payment inquiry once the payment
     transaction has been opened by the IOTP Application Core, i.e., at
     any time after the initial submission of the IOTP Payment Request
     Block.  The IOTP Application Core requests any additional specific
     payment scheme data from the IOTP Payment Bridge which has been
     fixed during brand selection (cf. Section 2.3) using the "Start
     Payment Inquiry" API request.

     Erroneous API responses should be reported to the Consumer and
     valid alternatives (typically retry and cancellation) should be
     presented by the IOTP Application Core.

     This request might perform the complete initialization, e.g.,
     availability check of periphery or pass phrase supplement, and the
     IOTP Payment Bridge reports lack of capability quite similarly to
     the "Check Payment Possibility" request to the IOTP Application
     Core.





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     If the IOTP Payment Bridge requests wallet identifiers or pass
     phrases anywhere during the payment process, they should be
     requested by this API function, too.  It is recommended that the
     IOTP Application Core store plain text pass phrases only in
     runtime memory.

     The IOTP Application Core encapsulates any Payment Scheme
     Component in an IOTP Inquiry Request Block and submits the block
     to the Payment Handler.

  2. The Payment Handler analyses the IOTP Inquire Request Block, maps
     the Transaction Identifier to payment related attributes (brand,
     consumer and payment identifiers), determines the appropriate IOTP
     Payment Bridge, and forwards the request to the this IOTP Payment
     Bridge ("Inquire Payment Status").  The IOTP Application Core
     transforms the response to an IOTP Inquiry Response Block and
     transmits it to the Consumer.

  3. On receipt of the respective IOTP Inquiry Response Block the
     Consumer's IOTP Application Core submits any encapsulated payment
     scheme specific data to the IOTP Payment Bridge for verification
     ("Continue Process").

  4. The IOTP Application Core passes the reported payment status
     (except textual descriptions) to the IOTP Payment Bridge ("Change
     Process State") for verification purposes and payment status
     change.  The IOTP Payment Bridge reports any inconsistencies as
     well as the final payment status to the IOTP Application Core.

     Any additional information that might be of interest to the
     Consumer has to be displayed by the IOTP Payment Bridge or
     Existing Payment Software on their own.

2.6.  Abnormal Transaction Processing

2.6.1.  Failures and Cancellations

  The IOTP specification distinguishes between several classes of
  failures:

     o  Business and technical errors
     o  Error depths of transport, message and block level
     o  Transient errors, warnings, and hard errors.

  Any IOTP Payment API has to deal with the receipt of failure
  notifications by and failure responses.  This proposal has borrowed
  the basic mechanisms for error reporting between the IOTP Application
  Core and the IOTP Payment Bridge from the actual protocol: Business



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  errors are reported by Status Components within IOTP Response Blocks
  while technical errors are signaled by Error Components within IOTP
  Error Blocks.

  Cancellations are mimicked as specific business errors which might be
  initiated by each trading party.

  Preferring slim interfaces, this IOTP Payment API introduces one
  additional Error Code value for business error indication - errors
  can be raised on every API call.  On receipt of this value, the IOTP
  Application Core has to infer further details by the issuance of the
  API function call "Inquire Process State".

  *+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*
  Any Party       Issue some API request                     -> IPB
                  Error Response(Error Code)                 <- IPB
                  On "Business Error" response
                  |  Inquire Process State()                 -> IPB
                  |  Inquire P.S. Resp.(State, Receipt)      <- IPB
                  Analyze local process state and try to resolve
                     with optional user interaction
                  If Process State Change needed
                  |  Change Process State (State)            -> IPB
                  |  Change Process State Response(State)    <- IPB
                  If counter party's notification required
                  |  Create Error or Cancel Block (, add to next
                  |  message, ) and transmit it to counter party
  *+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*

                   Figure 7.  Error Response from IPB

  The specific Completion Codes "ConsCancelled", "MerchCancelled", and
  "PaymCancelled" - returned by "Inquire Process State" - determine
  that the IOTP Cancel Block has to be created instead of an IOTP Error
  Block.

  The rules for determining the required behavior of the IOTP
  Application Core are given in the IOTP specification.

  Note that any payment (intermediate) termination, i.e., failures,
  cancellations, and even successes are always reported to the IOTP
  Payment Bridge by the API function "Change Process State".  This API
  function does both status changes and consistency checking /
  synchronization.  Any suspicion of inconsistency should be reported
  by the IOTP Payment Bridge for display by the IOTP Application Core.






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  *+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*
  Any Party       Error Block or Cancel Block Received
                  If Change Process State required
                  |  Change Process State (State)            -> IPB
                  |  Change Process State Response(State)    <- IPB
  *+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*

            Figure 8.  Error Notification from counter party

  Not every failure might be visible at the IOTP layer, e.g., the
  processing of payment transactions might temporarily be hampered by
  intermediate failures at the payment scheme or protocol transport
  layer which might be resolved by the actual components.

  However, final failures or cancellations have to be reported at the
  IOTP layer.  E.g., communication time-outs and heavily faulty
  communication channels may disable the transaction.

  Any system component may implement time-out recognition and use the
  aforementioned API mechanisms for the notification of process state
  changes.  But, time-outs may happens while communicating with both
  the counter party and local system components, like chip card readers
  or IOTP Payment Bridges.  Anyway, the Consumer's IOTP Application
  Core should notify the Consumer about the resolution alternatives,
  i.e., retry, suspension, and cancellation.

2.6.2.  Resumption

  Payment transaction resumption may apply at different steps of a
  payment transaction:

  o  The Consumer's and Payment Handler's view of the transaction might
     not be synchronized: Due to different time-out values the payment
     transaction may not have been suspended by the counter party.

     Any "Resume Payment ..." API function responds with an Error Code
     on non-suspended payment transaction that signals a business
     error.  Afterwards the IOTP Application Core has to issue the
     "Inquire Process State" API call for further analysis of the
     process state.

  o  One IOTP message sent by one party might not be processed
     successfully or even received by the counter party.  This needs to
     be handled by the actual payment scheme.  It is expected that the
     IOTP Application Core will not recognize anything.






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  o  IOTP does not provide any specific signal for payment resumption.
     On receipt of every IOTP Payment Exchange Block, the IOTP
     Application Core has to decide whether this Block belongs to a
     pending transaction or to a suspended transaction that should be
     resumed.  The IOTP Application Core might call the "Inquire
     Process State" API function to update any lack of knowledge.

     Any "Resume Payment" API function responds with an Error Code on
     non-suspended payment transaction that signals a business error.
     Similar, the "Continue Process" API function should report
     business errors on non-pending payment transactions.

  o  The payment transaction may not have been created at the Payment
     Handler (early suspension and failed data transmission).  In that
     case, the IOTP Application Core should respond with a business
     error that signals the repetition of the payment transaction (by
     the Consumer).

     Any "Resume Payment", "Continue Process" or "Inquire Process
     State" API function should return with an Error Code
     "AttValIllegal" on non-existent payment transaction whereby the
     further Error Attribute "Names" denote the payment identifier.

  o  The IOTP Application Core should always request fresh payment
     scheme specific data on resumption - for synchronization purposes
     with the Existing Payment Software.  Old data in the cache that
     has not been sent to the counter party should not be accessed.

  If the Consumer does not reconnect within an acceptable amount of
  time, the Payment Handler's system may perform local failure
  resolution in order to close the transaction and to retain resources
  for other transactions ("Change Process State").  If the Consumer
  reconnect afterwards, an IOTP Payment Response or IOTP Error Block
  could be generated.

2.7.  IOTP Wallet Initialization

  At startup or on explicit user request the IOTP Application Core
  should check its IOTP Payment Bridges' internal status by searching
  for pending payment transactions.

  1. The IOTP Application Core interrogates the registered IOTP Payment
     Bridges about pending payment transactions.  The IOTP Application
     Core may store indicators for pending transactions and use them
     for driving any subsequent inquiry ("Inquire Pending Payment").






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  2. If one or more IOTP Payment Bridges report the presence of pending
     transactions, the IOTP Application Core may try to suspend
     ("Change Process State") or resume (only Consumer: "Resume Payment
     Consumer") the pending transactions (on user request).

  The IOTP Payment Bridge may deny the processing of any new payment
  transactions until the pending transactions have been processed.
  Such denials are signaled by the error code "Business Error".

2.8.  Payment Software Management

  The IOTP Application Core provides only a simple and generic
  interface for the registration of new payment methods / instruments
  ("Manage Payment Software").  It receives the initial user request
  and defers the actual registration to the corresponding IOTP Payment
  Bridge.

  The IOTP Application Core may also activate the Existing Payment
  Software for further payment instrument and wallet administration.

3.  Mutuality

  The Payment API is formalized using the eXtensible Markup Language
  (XML).  It defines wrapper elements for both the input parameters and
  the API function's response.  In particular, the response wrapper
  provides common locations for Error Codes and Error Descriptions.

  It is anticipated that this description reflects the logical
  structure of the API parameter and might be used to derive
  implementation language specific API definitions.

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT IotpPaymentApiRequest (
    FindAcceptedPaymentBrand |
    FindAcceptedPaymentProtocol |
    GetPaymentInitializationData |
    FindPaymentInstrument |
    CheckPaymentPossiblity |
    StartPaymentConsumer |
    StartPaymentPaymentHandler |
    ResumePaymentConsumer |
    ResumePaymentPaymentHandler |
    ContinueProcess |
    InquireProcessState |
    ChangeProcessState |
    InquireAuthChallenge |
    Authenticate |



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    CheckAuthResponse |
    CheckPaymentReceipt |
    ExpandPaymentReceipt |
    RemovePaymentLog |
    PaymentInstrumentInquiry |
    InquirePendingPayment |
    ManagePaymentSoftware |
    StartPaymentInquiry |
    InquirePaymentStatus |
    CallBack )>

  <!ATTLIST IotpPaymentApi
    xml:lang          NMTOKEN   #IMPLIED
    ContentSoftwareID CDATA     #IMPLIED
    xmlns             CDATA     #FIXED
                   "http://www.iotp.org/2000/08/PaymentAPI" >

  <!ELEMENT IotpPaymentApiResponse (ErrorResponse?, (
    FindAcceptedPaymentBrandResponse |
    FindAcceptedPaymentProtocolResponse |
    GetPaymentInitializationDataResponse |
    FindPaymentInstrumentResponse |
    CheckPaymentPossiblityResponse |
    StartPaymentConsumerResponse |
    StartPaymentPaymentHandlerResponse |
    ResumePaymentConsumerResponse |
    ResumePaymentPaymentHandlerResponse |
    ContinueProcessResponse |
    InquireProcessStateResponse |
    ChangeProcessStateResponse |
    InquireAuthChallengeResponse |
    AuthenticateResponse |
    CheckAuthResponseResponse |
    CheckPaymentReceiptResponse |
    ExpandPaymentReceiptResponse |
    RemovePaymentLogResponse |
    PaymentInstrumentInquiryResponse |
    InquirePendingPaymentResponse |
    ManagePaymentSoftwareResponse |
    StartPaymentInquiryResponse |
    InquirePaymentStatusResponse |
    CallBackResponse )?)>

  <!ATTLIST IotpPaymentApiResponse
    xml:lang          NMTOKEN #IMPLIED
    ContentSoftwareID CDATA   #IMPLIED
    xmlns             CDATA   #FIXED
               "http://www.iotp.org/2000/08/PaymentAPI" >



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  <!ELEMENT ErrorResponse (ErrorLocation+,PaySchemePackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST ErrorResponse
    xml:lang      NMTOKEN   #IMPLIED
    ErrorCode     NMTOKEN   #REQUIRED
    ErrorDesc     CDATA     #REQUIRED
    Severity(Warning |
      TransientError |
             HardError)     #REQUIRED
    MinRetrySecs  CDATA     #IMPLIED
    SwVendorErrorRef CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Most of the attribute items are intended for immediate insertion in
  the IOTP Error Block.  The attribute values of the Error Location
  elements attribute have to enriched and transformed into Error
  Location Elements of the Error Component (cf. IOTP Specification).

  Attributes (cf. IOTP Specification):

  xml:lang           Defines the language used by attributes or
                     child elements within this component, unless
                     overridden by an xml:lang attribute on a child
                     element.

  ContentSoftwareId  Contains information which identifies the
                     software that generated the content of the
                     element.  Its purpose is to help resolve
                     interoperability problems that might occur as
                     a result of incompatibilities between messages
                     produced by different software.  It is a single
                     text string in the language defined by
                     "xml:lang".  It must contain, as a minimum
                     problems that might occur as a result of

                     o  the name of the software manufacturer,
                     o  the name of the software,
                     o  the version of the software, and
                     o  the build of the software.

  ErrorCode          Contains an error code which indicates the
                     nature of the error in the message in error.
                     Valid values for the Error Code are given in
                     the following section.  This mnemonic enables
                     the automatic failure resolution of the IOTP
                     Application Core which analyzes the error code
                     value in order to determine the continuation
                     alternatives.





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  ErrorDesc          Contains a description of the error in the
                     language defined by xml:lang.  The content of
                     this attribute is defined by the
                     vendor/developer of the software that
                     generated the Error Response Element.
                     It is intended for user display and provides
                     detailed explanations about the failure and
                     its (out-of-band) resolution alternatives.

  Severity           Indicates the severity of the error.  Valid
                     values are:

                     o  Warning.  This indicates that although there
                        is a message in error the IOTP Transaction
                        can still continue.

                     o  TransientError.  This indicates that the
                        error in the message in error may be
                        recovered if the message in error that is
                        referred to by the "Names" attribute is
                        resent.

                     o  HardError.  This indicates that there is an
                        unrecoverable error in the message in error
                        and the IOTP Transaction must stop.

  MinRetrySecs       This attribute should be present if "Severity"
                     is set to "TransientError".  It is the minimum
                     number of whole seconds which the IOTP aware
                     application which received the message
                     reporting the error should wait before
                     resending the message in error identified by
                     the "ErrorLocation" attribute.

                     If Severity is not set to
                     "TransientError" then the value of this
                     attribute is ignored.

  SwVendorErrorRef   This attribute is a reference whose value is
                     set by the vendor/developer of the software
                     that generated the Error Element.  It should
                     contain data that enables the vendor to
                     identify the precise location in their
                     software and the set of circumstances that
                     caused the software to generate a message
                     reporting the error.





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  Content:

  ErrorLocation      This identifies, where possible, the
                     element and attribute in the message
                     in error that caused the Error
                     Element to be generated.  If the
                     "Severity" of the error is not
                     "TransientError", more that one
                     "ErrorLocation" may be specified as
                     appropriate depending on the nature
                     of the error and at the discretion of
                     the vendor/developer of the IOTP
                     Payment Bridge.

                     Its definition coincides with the
                     IOTP specification whereby the
                     attributes "IotpMsgRef", "BlkRef" and
                     "CompRef" are left blank,
                     intentionally.

  PaySchemePackagedContent  cf. Table 5

3.1.  Error Codes

  The following table lists the valid values for the ErrorCode
  attribute of the Error Response Element.  The first sentence of the
  error description contains the default text that can be used to
  describe the error when displayed or otherwise reported.  Individual
  implementations may translate this into alternative languages at
  their discretion.  However, not every error code may apply to every
  API call.  An Error Code must not be more than 14 characters long.
  The Error Codes have been taken from the IOTP Specification and
  extended by some additional codes which are highlighted by a
  preceding asterisk.

  Generally, if the corrupt values have been user supplied, the IOTP
  Application Core might prompt for their correction.  If the renewal
  fails or if the IOTP Application Core skips any renewals and some
  notification has to be send to the counter-party, the error code is
  encapsulated within an IOTP Error Block.

  However, the IOTP server application reports business errors -
  visible at the IOTP layer - in the Status Component of the respective
  Response Block.

  The IOTP Application Core may add the attributes (and values) within
  the ErrorLocation elements that are omitted by the IOTP Payment
  Bridge.



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  The following table mentions any modification from this general
  processing for particular error values.  Furthermore, it contains
  hints for developers of IOTP Application Core software components
  about the processing of error codes.  Conversely, developers of IOTP
  Payment Bridges get impressions about the expected behavior of the
  IOTP Application Core.

  The IOTP Payment API assumes that the IOTP Application Core
  implements the dialog boxes needed for error resolution.  But it does
  not assume, that the IOTP Payment Bridge actually relies on them.
  Instead, the IOTP Payment Bridge may try resolution on its own, may
  implement specific dialog boxes, and may signal only final failures.

  Note: This abstract document assumes that the API parameters are
  exchanged XML encoded.  Therefore, several error values might
  disappear in lower level language specific derivations.

  Error Value        Error Description
  -----------        -----------------

  Reserved           Reserved.  This error is reserved by the
                     vendor/developer of the software.  Contact
                     the vendor/developer of the software for
                     more information (see the SoftwareId
                     attribute of the Message Id element in the
                     Transaction Reference Block [IOTP]).

  XmlNotWellFrmd     XML not well formed.  The XML document is not
                     well formed.  See [XML] for the meaning of
                     "well formed".

  XmlNotValid        XML not valid.  The XML document is well
                     formed but the document is not valid.  See
                     [XML] for the meaning of "valid".
                     Specifically:

                     o  the XML document does not comply with the
                        constraints defined in the IOTP document
                        type declaration, and
                     o  the XML document does not comply with the
                        constraints defined in the document type
                        declaration of any additional [XML-NS]
                        that are declared.

                     The Names attribute might refer some
                     attributes and elements of the input
                     parameter list.




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  (*)ElNotValid      Element not valid.  Invalid element in terms
                     of prescribed syntactical characteristics.

                     The ElementRef attributes of ErrorLocation
                     elements might refer to the corresponding
                     elements (if they have ID attributes).

                     The IOTP Application Core has to replace the
                     error code with "XmlNotValid" before
                     transmission to the counterparty.

  ElUnexpected       Unexpected element.  Although the XML
                     document is well formed and valid, an
                     element is present that is not expected in
                     the particular context according to the
                     rules and constraints contained in this
                     specification.

                     The ElementRef attributes of ErrorLocation
                     elements might refer to the corresponding
                     elements (if they have ID attributes).

  ElNotSupp          Element not supported.  Although the document
                     is well formed and valid, an element is
                     present that

                     o  is consistent with the rules and
                        constraints contained in this
                        specification, but
                     o  is not supported by the IOTP Aware
                        Application which is processing the IOTP
                        Message.

                     The ElementRef attributes of ErrorLocation
                     elements might refer to the corresponding
                     elements (if they have ID attributes).

  ElMissing          Element missing.  Although the document is
                     well formed and valid, an element is missing
                     that should have been present if the rules
                     and constraints contained in this
                     specification are followed.

                     The ElementRef attributes of ErrorLocation
                     elements might refer to the corresponding
                     elements (if they have ID attributes).





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  ElContIllegal      Element content illegal.  Although the
                     document is well formed and valid, the
                     element contains values which do not conform
                     the rules and constraints contained in this
                     specification.

                     The ElementRef attributes of ErrorLocation
                     elements might refer to the corresponding
                     element (if they have ID attributes).

                     The IOTP Application Core has to replace the
                     Error Code with "ElNotSupp" before
                     transmission to the counter party, if the
                     ErrorLocation elements refer to
                     non-PackagedContent element.

  EncapProtErr       Encapsulated protocol error.  Although the
                     document is well formed and valid, the
                     Packaged Content of an element contains data
                     from an encapsulated protocol which contains
                     errors.

                     The ElementRef attributes of ErrorLocation
                     elements might refer to the corresponding
                     element (if they have ID attributes).

  AttUnexpected      Unexpected attribute.  Although the XML
                     document is well formed and valid, the
                     presence of the attribute is not expected in
                     the particular context according to the
                     rules and constraints contained in this
                     specification.

                     The AttName attributes of ErrorLocation
                     elements might refer to the corresponding
                     attribute tags.

  (*)AttNotValid     Attribute not valid.  Invalid attribute value
                     in terms of prescribed syntactical
                     characteristics.

                     The AttName attributes of ErrorLocation
                     elements might refer to the corresponding
                     attribute tags.

                     The IOTP Application Core has to replace the
                     error code with "XmlNotValid" before
                     transmission to the counter party.



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  AttNotSupp         Attribute not supported.  Although the XML
                     document is well formed and valid, and the
                     presence of the attribute in an element is
                     consistent with the rules and constraints
                     contained in this specification, it is not
                     supported by the IOTP Aware Application
                     which is processing the IOTP Message.

  AttMissing         Attribute missing.  Although the document is
                     well formed and valid, an attribute is
                     missing that should have been present if the
                     rules and constraints contained in this
                     specification are followed.

                     The AttName attributes of ErrorLocation
                     elements might refer to the corresponding
                     attribute tags.

                     If the attribute is required by the IOTP
                     Document Type Declaration (#REQUIRED) the
                     hints for non-valid attributes should be
                     adopted, otherwise these for illegal
                     attribute values.

  AttValIllegal      Attribute value illegal.  The attribute
                     contains a value which does not conform to
                     the rules and constraints contained in this
                     specification.

                     The AttName attributes of ErrorLocation
                     elements might refer to the corresponding
                     attribute tags - valid values are:

                     BrandId: illegal/unknown Brand Identifier -
                     If the brand is not recognized/known by any
                     IOTP Payment Bridge, the IOTP Application
                     Core may offer the registration of a new
                     Payment Instrument.

                     PaymentInstrumentId: illegal/unknown
                     Payment Instrument Identifier - This
                     indicates a serious communication problem if
                     the attribute value has been reported by the
                     same "wallet" on a previous inquiry
                     requests.  The IOTP Application Core has to
                     replace the error code with
                     "UnknownError" before transmission to the
                     counter party.



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RFC 3867                  Payment API for IOTP             November 2004


                     WalletId: illegal/unknown Wallet Identifier
                     - It is assumed that the wallet identifier
                     is checked before the pass phrase.  On
                     invalid wallet identifiers, the IOTP
                     Application Core may open the dialog in
                     order to request the correct wallet
                     identifier.  In addition, any pass phrase may
                     be supplied by the user.  The dialog should
                     indicate the respective payment brand(s).
                     The IOTP Application Core has to replace the
                     error code with "UnknownError" before
                     transmission to the counter party.

                     Passphrase:   illegal/unknown Pass Phrase -
                     The IOTP Application Core may open the
                     dialog in order to request the correct pass
                     phrase.  If the pass phrase is wallet
                     identifier specific the dialog should
                     display the wallet identifier.  The IOTP
                     Application Core has to replace the error
                     code with "TransportError" before
                     transmission to the counter party.

                     Action:  illegal / unknown / unsupported
                     Action

                     PropertyTypeList:  lists contains illegal /
                     unknown / unsupported Property Types - The
                     IOTP Application Core tries only the local
                     resolution but does never transmit any IOTP
                     Error Block to the counter party.

                     CurrCode: illegal/unknown/unsupported
                     Currency Code

                     CurrCodeType: illegal/unknown/unsupported
                     Currency Code Type

                     Amount: illegal/unknown/unsupported Payment
                     Amount

                     PayDirection: illegal/unknown/unsupported
                     Payment Direction

                     ProtocolId:   illegal/unknown/unsupported
                     Protocol Identifier





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RFC 3867                  Payment API for IOTP             November 2004


                     OkFrom: illegal/unknown/unsupported OkFrom
                     Timestamp

                     OkTo:   illegal/unknown/unsupported OkTo
                     Timestamp

                     ConsumerPayId: illegal/unknown Consumer
                     Payment Identifier

                     PaymentHandlerPayId: illegal/unknown Payment
                     Handler Payment Identifier

                     PayId: illegal/unknown Payment Identifier

  AttValNotRecog     Attribute Value Not Recognized.  The
                     attribute contains a value which the IOTP
                     Aware Application generating the message
                     reporting the error could not recognize.

                     The AttName attributes of ErrorLocation
                     elements might refer to the corresponding
                     attribute tags.

  MsgTooLarge        Message too large.  The message is too large
                     to be processed by the IOTP Payment Bridge
                     (or IOTP Application Core).

  ElTooLarge         Element too large.  The element is too large
                     to be processed by the IOTP Payment Bridge
                     (or IOTP Application Core).

                     The ElementRef attributes of ErrorLocation
                     elements might refer to the corresponding
                     elements.

  ValueTooSmall      Value too small or early.  The value of all
                     or part of an element content or an
                     attribute, although valid, is too small.

                     The ErrorLocation elements might refer to
                     the corresponding attribute tags or
                     elements.

  ValueTooLarge      Value too large or in the future.  The value
                     of all or part of an element content or an
                     attribute, although valid, is too large.





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                     The ErrorLocation elements might refer to
                     the corresponding attribute tags or
                     elements.

  ElInconsistent     Element Inconsistent.  Although the document
                     is well formed and valid, according to the
                     rules and constraints contained in this
                     specification:

                     o  the content of an element is inconsistent
                        with the content of other elements or
                        their attributes, or

                     o  the value of an attribute is inconsistent
                        with the value of one or more other
                        attributes.

                     The Error Description may contain further
                     explanations.

                     The ErrorLocation elements might refer to
                     the corresponding attribute tags or elements
                     that are inconsistent.

  TransportError     Transport Error.  This error code is used to
                     indicate that there is a problem with the
                     transport mechanism that is preventing the
                     message from being received.  It is typically
                     associated with a "Transient Error".

                     The connection to some periphery or the
                     counter party could not be established,
                     is erroneous, or has been lost.

                     The Error Description may contain further
                     narrative explanations, e.g., "chip card
                     does not respond", "remote account manager
                     unreachable", "Internet connection to xyz
                     lost", "no Internet connection available",
                     "no modem connected", or "serial port to
                     modem used by another application".  This
                     text should be shown to the end user.  If
                     timeout has occurred at the Consumer this
                     text should be shown and the Consumer may
                     decide how to proceed - alternatives are
                     retry, payment transaction suspension, and
                     cancellation.




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  MsgBeingProc       Message Being Processed.  This error code is
                     only used with a Severity of Transient
                     Error.  It indicates that the previous
                     message, which may be an exchange message or
                     a request message, is being processed and,
                     if no response is received by the time
                     indicated by the "MinRetrySecs" attribute,
                     then the original message should be resent.

  SystemBusy         System Busy.  This error code is only used
                     with a Severity of Transient Error.  It
                     indicates that the IOTP Payment Bridge or
                     Existing Payment Software that received the
                     API request is currently too busy to handle
                     it.  If no response is received by the time
                     indicated by the "MinRetrySecs" attribute,
                     then the original message should be resent.

                     The Error Description may provide further
                     explanations, e.g., "wallet / chip card
                     reader is unavailable or locked by another
                     payment transaction", "payment gateway is
                     overloaded", "unknown chip card reader", or
                     "unrecognized chip card inserted, change
                     chip card".

                     The Consumer's IOTP Application Core may
                     display the error description and ask the
                     Consumer about the continuation -
                     alternatives are retry, payment transaction
                     suspension, and cancellation.

  UnknownError       Unknown Error.  Indicates that the
                     transaction cannot complete for some reason
                     that is not covered explicitly by any of the
                     other errors.  The Error description
                     attribute should be used to indicate the
                     nature of the problem.

                     The ErrorLocation elements might refer to
                     the corresponding attribute tags or elements
                     that are inconsistent.

  (*)SyntaxError     Syntax Error.  An (unknown) syntax error has
                     occurred.






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RFC 3867                  Payment API for IOTP             November 2004


                     The ErrorLocation elements might refer to
                     the corresponding attribute tags or elements
                     that are inconsistent.

                     The IOTP Application Core has to replace the
                     error code with "XmlNotValid" or
                     "UnknownError" before transmission to the
                     counter party.

  (*)ReqRefused      Request refused.  The API request is
                     (currently) refused by the IOTP Payment
                     Bridge.  The error description may provide
                     further explanations, e.g., "wallet / chip
                     card reader is unavailable or locked by
                     another payment transaction", "payment
                     gateway is overloaded", "unknown chip card
                     reader", or "unrecognized chip card
                     inserted, change chip card".

                     The Consumer's IOTP Application Core may
                     display the error description and ask the
                     Consumer about the continuation -
                     alternatives are retry, payment transaction
                     suspension, and cancellation.  Denials due to
                     invalid Process States should be signaled by
                     "BusinessError".  Typically, this kind of
                     error is not passed to the counter party's
                     IOTP Application Core.  Otherwise, it maps to
                     "TransportError" or "UnknownError".

  (*)ReqNotSupp      Request not supported.  The API
                     function(ality) has not been implemented in
                     the IOTP Payment Bridge.  Typically, this
                     kind of error is not passed to the
                     counter party's IOTP Application Core.
                     Otherwise, it maps to "TransportError" or
                     "UnknownError".

  (*)BusError        Business Error.  The API request has been
                     rejected because some payment transaction
                     has an illegal payment status.
                     Particularly, this error code is used to
                     signal any raise of payment business layered
                     failures.

                     The ErrorLocation elements may refer to
                     payment transactions using the party's
                     Payment Identifier - it defaults to the



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RFC 3867                  Payment API for IOTP             November 2004


                     current transaction or might contain the
                     current payment transaction party's Payment
                     Identifier - identified by the ElementRef
                     attribute while the AttName attribute is
                     fixed with "PayId".

                     The IOTP Application Core must inquire the
                     IOTP Payment Bridge about the actual Process
                     State which actually encodes the business
                     error ("Inquire Process State").
                     This error code must not be
                     passed to the counter party's IOTP
                     Application Core.

                       Table 2: Common Error Codes

  The IOTP Payment Bridge may also use the error description in order
  to notify the Consumer about further necessary steps for failure
  resolution, e.g., "Sorry, your payment transaction failed.
  Unfortunately, you have been charged, please contact your issuer."

3.2.  Attributes and Elements

  The following table explains the XML attributes in alphabetical order
  - any parenthesized number after the attribute tag is a recommended
  maximal length of the attribute value in characters:

  Attribute           Description
  ---------           -----------

  Amount    (11)      Indicates the payment amount to be paid in
  AmountFrom(11)      whole and fractional units of the currency.
  AmountTo  (11)      For example $245.35 would be expressed
                      "245.35".  Note that values smaller than the
                      smallest denomination are allowed.  For
                      example one tenth of a cent would be
                      "0.001".

  AuthenticationId    An identifier specified by the
                      authenticator which, if returned by the
                      organization that receives the
                      authentication request, will enable the
                      authenticator to identify which
                      authentication is being referred to.







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  BrandId  (128)      This contains a unique identifier for the
                      brand (or promotional brand).  It is used to
                      match against a list of Payment Instruments
                      which the Consumer holds to determine
                      whether or not the Consumer can pay with the
                      Brand.

                      Values of BrandId are managed under
                      procedure being described in the IOTP
                      protocol specification.

  BrandLogoNetLocn    The net location which can be used to
                      download the logo for the organization (cf.
                      IOTP Specification).

                      The content of this attribute must conform
                      to [URL].

  BrandName           This contains the name of the brand, for
                      example "MasterCard Credit".  This is the
                      description of the Brand which is displayed
                      to the consumer in the Consumer's language
                      defined by "xml:lang".  For example it might
                      be "American Airlines Advantage Visa".  Note
                      that this attribute is not used for matching
                      against the payment instruments held by the
                      Consumer.

  BrandNarrative      This optional attribute is
                      used by the Merchant to indicate some
                      special conditions or benefit which would
                      apply if the Consumer selected that brand.
                      For example "5% discount", "free shipping
                      and handling", "free breakage insurance for
                      1 year", "double air miles apply", etc.

  CallBackFunction    A function which is called whenever there is
                      a change of Process State or payment
                      progress, e.g., for display updates.  However,
                      the IOTP Payment Bridge may use its own
                      mechanisms and dialog boxes.

  CallBackLanguageList
                      A list of language codes which contain, in
                      order of preference, the languages in which
                      the text passed to the Call Back function
                      will be encoded.




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RFC 3867                  Payment API for IOTP             November 2004


  CompletionCode (14) Indicates how the process completed.
                      It is required if ProcessState is set to
                      "Failed" otherwise it is ignored.  Valid
                      values as well as recovery options are given
                      in the IOTP specification.

                      The IOTP Payment Bridge may also use the
                      Status Description to notify the Consumer
                      about further necessary steps in order to
                      resolve some kind of business failures,
                      e.g.,

                      o  "sorry, your payment transaction failed.
                         Unfortunately, you have been charged,
                         please contact your issuer."
                      o  "insufficient capacity left (on your
                         stored value card) for refund",
                      o  "payment failed/chip card error/internal
                         error, please contact your payment
                         instrument's issuer"

  ConsumerDesc        A narrative description of the Consumer.

  ConsumerPayId (14)  An unique identifier specified by the
                      Consumer that, if returned by the Payment
                      Handler in another Payment Scheme Component
                      or by other means, enables the Consumer to
                      identify which payment is being referred to.

                      This unique identifier is generated by the
                      IOTP Application Core and submitted to the
                      IOTP Payment Bridge on every API call.  It
                      may equal the Payment Handler Payment
                      Identifiers but need not necessarily be so.

                      The uniqueness extends to multiple payment
                      instruments, payment brands, payment
                      protocols, wallet identifiers, and even
                      multiple IOTP Payment Bridges.

  ContStatus          During payment progress, this status value
                      indicates whether the payment needs to be
                      continued with further IOTP Payment Scheme
                      Component exchanges with the remote party.
                      "End" indicates that the reported payment
                      scheme data is the last data to be exchanged
                      with the counter party.




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RFC 3867                  Payment API for IOTP             November 2004


  ContentSoftwareId   This contains information that identifies
                      the software that generated the content of
                      the element.  Its purpose is to help resolve
                      interoperability problems that might occur
                      as a result of incompatibilities between
                      messages produced by different software.  It
                      is a single text string in the language
                      defined by xml:lang.  It must contain, as a
                      minimum:

                      o  the name of the software manufacturer,
                      o  the name of the software,
                      o  the version of the software, and
                      o  the build of the software.

  CurrCodeType (14)   Indicates the domain of the CurrCode.  This
                      attribute is included so that the currency
                      code may support nonstandard currencies
                      such as frequent flyer point, trading
                      stamps, etc.  Its values may be

                      o  ISO-4217-A, the default, indicates the
                         currency code is the three-letter
                         alphabetic code that conform to ISO-4217
                         [ISO4217].
                      o  IOTP indicates that the values of
                         CurrCode are managed under the procedure
                         described in [IOTP].

  CurrCode  (14)      A code which identifies the currency to be
                      used in the payment.  The domain of valid
                      currency codes is defined by "CurrCodeType"

  MerchantPayId  (14) An private identifier specified by the
                      Merchant which will enable the Merchant to
                      identify which payment is being referred to.
                      It is a pure private item and is never sent
                      to any other party.  It is provided by the
                      IOTP Payment Bridge on payment preparation
                      during brand compilation.

                      Cf. To "ConsumerPayId" for note about
                      uniqueness.








Hans, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 51]

RFC 3867                  Payment API for IOTP             November 2004


  MerchantOrgId  (64) A local item that might refer to some
                      specific shop in a multi shop environment.
                      This item is optional and might enrich the
                      Wallet Identifier which itself can be used
                      for the same purpose.

  Name                Distinguishes between multiple occurrences
                      of Packaged Content Elements at the same
                      point in IOTP.  For example:

                      <ABCD>
                        <PackagedContent Name='FirstPiece'>
                          snroasdfnas934k
                        </PackagedContent>
                        <PackagedContent Name='SecondPiece'>
                          dvdsjnl5poidsdsflkjnw45
                        </PackagedContent>
                      </ABCD>

                      The "Name" attribute may be omitted, for
                      example if there is only one Packaged
                      Content element.

  OkFrom  (30)        The date and time in UTC Format range
  OkTo  (30)          indicated by the merchant in which the
                      Payment Handler may accept the payment.
                      For more information, see [UTC].

  Passphrase  (32)    Payment wallets may use pass phrase
                      protection for transaction data and payment
                      instruments' data.  However, it is assumed
                      that there exists a public and customizable
                      payment instrument identifier such that
                      these identifiers together with their
                      relationship to payment brands, payment
                      protocols, payment directions, and currency
                      amounts can be queried by the IOTP
                      application without any pass phrase
                      knowledge.

  PayDirection        Indicates the direction in which the
                      payment for which a Brand is being selected
                      is to be made.  Its values may be:

                      o  Debit: The sender of the Payment Request
                         Block (e.g., the Consumer) to which this
                         Brand List relates will make the payment
                         to the Payment Handler, or



Hans, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 52]

RFC 3867                  Payment API for IOTP             November 2004


                      o  Credit: The sender of the Payment Request
                         Block to which this Brand List relates
                         will receive a payment from the Payment
                         Handler.

  PayId (14)          This attribute is introduced for API
                      simplification:

                      o  The Consumer has to identify PayId and
                         ConsumerPayId.

                      o  The Merchant has to identify PayId and
                         MerchantPayId.

                      o  The Payment Handler has to identify PayId
                         and Payment Handler Pay Id.


  PayInstId           This contains the unique identifier used
                      internally by the IOTP Payment
                      Bridge/Existing Payment Software.

  PayInstName         This contains the user-defined name of the
                      payment instrument.  There exist no
                      (technical) constraints like uniqueness.  The
                      "xml:lang" attribute denotes the language
                      encoding of its value.

  PaymentHandlerDesc  A narrative description of the Payment
                      Handler.

  PaymentHandlerPayId An unique identifier specified by the
    (14)              Payment Handler that, if returned by the
                      Consumer in another Payment Scheme Component
                      or by other means, enables the Payment
                      Handler to identify which payment is being
                      referred to.  It is required whenever it is
                      known.

                      Cf. To "ConsumerPayId" for note about
                      uniqueness.

  PaymentInstrumentId An identifier for a specific payment
    (32)              instrument, e.g., "credit card", "Mondex card
                      for English Pounds".  This identifier is
                      fully customizable.  It is assumed, that it
                      does not contain confidential information or
                      even an indication of it.  The payment



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RFC 3867                  Payment API for IOTP             November 2004


                      instrument identifier is unique within each
                      payment brand.  It is displayed to the
                      Consumer during brand selection.

  PayReceiptNameRefs  Optionally contains element references to
    (32)              other elements (containing payment scheme
                      specific data) that together make up the
                      receipt.  Note that each payment scheme
                      defines in its supplement the elements that
                      must be referenced

                      The IOTP Application Core should save all
                      the components referenced so that the
                      payment receipt can be reconstructed when
                      required.

  PayReqNetLocn       The Net Location indicating where an
                      unsecured Payment Request message should be
                      sent if this protocol choice is used.

                      The content of this attribute must conform
                      to [URL] and depends on the Transport
                      Mechanism.

  PercentComplete (3) A number between 0 and 100 which indicates
                      the progress of the payment transaction.  The
                      values range between 0 and 99 for pending
                      and suspended transactions.

  ProcessState        Contains a Process State Code that
                      indicates the current state of the process
                      being carried out.  Valid values are:

                      o  NotYetStarted.  The Payment Request Block
                         has been received but processing of the
                         Payment Request has not yet started

                      o  InProgress.  The payment transaction is
                         pending.  The processing of the (Payment)
                         Request Block has started but it is not
                         yet complete.

                      o  (*)Suspended: The payment transaction has
                         been suspended and can be resumed.

                      This process state is mapped to
                      "InProgress", if it is passed to the
                      counter party's IOTP Application Core.



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                      o  CompletedOk.  The processing of the (Payment)
                         Request Block and any following Payment
                         Exchange Blocks has completed successfully.

                      o  Failed.  The payment processing has finally
                         failed for a Business Error.

                      o  ProcessError.  This value is only used
                         when the Status Component is being used in
                         connection with an Inquiry Request Trading
                         Block.  It indicates there was a Technical
                         Error in the Request Block which is being
                         processed or some internal processing
                         error.  Each party's IOTP Payment Bridge
                         uses this value in order to notify the
                         IOTP Application Core about the presence
                         of technical errors.

  PropertyType  (14)  The property type defines codes used for
                      interrogation of specific properties about a
                      payment instrument.  They are unique for each
                      payment brand.  The predefined property "all"
                      is used on general inquiries.  However, these
                      property types are not used during normal
                      payment processing.  E.g., they may apply to
                      payment brand specific transactions or
                      out-of-band failure resolution.

  PropertyDesc        The property description carries the
                      respective human readable property (value)'s
                      description.

  PropertyValue       The actual property value intends automatic
                      post processing.

  ProtocolBrandId (64)This is an identifier to be used with a
                      particular payment protocol.  For example,
                      SET and EMV have their own well defined, yet
                      different, values for the Brand identifier
                      to be used with each protocol.  The valid values
                      of this attribute are defined in the
                      supplement for the payment protocol
                      identified by "ProtocolId" that describes
                      how the payment protocol works with IOTP.
                      Identifier maps to at most one Protocol
                      Brand Identifier.





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  ProtocolId  (64)    An identifier for a specific payment
                      protocol and version, e.g., "SETv1.0",
                      "ecash".  Valid values are defined by
                      supplements to the IOTP specification and
                      they are unique within each payment brand.

  ProtocolIds         A sequence of Protocol Identifiers

  ProtocolName        A narrative description of the payment
                      protocol and its version in the language
                      identified by "xml:lang".  For example
                      "Secure Electronic Transaction Version 1.0".
                      Its purpose is to help provide information
                      on the payment protocol being used if
                      problems arise.

  SecPayReqNetLocn    The Net Location indicating where a secured
                      Payment Request message should be sent if
                      this protocol choice is used.

                      A secured payment involves the use of a
                      secure channel such as [TLS] in order
                      to communicate with the Payment Handler.

                      The content of this attribute must conform
                      to [URL].

  ReceiverOrgId       The Organization Identification which
                      receives the payment bridge processing
                      Trading Role Data PackagedContent.

  StatusDesc  (256)   An optional textual description of the
                      current process state in the language
                      identified by "xml:lang" that should be
                      displayed to the Consumer.  The usage of this
                      attribute is defined in the payment
                      supplement for the payment method being
                      used.  Particularly, it provides hints for
                      out-of-band failure resolution.  Its length
                      is limited to 256 characters.

  StyleSheetNetLocn   This contains the net location to a style
                      sheet with visualisation rules for XML
                      encoded data.

  TimeStamp  (30)     The date and time in UTC Format when the
                      payment transaction has been started.
                      For more information on UTC, see [UTC].



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RFC 3867                  Payment API for IOTP             November 2004


  WalletId  (32)      Many existing payment wallet software are
                      multiple wallet capable.  The Wallet
                      Identifier selects the actual wallet.  It is
                      assumed, that the wallet identifier is a
                      public item, that might be stored by the
                      IOTP Application Core.

  xml:lang            Defines the language used by the Process
                      State Description attribute (cf. IOTP
                      Specification)

                           Table 3: Attributes

  The following table explains the XML elements in alphabetical order:

  Element             Description
  -------             -----------

  Algorithm           This contains information which describes
                      an Algorithm that may be used to generate
                      the Authentication response.

                      The algorithm that may be used is
                      identified by the Name attribute (cf. IOTP
                      Specification).

  AuthReqPackagedContent   The Authentication Request Packaged
                      Content originates from a Authentication
                      (Data/Response) Component's content
                      whereby the outermost element tags are
                      prefixed with "AuthReq".  Its declaration
                      coincides with the Packaged Content's
                      declaration (cf. IOTP Specification).  It
                      encapsulates the authentication challenge
                      value.  The content of this information is
                      defined in the supplement for a payment
                      protocol.

  AuthResPackagedContent   The Authentication Response Packaged
                      Content originates from a Authentication
                      Response Component's content whereby the
                      outermost element tags are prefixed with
                      "AuthRes".

                      Its declaration coincides with the
                      Packaged Content's declaration (cf. IOTP
                      Specification).  It encapsulates the




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RFC 3867                  Payment API for IOTP             November 2004


                      authentication response value.  The
                      content of this information is defined in
                      the supplement for a payment protocol.

  BrandPackagedContent     Container for further payment brand
                      description.  Its content originates from
                      a Brand Element content whose outermost
                      element tags are prefixed with "Brand".
                      Its declaration coincides with the
                      Packaged Content's declaration (cf. IOTP
                      Specification).

  BrandSelBrandInfoPackagedContent
                      This contains any additional data that
                      may be required by a particular payment
                      brand.  It forms the content of the Brand
                      Selection Brand Info Element.

  BrandSelProtocolAmountInfoPackagedContent
                      This contains any additional data that
                      may be required by a particular payment
                      brand in the format.  It forms the content
                      of the Brand Selection Protocol Amount
                      Info Element.

  BrandSelCurrencyAmountInfoPackagedContent
                      This contains any additional data that is
                      payment brand and currency specific in
                      the format.  It forms the content of the
                      Brand Selection Currency Amount Info
                      Element.

  MerchantData        Any merchant related data that might be
                      used by the IOTP Payment Bridge for
                      different purposes, e.g., it might
                      contain IDs to access some mall data,
                      but not cryptographic keys.  Its Packaged
                      declaration coincides with the Content's
                      declaration (cf. IOTP Specification).

  PackagedContent     Generic Container for non-IOTP data (cf.
                      IOTP Specification).

  PayProtocolPackagedContent
                      The Pay Protocol Packaged Content
                      originates from a Pay Protocol
                      Element's content whereby the outermost
                      element tags are prefixed with



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                      "PayProtocol".  It contains information
                      about the protocol which is used by
                      the payment protocol.  The content of
                      this information is defined in the
                      supplement for a payment protocol.  Its
                      declaration coincides with the Packaged
                      Content's declaration (cf. IOTP
                      Specification).

  PaySchemePackagedContent
                      The PayScheme Packaged Content originates
                      from a Payment Scheme Component's content
                      whereby the outermost element tags are
                      prefixed with "PayScheme".  Its
                      declaration coincides with the Packaged
                      Content's declaration (cf. IOTP
                      Specification).  It carries the payment
                      specific data.  The content of this
                      information is defined in the supplement
                      for a payment protocol.

  ProtocolAmountPackagedContent
                      The Protocol Amount Packaged Content
                      originates from a Protocol Amount
                      Element's content whereby the outermost
                      element tags are prefixed with "Amount".
                      Its declaration coincides with the
                      Packaged Content's declaration (cf. IOTP
                      Specification).  It contains information
                      about the protocol which is used by the
                      payment protocol.  The content of this
                      information is defined in the supplement
                      for a payment protocol.

  ProtocolBrandPackagedContent
                      The Protocol Brand Packaged Content
                      originates from a Protocol Brand
                      Element's content whereby the outermost
                      element tags are prefixed with
                      "ProtocolBrand".  Its declaration
                      coincides with the Packaged Content's
                      declaration (cf. IOTP Specification).  It
                      contains information about the brand
                      which might be used by the payment
                      protocol.  The content of this information
                      is defined in the supplement for a
                      payment protocol.




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  ResponsePackagedContent
                      Container for authentication response
                      data.  Its content originates from a
                      Authentication Response Component's
                      Packaged Content whose outermost element
                      tags are prefixed with "Response".  Its
                      declaration coincides with the Packaged
                      Content's declaration (cf. IOTP
                      Specification).

  TradingRoleDataPackagedContent
                      The TradingRoleData Packaged Content
                      originates from a TradingRoleData
                      Component's content whereby the outermost
                      element tags are prefixed with
                      "TradingRoleData".  Its declaration
                      coincides with the Packaged Content's
                      declaration (cf. IOTP Specification).  It
                      contains information from Merchant to
                      Payment Handler via Consumer about the
                      protocol which is used by the payment.
                      The content of this information is
                      defined in the supplement for a payment
                      protocol.  The Name attribute in this
                      packaged contents must include prefix as
                      "Payment:" to indicate that the payment
                      bridge processes this, for example
                      "Payment:SET-OD".  See [SET/IOTP] for
                      more information.

                      The element's declaration coincides with
                      the Packaged Content's declaration (cf.
                      IOTP Specification).

                            Table 4: Elements

  XML definition:

  <!ENTITY % AuthReqPackagedContent       "PackagedContent">
  <!ENTITY % AuthResPackagedContent       "PackagedContent">

  <!ENTITY % BrandPackagedContent         "PackagedContent">
  <!ENTITY % BrandSelInfoPackagedContent  "PackagedContent">
  <!ENTITY % BrandSelProtocolAmountPackagedContent
                                          "PackagedContent">
  <!ENTITY % BrandSelCurrencyAmountPackagedContent
                                          "PackagedContent">
  <!ENTITY % ProtocolAmountPackagedContent



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RFC 3867                  Payment API for IOTP             November 2004


                                          "PackagedContent">
  <!ENTITY % PayProtocolPackagedContent   "PackagedContent">
  <!ENTITY % TradingRoleDataPackagedContent "PackagedContent">
  <!ENTITY % MerchantData "PackagedContent">
  <!ENTITY % PaySchemePackagedContent     "PackagedContent">

3.3.  Process States

  The IOTP Payment API supports six different attribute values that
  encode the transaction status from the IOTP's point of view, i.e.,
  the appropriate point of view at the interface between the IOTP
  Application Core and IOTP Payment Bridge.  This point of view does
  not completely mimic the more detailed view on the actual payment by
  the actual Existing Payment Software or IOTP Payment Bridge.

  The following three tables distinguish between the Merchant's,
  Consumer's, and Payment Handlers' environment.  They extend the
  aforementioned explanations towards the mapping between IOTP process
  states and the internal payment scheme related states of the Existing
  Payment Software/IOTP Payment Bridge.

3.3.1.  Merchant

  The Merchant's point of view of payment is limited to the local
  payment initiation being interlaced with order processing because
  IOTP assigns the actual payment processing to the Payment Handler.

  ProcessState        Description
  ------------        -----------

  NotYetStarted       The Payment Transaction exists within the
                      IOTP Application Core, i.e., the
                      Merchant's shop has already signaled to
                      the IOTP Application Core that an IOTP
                      transaction has been initiated by the
                      Consumer.

                      However, neither any API call has been
                      issued to the IOTP Payment Bridge nor has
                      the IOTP Order Request has been created.

  InProgress          The IOTP Application changes the process
                      state to this value when it issues the
                      first API call to the Payment Bridge
                      during Brand List compilation.






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RFC 3867                  Payment API for IOTP             November 2004


                      This value indicates that the Payment
                      Bridge might have some knowledge about
                      the expected payment or might have
                      performed some preparatory tasks (even
                      with the Payment Handler out-of-band to
                      IOTP).

                      However, this value does not indicate
                      that any IOTP Order Request has been
                      created and transmitted to the Consumer.

  Suspended           The IOTP transaction has been suspended
                      before the order request block has been
                      transmitted to the Consumer.

                      Implicitly, the payment is also deferred.

  CompletedOk         The IOTP Order Request has been
                      successfully created and transmitted to
                      the Consumer.  Actually, this process
                      state indicates only that the order
                      processing has been finished.

                      But it contains no indication about the
                      status of the actual payment, which is
                      accepted by the Payment Handler.

                      However, successful order processing
                      signals the IOTP Application Core that a
                      payment with some specific parameters is
                      expected within the near future.  And this
                      signal might be used by the Existing
                      Payment Software for similar purposes.
                      This attribute might be interpreted as
                      successful preparation of the payment
                      system.

                      Particularly, it is expected that the
                      Existing Payment Software maps this IOTP
                      status value to some other internal
                      value, e.g., "NotYetStarted", that is more
                      accurate from its point of view.

                      As IOTP provides no communication channel
                      between the Merchant and Payment Handler,
                      any change of payment process state will





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                      be initiated out-of-band to IOTP, e.g., by
                      electronic statements of account or
                      payment scheme specific mechanisms.

  Failed              The IOTP transaction, i.e., order
                      processing, has failed for some
                      (business) reason and it is known that no
                      payment will occur.

                      This indication might be used to clear
                      all data about this transaction within
                      the Existing Payment Bridge (by
                      "RemovePaymentLog" or
                      "ChangeProcessState") or to reverse any
                      preparation (with the Payment Handler
                      out-of-band to IOTP).

                      However, the ideal point of view of IOTP
                      suspects that the actual payment
                      transaction has been neither started nor
                      initiated.

  ProcessError        The IOTP transaction, i.e., order
                      processing, has failed for some
                      (technical) reason and it is known that
                      no payment will occur.

                      This indication might be used to clear
                      all data about this transaction within
                      the Existing Payment Bridge (by
                      "RemovePaymentLog" or
                      "ChangeProcessState") or to reverse any
                      preparation (with the Payment Handler
                      out-of-band to IOTP).

                      However, the ideal point of view of IOTP
                      suspects that the actual payment
                      transaction has been neither started nor
                      initiated.

                            Table 5: Merchant

3.3.2.  Consumer

  The Consumer's IOTP Application Core restricts its point of view to
  the payment transaction.  It is assumed that the IOTP Payment Bridge
  handles the preceding brand selection process in a stateless manner.




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  ProcessState        Description
  ------------        -----------

  NotYetStarted       This encodes the initial process state of
                      any IOTP payment transaction.  This value
                      is set during brand selection but it
                      normally will not change during the whole brand
                      selection process.

  InProgress          With the issuance of the Start Payment
                      Consumer API call, the IOTP Application
                      Core changes the process state to this
                      value.

  Suspended           The payment transaction has been
                      suspended.  Suspension may occur anywhere
                      during brand selection (with the
                      Merchant) or payment processing (with the
                      Payment Handler).  On resumption, the IOTP
                      Application Core and the IOTP Payment
                      Bridge have to use other internal data to
                      decide whether brand selection or actual
                      payment processing needs to be continued,
                      i.e., whether the process state needs to
                      be reset to "NotYetStarted" or
                      "InProgress".

                      Note that the Payment API assumes
                      stateless brand selection by the IOTP
                      Payment Bridge.  Typically, any suspension
                      during brand selection requires the
                      repetition of the whole process.  Hereby,
                      the IOTP Application Core might need to
                      consider any already negotiated
                      conditions in a brand depended purchase
                      (brand, protocol).

  CompletedOk         The successful payment has been
                      acknowledged by the Payment Handler, i.e.,
                      the successful IOTP Payment Response has
                      been received.

                      Implicitly, this implies successful order
                      processing.







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  Failed              The IOTP transaction, i.e., order or
                      payment processing, has failed for some
                      (business) reason.  In either case it is
                      known that the payment will not succeed.

  ProcessError        The IOTP transaction, i.e., order or
                      payment processing, has failed for some
                      (technical) reason.

                      However, the local process state might be
                      different from that of Payment Handler.

                            Table 6: Consumer

3.3.3.  Payment Handler

  The Payment Handler is responsible for the actual payment processing.
  New payment transactions are reported by the Consumer with the
  transmission of new IOTP Payment Request Blocks.  IOTP Payment
  Exchange Block are send by the Consumer for payment transaction
  continuation and resumption.

  ProcessState        Description
  ------------        -----------

  NotYetStarted       This encodes the initial process state of
                      any payment transaction.  Typically, this
                      value will last for a short amount of
                      time.

  InProgress          The IOTP Application Core changes the
                      process state changes to "InProgress"
                      when the Payment Handler starts with the
                      actual processing of the IOTP Payment
                      Request Block.

                      Note that this does not assume that the
                      "StartPaymentPaymentHandler" API function
                      has been called.

  Suspended           The payment transaction has been
                      suspended.

  CompletedOk         The payment has been processed,
                      successfully, i.e., the IOTP Payment
                      Response Block was created and
                      transmitted to the Consumer.




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  Failed              The payment transaction, has finally
                      failed for some (business) reason.

                      Note that this value encodes the payment
                      state reported by the IOTP Payment Bridge
                      on "InquireProcessState".  It neither
                      reflects whether the payment receipt has
                      been inquired nor whether the IOTP
                      Payment Response Block has been created
                      and submitted to the Consumer.

  ProcessError        The payment transaction, has finally
                      failed for some (technical) reason.

                      Note that this value encodes the payment
                      state reported by the IOTP Payment
                      Bridge.  It does not reflect whether some
                      IOTP Error Block has been created and
                      submitted to the Consumer.

                            Table 7: Consumer

4.  Payment API Calls

4.1.  Brand Compilation Related API Calls

4.1.1.  Find Accepted Payment Brand

  This API function determines the payment brands being accepted by the
  Payment Handler on behalf of the Merchant.

  Input Parameters

  o  Payment Direction - provided by the IOTP Application Core
  o  Currency Code and Currency - provided by the IOTP Application
     Core
  o  Payment Amount - provided by the IOTP Application Core
  o  Merchant Payment Identifier - Merchant's unique private
     reference to the payment transaction
  o  Merchant Organisation Identifier - used for distinction between
     multiple merchants that share the some IOTP merchant system
  o  Wallet Identifier - managed by the IOTP Application Core
  o  Merchant Data - specific data used by the IOTP Payment Bridge
     which is managed in the IOTP Application Core.







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  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT FindAcceptedPaymentBrand (MerchantData*) >
  <!ATTLIST FindAcceptedPaymentBrand
    PayDirection  (Debit|Credit)  #REQUIRED
    CurrCodeType  NMTOKEN  'ISO4217-A'
    CurrCode  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    Amount  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    MerchantPayId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    MerchantOrgId  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Output Parameters

  o  Payment Brand Identifier - for insertion in the Brand List
     Component's Brand Element
  o  Payment Brand Name and language annotation - for insertion in
     the Brand List Component's Brand Element
  o  Payment Brand Logo Net Location - for insertion in the Brand
     List Component's Brand Element
  o  Payment Brand Narrative Description - for insertion in the
     Brand List Component's Brand Element
  o  (Brand) Packaged Content - further payment brand description
     for insertion in the Brand List Component's Brand Element

  The Existing Payment Software returns an empty list of brand items,
  if it does not support any payment brand/payment protocol combination
  for the given payment parameters.

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT FindAcceptedPaymentBrandResponse (BrandItem*) >
  <!ELEMENT BrandItem (BrandPackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST BrandItem
    BrandId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    xml:lang  NMTOKEN  #IMPLIED
    BrandName  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    BrandLogoNetLocn  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    BrandNarrative  CDATA  #IMPLIED >


  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.








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4.1.2.  Find Accepted Payment Protocol

  This API function determines the instances of payment protocols (and
  optionally the payment brands) being accepted by the Payment Handler
  on behalf of the Merchant.  The function might be called in two
  variants:

  o  With the Brand Identifier set on the input parameter list: The
     function responds with the payment protocols that fits to the
     submitted brand.

  o  Without any Brand Identifier - that allows the omission of the
     "Find Accepted Payment Brand" API call (cf. Section 4.1.1): This
     function responds with both the supported brand identifiers and
     the payment protocols being specified by the Brand Elements.

  Input Parameters

  o  Brand Identifier - returned by "Find Accepted Payment Brand"
  o  Payment Direction
  o  Currency Code and Currency
  o  Payment Amount
  o  Merchant Payment Identifier - Merchant's unique private
     reference to the payment transaction
  o  Merchant Organisation Identifier - used for distinction between
     multiple merchants that share the some IOTP merchant system
  o  Wallet Identifier - managed by the IOTP Application Core
  o  (Brand) Packaged Content - further payment brand description;
     returned by "Find Accepted Payment Brand"; this elements are
     only provided if the Brand Identifier is set
  o  Merchant Data - specific data used by the IOTP Payment Bridge
     which is managed in the IOTP Application Core.

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT FindAcceptedPaymentProtocol (BrandPackagedContent*,
    MerchantData?) >
  <!ATTLIST FindAcceptedPaymentProtocol
    BrandId  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    PayDirection  (Debit|Credit)  #REQUIRED
    CurrCodeType  NMTOKEN  'ISO4217-A'
    CurrCode  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    Amount  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    MerchantPayId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    MerchantOrgId  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED >





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  Output Parameters

  o  Payment Protocol Identifier - for insertion in the Brand List
     Component's Pay Protocol Element
  o  Protocol Brand Identifier - for insertion in the Protocol Brand
     Element of the Brand List Component's Brand Element
  o  Payment Protocol Name and language annotation- for insertion in
     the Brand List Component's Pay Protocol Element
  o  Payment Request Net Location - for insertion in the Brand List
     Component's Pay Protocol Element
  o  Secured Payment Request Net Location - for insertion in the
     Brand List Component's Pay Protocol Element
  o  Brand Item List (cf. Section 4.1.1) - there must be at least
     one element if no brand identifier has been provided on the
     input parameter list.
  o  (Protocol Amount) Packaged Content - for insertion in the Brand
     List Component's Protocol Amount Element
  o  (Pay Protocol) Packaged Content - for insertion in the Brand
     List Component's Pay Protocol Element
  o  Currency Amount element - quite similar to the definition in
     [IOTP], that contain
     - refined Currency Code and Currency - for insertion in the
       Brand List Component's Currency Amount Element
     - refined Payment Amount - for insertion in the Brand List
     Component's Currency Amount Element
  o  Brand - there must be at least one element in each Protocol
     Item if no brand identifier has been provided on the input
     parameter list.

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT FindAcceptedPaymentProtocolResponse (ProtocolItem+,
    BrandItem*) >
  <!ELEMENT ProtocolItem (ProtocolAmountPackagedContent*,
    PayProtocolPackagedContent*
    CurrencyAmount+, Brand*,ProtocolBrand*)>
  <!ATTLIST ProtocolItem
    ProtocolId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    ProtocolBrandId  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    xml:lang  NMTOKEN  #IMPLIED
    ProtocolName  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    PayReqNetLocn  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    SecPayReqNetLocn  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  <!ELEMENT Brand EMPTY >
  <!ATTLIST Brand
    BrandId  CDATA  #REQUIRED >




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  <!ELEMENT CurrencyAmount EMPTY >
  <!ATTLIST CurrencyAmount
    CurrCodeType  NMTOKEN  'ISO4217-A'
    CurrCode  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Amount  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.

4.1.3.  Get Payment Initialization Data

  This API function provides the remaining initialization data being
  required by the Consumer's or Payment Handler's Existing Payment
  Software.  This function might be called both for "brand dependent"
  and "brand independent" transaction types.  In either case, this
  function is called with one particular brand.

  Input Parameters

  o  Brand Identifier - returned by "Find Accepted Payment Brand"
  o  Merchant Payment Identifier - Merchant's unique private
     reference to the payment transaction
  o  Payment Direction
  o  Currency Code and Currency - from the Brand List Component's
     Currency Amount Element
  o  Payment Amount - from the Brand List Component's Currency
     Amount Element
  o  Payment Protocol Identifier - from the Brand List Component's
     Pay Protocol Element
  o  Protocol Brand Identifier - from the Protocol Brand Element
     which relates to the selected Brand Element, if any
  o  (TradingRoleData) Receiver Organization Identifier
  o  OkFrom, OkTo - identical to the entries of the Order Component

  Merchant Payment Identifier

  o  Merchant Organisation Identifier - used for distinction between
     multiple merchants that share the some IOTP merchant system
  o  Wallet Identifier and/or Pass Phrase

  Protocol Brand Element

  o  (Brand) Packaged Content - further payment brand description,
     from the Brand List Component's Brand Element
  o  (Protocol Amount) Packaged Content - further payment protocol
     description, from the Brand List Component's Protocol Amount
     Element




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  o  (Pay Protocol) Packaged Content - further payment protocol
     description, from the Brand List Component's Pay Protocol
     Element
  o  (Protocol Brand) Packaged Content - further brand information,
     from the Protocol Brand Element of the Brand List Component
     which relates to the selected Brand Element, if any
  o  (Order) Packaged Content - further order description, from the
     Order Element
  o  three Brand Selection Info Packaged Content elements - copied
     from the Brand Selection Component on brand dependent purchases
  o  Brand - additional data about the payment brand
  o  Protocol Amount - additional data about the payment protocol
  o  Currency Amount - additional payment brand and currency
     specific data
  o  Merchant Data - specific data used by the IOTP Payment Bridge
     which is managed in the IOTP Application Core.

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT GetPaymentInitializationData (ProtocolBrand?
    BrandPackagedContent*
    ProtocolAmountPackagedContent*,
    PayProtocolPackagedContent*,
    OrderPackagedContent*,
    BrandSelBrandInfoPackagedContent*,
    BrandSelProtocolAmountInfoPackagedContent*,
    BrandSelCurrencyAmountInfoPackagedContent*,
    MerchantData*) >
  <!ATTLIST GetPaymentInitializationData
    BrandId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    MerchantPayId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    PayDirection  (Debit|Credit)  #REQUIRED
    CurrCodeType  NMTOKEN  'ISO4217-A'
    CurrCode  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    Amount  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    ProtocolId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    OkFrom  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    OkTo  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    ReceiverOrgId  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    MerchantOrgId  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED >









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  Output Parameters

  o  OkFrom, OkTo - for insertion in the Payment Component
  o  (TradingRoleData) Packaged Content - further payment protocol
     description; the Name Attribute of the packaged Content
     element must include "Payment:" as the prefix,
     for example "Payment:SET-OD".  For more information, see
     [SET/IOTP].
  o  (Order) Packaged Content - defaults to the supplied order
     packaged content if omitted.

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT GetPaymentInitializationDataResponse
  (OrderPackagedContent*,
  TradingRoleDataPackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST GetPaymentInitializationDataResponse
    OkFrom  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    OkTo  CDATA  #IMPLIED>

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.

4.1.4.  Inquire Authentication Challenge

  This API function inquires any payment protocol specific
  authentication challenge value from the IOTP Payment Bridge.  In
  Baseline IOTP this API function is called by the Merchant (or
  Financial Institution).  The IOTP Application Core may propose a
  choice of algorithms to the IOTP Payment Bridge.  However, the IOTP
  Payment Bridge may ignore the proposal and select some other
  algorithm.

  The inquiry is assumed to be stateless.  E.g., the IOTP Application
  Core may check the returned algorithm and stop transaction processing
  without notifying the IOTP Payment Bridge.

  The IOTP Application Core may issue several API calls to the IOTP
  Payment Bridge to build up the IOTP Authentication Request Block.
  Any subsequently submitted choice of algorithms should be constrained
  by the accepted algorithms from earlier API responses.

  The IOTP Payment Bridge responds with the Business Error Code if it
  does not provide any (more) authentication algorithms and challenges.







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  Input Parameters

  o  Authentication Identifier - the authenticator may provide its
     payment identifier, i.e., Payment Handler or Merchant Payment
     Identifier.
  o  Wallet Identifier and/or Pass Phrase
  o  set of pre-selected algorithms for authentication

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT InquireAuthChallenge (Algorithm*) >
  <!ATTLIST InquireAuthChallenge
    AuthenticationId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Output Parameters

  o  list of Authentication Challenge Packaged Contents - for
     insertion into the IOTP Authentication Request Component
  o  Algorithm Element - for insertion into the IOTP Authentication
     Request Component

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT InquireAuthChallengeResponse (AuthReqPackagedContent*,
    Algorithm) >

4.1.5.  Authenticate

  The Consumer's IOTP Application Core defers payment protocol specific
  authentication processing and the current challenge value to the
  active IOTP Payment Bridge.  Alternative authentication algorithms
  might be tried sequentially or offered to the user for selection.

  Note that the IOTP Application Core has to consider both the current
  context and the algorithm in order to determine the responsible IOTP
  Payment Bridge.

  Failed authentication is reported by the Business Error Code which
  might trigger the inquiry of the details ("Inquire Process State").
  Final failures might be encoded by the process state "Failed".









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  Input Parameters

  o  Authentication Identifier
  o  Wallet Identifier and/or Pass Phrase
  o  Authentication Challenge Packaged Content - copied from the
     IOTP Authentication Request Component
  o  Algorithm Element - copied from the IOTP Authentication Request
     Component

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT Authenticate (Algorithm, AuthReqPackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST Authenticate
    AuthenticationId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Output Parameters

  o  Authentication Response Packaged Content - for insertion into
     the IOTP Authentication Response Component

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT AuthenticateResponse (AuthResPackagedContent*) >

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.

4.1.6.  Check Authentication Response

  This API function verifies the Consumer's payment protocol specific
  authentication response.  In Baseline IOTP this API function is
  called by the Merchant (or the Financial Institution).  It is called
  only if the counter party has responded with an IOTP Authentication
  Response Component within the Authentication Response Block.  Of
  course, the IOTP Application Core traces the need of such an
  response.

  Due to the authentication's statelessness, all parameters (algorithm,
  challenge and response) are submitted to the IOTP Payment Bridge.
  Authentication failure is reported by a Process State different from
  "CompletedOK".








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  Input Parameters

  o  Authentication Identifier
  o  Wallet Identifier and/or Pass Phrase
  o  Authentication Challenge Packaged Content - generated by
     previous "Inquire Authentication Challenge" API call
  o  Algorithm Element
  o  Authentication Response Packaged Content - copied from the
     Authentication Response Component

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT CheckAuthResponse (Algorithm, AuthReqPackagedContent*,
    AuthResPackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST CheckAuthResponse
    AuthenticationId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Output Parameters

  o  Current Process (Authentication) State
  o  Completion Code
  o  Status Description and its language annotation

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT CheckAuthResponseResponse EMPTY >
  <!ATTLIST CheckAuthResponseResponse
    ProcessState  (NotYetStarted |
     InProgress |
     Suspended |
     CompletedOk |
     Failed |
     ProcessError)#REQUIRED
    CompletionCode  NMTOKEN  #IMPLIED
     xml:lang  NMTOKEN  #IMPLIED
     StatusDesc  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.










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4.2.  Brand Selection Related API Calls

4.2.1.  Find Payment Instrument

  This API function determines which instances of a Payment Brand,
  e.g., two Mondex cards, are present.  The same physical card may even
  represent multiple payment instruments.

  The IOTP Application Core supplies possible payment brand and payment
  protocol to the IOTP Payment Bridge that has to be considered when
  the IOTP Payment Bridge searches for appropriate payment instruments.
  This set represents the (sub)set of payment alternatives being
  supported by the Merchant.  If the IOTP Application Cote has multiple
  possible payment brand/protocol, it can call this function in turn.

  The Existing Payment Software responds with PayInstrument Elements
  with empty PayInstId attributes if it does not distinguish between
  different payment instruments for the particular payment
  alternatives.

  Note that the Payment API assumes that the values of the attributes
  BrandId, ProtocolId, ProtocolBrandId and the currency amount suffice
  for the determination of the appropriate Packaged Content Element
  that will be transmitted to the Payment Handler later on.

  Input Parameters

  o  Brand Identifier - copied from the Brand List Component's Brand
     Element
  o  Payment Protocol Identifier and associated Protocol Brand
     Identifier
  o  Payment Direction - copied from the Brand List Component
  o  Currency Code and Currency - copied from the Currency Amount
     Element
  o  Payment Amount - copied from the Currency Amount Element
  o  Consumer Payment Identifier - Consumer's unique reference to
     the current payment transaction
  o  Wallet Identifier - managed by the IOTP Application Core
  o  (Brand) Packaged Content - further payment brand description;
     copied from the Brand List Component's Brand Element
  o  (Protocol Brand) Element - further information; copied from the
     Protocol Brand Element of the Brand List Component which
     relates to the Consumer selected Brand Element, if any.
  o  (Protocol Amount) Packaged Content - further payment protocol
     description, copied from the Brand List Component's Protocol
     Amount Element





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  o  Element (Protocol) Packaged Content - further payment protocol
     description, copied from the Brand List Component's Pay
     Protocol Element

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT FindPaymentInstrument (BrandPackagedContent*,
    ProtocolBrand?,
    PayProtocolPackagedContent*,
    ProtocolAmountPackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST FindPaymentInstrument
    BrandId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    ProtocolId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    PayDirection  (Debit|Credit)  #REQUIRED
    CurrCodeType  NMTOKEN  'ISO4217-A'
    CurrCode  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    Amount  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    ConsumerPayId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Output Parameters

  o  The known Payment Instrument Identifiers, these are internal
     values
  o  The user-defined names of the payment instrument and their
     language encoding

     The Existing Payment Software responds with an empty list of
     identifiers, either if it does not distinguish between different
     payment instruments or if there are no registered payment
     instruments available despite brand support for at least one
     (unspecified) payment protocol.  In the latter case, the IOTP
     Payment Bridge has to request the registration of a suitable
     payment instrument at a subsequent step of the payment process.

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT FindPaymentInstrumentResponse (PayInstrument*) >
  <!ELEMENT PayInstrument EMPTY >
  <!ATTLIST PayInstrument
    Id  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    xml:lang  NMTOKEN  #IMPLIED
    PayInstName  CDATA  #REQUIRED >

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.





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4.2.2.  Check Payment Possibility

  This API function checks whether a payment (both debit and credit)
  can go ahead.  It can be used, for example, to check

  o  if there are sufficient funds available in a particular currency
     for an electronic cash payment brand,
  o  whether there is sufficient value space left on the payment
     instrument for payment refund,
  o  whether required system resources are available and properly
     configured, e.g., serial ports or baud rate,
  o  whether environment requirements are fulfilled, e.g., chip card
     reader presence or Internet connection.

  If the payment method is based on external components, e.g., magnetic
  stripe or chip cards, and the check accesses the medium, the existing
  payment method should not mutually exclusive lock system resources,
  e.g., serial port or modem, that may also be required by other
  Existing Payment Software, e.g., multiple payment software components
  may share the same card reader.  If this happens for API internal
  request processing, the function has to unlock these components prior
  to return.  Otherwise, the payment may not proceed if the Consumer
  cancels immediately and decides to use another payment instrument.
  In this event the previous IOTP Payment Bridge is not notified about
  the change.

  This function call happens immediately after the Consumer's payment
  instrument selection.  For example, if the payment instrument is a
  chip card, that is not inserted in the chip card reader, the Consumer
  may be prompted for its insertion.  However, the Consumer should be
  able to hit some 'skip' button, if the payment check is part of the
  actual payment protocol, too.  Finally, the IOTP Payment Bridge may
  provide only a subset of these capabilities or may even directly
  generate a successful response without any checks.

  Input Parameters

  o  Brand Identifier - user selection
  o  Payment Instrument Identifier - user selection
  o  Currency Code and Currency Code Type - copied from the selected
     Currency Amount Element
  o  Payment Amount - copied from the selected Currency Amount Element
  o  Payment Direction - copied from the selected Trading Protocol
     Option Block
  o  Protocol Identifier - copied from the selected Pay Protocol
     Element





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  o  Protocol Brand Identifier - copied from the selected Protocol
     Brand Element of the Brand List Component which relates to the
     selected Brand Element, if any
  o  Consumer Payment Identifier - Consumer's unique reference to the
     current payment transaction
  o  Wallet Identifier and/or Pass Phrase
  o  (Brand) Packaged Content - copied from the selected Brand Element
  o  (Protocol Amount) Packaged Content - copied from the selected
     Protocol Amount Element
  o  (Protocol) Packaged Content - copied from the selected Pay
     Protocol Element
  o  (Protocol Brand) Packaged Content - copied from the selected
     Protocol Brand Element of the Brand List Component which relates
     to the selected Brand Element, if any

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT CheckPaymentPossibility (BrandPackagedContent*,
    ProtocolBrand?
    ProtocolAmountPackagedContent*,
    PayProtocolPackagedContent*>
  <!ATTLIST CheckPaymentPossibility
    BrandId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    PaymentInstrumentId  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    PayDirection  (Debit|Credit)  #REQUIRED
    CurrCodeType  NMTOKEN  'ISO4217-A'
    CurrCode  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    Amount  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    ProtocolId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    ConsumerPayId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Output Parameters

  o  three Brand Selection Info Packaged Content elements - for
     insertion into the Brand Selection component
  o  Brand - additional data about the payment brand
  o  Protocol Amount - additional data about the payment protocol
  o  Currency Amount - additional payment brand and currency specific
     data










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  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT CheckPaymentPossibilityResponse
    (BrandSelBrandInfoPackagedContent*,
    BrandSelProtocolAmountInfoPackagedContent*,
    BrandSelCurrencyAmountInfoPackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST CheckPaymentPossibilityResponse >

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.

4.3.  Payment Transaction Related API calls

  These Payment API calls may be made either by the Consumer's or
  Payment Handler's IOTP Application Core.

4.3.1.  Start Payment Consumer

  This API function initiates the actual payment transaction at the
  Consumer side.  The IOTP Payment Bridge and the Existing Payment
  Software perform all necessary initialization and preparation for
  payment transaction processing.  This includes the reservation of
  external periphery.  E.g., 1) the Consumer's chip card reader needs
  to be protected against access from other software components, 2) the
  insertion of the chip card may be requested, 3) the Internet
  connection may be re-established, or 4) the Payment Handler may open
  a mutual exclusive session to the security hardware.

  The IOTP Payment Bridge monitors the payment progress and stores the
  current payment states such that resumption - even after power
  failures - remains possible.  Note that the IOTP Application Core
  supplies only a subset of the following input parameter to the
  associated resumption API function and refers to the payment
  transaction through the party's payment identifier.

  Input Parameters

  o  Brand Identifier - copied from the selected Brand Element
  o  Payment Instrument Identifier - the user selection
  o  Currency Code and Currency - copied from the selected Currency
     Amount Element
  o  Payment Amount - copied from the selected Currency Amount
     Element
  o  Payment Direction - copied from the Brand List Component
  o  Protocol Identifier - copied from the selected Payment Protocol
     Element





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  o  Protocol Brand Element - further information; copied from the
     Protocol Brand Element of the Brand List Component which
     relates to the selected Brand Element, if any
  o  OkFrom, OkTo - copied from the Payment Component
  o  Consumer Payment Identifier - Consumer's unique reference to
     the current payment transaction
  o  Wallet Identifier and/or Pass Phrase
  o  Call Back Function - used for end user notification/logging
     purposes
  o  Call Back Language List.  This list is required if the Call Back
     Function is set
  o  (Brand) Packaged Content - further payment brand description;
     copied from the selected Brand Element's content
  o  (Protocol Amount) Packaged Content - further payment protocol
     description; copied from the selected Protocol Amount Element's
     content
  o  (Payment Protocol) Packaged Content - further payment protocol
     description; copied from the selected Pay Protocol Element's
     content
  o  (Order) Packaged Content - further order description, copied
     from the Order Component

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT StartPaymentConsumer (BrandPackagedContent*,
    ProtocolBrand?
    ProtocolAmountPackagedContent*,
    PayProtocolPackagedContent*,
    OrderPackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST StartPaymentConsumer
    BrandId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    PaymentInstrumentId  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    CurrCodeType  NMTOKEN  'ISO4217-A'
    CurrCode  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    Amount  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    PayDirection  (Debit|Credit)  #REQUIRED
    ProtocolId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    ProtocolBrandId  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    OkFrom  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    OkTo  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    ConsumerPayId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    CallBackFunction  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    CallBackLanguageList  NMTOKENS  #IMPLIED >






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  Output Parameters

  o  Continuation Status
  o  (Payment Scheme) Packaged Content - for insertion into the
     Payment Scheme Component of the IOTP Payment Request Block

  The IOTP Application Core is allowed to reissue this request several
  times on failed analyses of the response.

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT StartPaymentConsumerResponse
    (PaySchemePackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST StartPaymentConsumerResponse
    ContStatus  (End|Continue)  #REQUIRED >

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.

4.3.2.  Start Payment Payment Handler

  This API function initializes the Consumer initiated payment
  transaction at the Payment Handler's side.  Similar to the Consumer's
  system, the IOTP Payment Bridge and the Existing Payment Software
  perform all necessary initialization and preparation for payment
  transaction processing.

  Input Parameters

  o  Brand Identifier  - copied from the Consumer selected Brand
     Element
  o  Consumer Payment Identifier - copied from the Payment Scheme
     Component
  o  Currency Code and Currency - copied from the Consumer selected
     Currency Amount Element
  o  Payment Amount - copied from the Consumer selected Currency
     Amount Element
  o  Payment Direction - copied from the Brand List Component
  o  Protocol Identifier  - copied from the Consumer selected
     Payment Protocol Element
  o  Protocol Brand Identifier - copied from the Brand Protocol
     Element of the Brand List Component which relates to the
     Consumer selected Brand Element, if any
  o  OkFrom, OkTo - copied from the Payment Component
  o  Payment Handler Payment Identifier - Payment Handler's unique
     reference to the current payment transaction
  o  Merchant Organisation Identifier -  copied from the Merchant's
     Organisation Element



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  o  Wallet Identifier - renaming to till identifier neglected -
     and/or Pass Phrase
  o  Call Back Function - used for end user notification/logging
     purposes
  o  Call Back Language List.  This list is required if the call
     back function is set
  o  (Brand) Packaged Content - further payment brand description;
     copied from the Consumer selected Brand Element's content
  o  (Protocol Brand) Packaged Content - further information; copied
     from the Protocol Brand Element of the Brand List Component
     which relates to the Consumer selected Brand Element, if any.
  o  (Protocol Amount) Packaged Content - further payment protocol
     description; copied from the Consumer selected Protocol Amount
     Element's content
  o  (Protocol) Packaged Content - further payment protocol
     description; copied from the Consumer selected Pay Protocol
     Element's content
  o  (TradingRoleData) Packaged Content - further payment protocol
     description; the Name Attribute of the packaged contents must
     include "Payment:" as the prefix, for example "Payment:SET-OD".
     For more information, see [SET/IOTP].
  o  Three Brand Selection Info Packaged Content Elements - copied
     from the Brand Selection Component
  o  Brand - additional data about the payment brand
  o  Protocol Amount - additional data about the payment protocol
  o  Currency Amount - additional payment brand and currency
     specific data
  o  (Payment Scheme) Packaged Content.

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT StartPaymentPaymentHandler (BrandPackagedContent*,
    ProtocolBrand?,
    ProtocolAmountPackagedContent*,
    PayProtocolPackagedContent*,
    BrandSelBrandInfoPackagedContent*,
    BrandSelProtocolAmountInfoPackagedContent*,
    BrandSelCurrencyAmountInfoPackagedContent*,
    TradingRoleDataPackagedContent*,
    PaySchemePackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST StartPaymentPaymentHandler
    BrandId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    ConsumerPayId  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    CurrCodeType  NMTOKEN  'ISO4217-A'
    CurrCode  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    Amount  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    PayDirection  (Debit|Credit)  #REQUIRED
    ProtocolId  CDATA  #REQUIRED



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    OkFrom  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    OkTo  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    PaymentHandlerPayId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    MerchantOrgId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    CallBackFunction  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    CallBackLanguageList  NMTOKENS  #IMPLIED >

  Output Parameters

  o  Continuation Status
  o  (Payment Scheme) Packaged Content - for insertion into the
     Payment Scheme Component of the IOTP Payment Exchange Block

  The response message must contain payment schema data if the
  continuation status signals "Continue".  The IOTP Application Core is
  allowed to reissue this request several times on failed analyses of
  the response.

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT StartPaymentPaymentHandlerResponse
    (PaySchemePackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST StartPaymentPaymentHandlerResponse
    ContStatus  (End|Continue)  #REQUIRED >

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.

4.3.3.  Resume Payment Consumer

  This API function resumes a previously suspended payment at the
  Consumer side.  Resumption includes the internal inquiry of the
  payment transaction data, e.g., payment amount, protocol identifier,
  and the whole initialization as it has been applied on the "Start
  Payment Consumer" API request.

  It is up to the IOTP Application Core to decide whether an IOTP
  Payment Request Block or a IOTP Payment Exchange Block needs to be
  generated.  One indicator might be the receipt of a previous IOTP
  Payment Exchange Block from the Payment Handler, e.g., the knowledge
  of the Payment Handler Payment Identifier.

  Input Parameters

  o  Consumer Payment Identifier
  o  Wallet Identifier and/or Pass Phrase



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  o  Call Back Function - used for end user notification/logging
     purposes

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT ResumePaymentConsumer EMPTY >
  <!ATTLIST ResumePaymentConsumer
    ConsumerPayId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    CallBackFunction  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    CallBackLanguageList  NMTOKENS  #IMPLIED >

  Output Parameters

  o  Continuation Status
  o  (Payment Scheme) Packaged Content - for insertion in the
     Payment Scheme Component of the next IOTP message (Payment
     Exchange or Request Block).

  The IOTP Application Core is allowed to reissue this request several
  times on failed analyses of the response.  However, the IOTP Payment
  Bridge might reject the resumption request by using the "AttNotSupp"
  Error Code "naming" the Consumer Payment Identifier attribute.  Then
  the Consumer has to apply normal error processing to the current
  (sub-)transaction and to issue a new Payment Request Block to the
  Payment Handler.

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT ResumePaymentConsumerResponse
    (PaySchemePackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST ResumePaymentConsumerResponse
    ContStatus  (End|Continue)  #REQUIRED >

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.

4.3.4.  Resume Payment Payment Handler

  This API function resumes a payment at the Payment Handler side.

  Input Parameters

  o  Payment Handler Payment Identifier
  o  Wallet Identifier - renaming to till identifier neglected - and
     Pass Phrase




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  o  Call Back Function - used for end user notification/logging
     purposes
  o  Call Back Language List.  This list is required if the Call Back
     Function is set
  o  (Payment Scheme) Packaged Content - copied from the Payment
     Scheme Component of the received IOTP message (Payment Exchange
     or Request Block).

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT ResumePaymentPaymentHandler
    (PaySchemePackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST ResumePaymentPaymentHandler
    PaymentHandlerPayId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    CallBackFunction  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    CallBackLanguageList  NMTOKENS  #IMPLIED >

  Output Parameters

  o  Continuation Status
  o  (Payment Scheme) Packaged Content - for insertion in the
     Payment Scheme Component of the next Payment Exchange Block.

  The response message contains payment schema specific data if the
  continuation status signals "Continue".  The IOTP Application Core is
  allowed to reissue this request several times on failed analyses of
  the response.

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT ResumePaymentPaymentHandlerResponse
  (PaySchemePackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST ResumePaymentPaymentHandlerResponse
    ContStatus  (End|Continue)  #REQUIRED >

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.

4.3.5.  Continue Process

  This API function passes one specific IOTP Payment Scheme Component,
  i.e., the encapsulated Packaged Content elements, received from the
  counter party (e.g., Consumer) to the IOTP Payment Bridge and
  responds with the next IOTP Payment Scheme Component for submission
  to the counter party.




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  Input Parameters

  o  Payty's Payment Identifier
  o  Process (Transaction) Type which distinguishes between Payments
     and Inquiries.
  o  Wallet Identifier and/or Pass Phrase
  o  (Payment Scheme) Packaged Content - copied from the Payment
     Scheme Component of the received Payment Exchange Block or from
     the Error Block.

  Each party should set the payment identifier with the local
  identifier (Consumer: ConsumerPayId; Merchant: MerchantPayId; Payment
  Handler: PaymentHandlerPayId).

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT ContinueProcess (PaySchemePackagedContent+) >
  <!ATTLIST ContinueProcess
    PayId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    ProcessType  (Payment | Inquiry) 'Payment'
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Output Parameters

  o  Continuation Status
  o  (Payment Scheme) Packaged Content - for insertion in the
     Payment Scheme Component of the next Payment Exchange Block or
     final Payment Response Block

  The response message contains payment schema data if the continuation
  status signals "Continue".  The IOTP Payment Bridge must signal
  "End", if the payment scheme data was received within an IOTP Error
  Block containing an Error Component with severity HardError.

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT ContinueProcessResponse (PaySchemePackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST ContinueProcessResponse
    ContStatus  (End|Continue)  #REQUIRED >

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.








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4.3.6.  Change Process State

  The IOTP Application Core changes the current payment status by this
  request.  The IOTP Payment Bridge may be notified about business
  level normal termination, cancellation, suspension, and processing
  errors.  Notification happens by requesting the intended process
  state.

  The IOTP Payment Bridge processes the status change and reports the
  result.

  The IOTP Application Core has to analyze any returned process status
  in order to check whether the IOTP Payment Bridge has agreed to or
  declined the status switch.  E.g., the submitted Process State
  "CompleteOk" may lead to the Payment Status "Failed" if the payment
  transaction has already failed.

  Transaction Suspension is notified by the newly introduced Process
  State "Suspended".  The other attribute values have been taken from
  the IOTP specification.

  This API function might be called by the Consumer, Merchant, or
  Payment Handler for each payment transaction anytime after the
  issuance of "FindPaymentInstrument" to the IOTP Payment Bridge by the
  Consumer, the issuance of "FindAcceptedPaymentBrand" by the Merchant,
  or the issuance of "StartPaymentPaymentHandler" by the Payment
  Handler.

  The Process States "CompletedOk", "Failed", and "ProcessError" are
  final in the sense that they can not be changed on subsequent calls.
  However, the API function should not return with an error code if
  such an incompatible call has been issued.  Instead it should report
  the old unchanged Process State.

  Unknown payment transactions are reported by the Error Code
  "AttValInvalid" pointing to the PayId attribute.

  Input Parameters

  o  Party's Payment Identifier
  o  intended Payment Status
  o  intended Completion Code
  o  Process (Transaction) Type which distinguishes between Payments
     and Inquiries.
  o  Wallet Identifier and/or Pass Phrase






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  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT ChangeProcessState EMPTY >
  <!ATTLIST ChangeProcessState
    PayId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    ProcessState  (NotYetStarted |
     InProgress |
     Suspended |
     CompletedOk |
     Failed |
     ProcessError)  #REQUIRED
    CompletionCode  NMTOKEN  #IMPLIED
    ProcessType  (Payment | Inquiry) 'Payment'
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Output Parameters

  o  Process State and Percent Complete
  o  Completion Code
  o  Status Description and its language annotation

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT ChangeProcessStateResponse EMPTY >
  <!ATTLIST ChangeProcessStateResponse
    ProcessState  (NotYetStarted |
     InProgress |
     Suspended |
     CompletedOk |
     Failed |
     ProcessError)  #REQUIRED
    PercentComplete  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    CompletionCode  NMTOKEN  #IMPLIED
    xml:lang  NMTOKEN  #IMPLIED
    StatusDesc  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.

4.4.  General Inquiry API Calls

  The following calls are not necessarily assigned to a payment
  transaction and may be issued at any time.  There are no dependencies
  on any other calls.






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4.4.1.  Remove Payment Log

  The IOTP Application Core notifies the IOTP Payment Bridge and/or the
  corresponding Existing Payment Software via IOTP Payment Bridge that
  any record in the Payment Log file, that deals with the listed
  payment transaction, might be removed.

  Input Parameters

  o  Party's Payment Identifier
  o  Wallet Identifier and/or Pass Phrase

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT RemovePaymentLog EMPTY >
  <!ATTLIST RemovePaymentLog
    PayId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Output Parameters

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT RemovePaymentLogResponse EMPTY >
  <!ATTLIST RemovePaymentLogResponse >

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.

4.4.2.  Payment Instrument Inquiry

  This API function retrieves the properties of the Payment Instrument.
  The Payment Instrument Identifier could be omitted if this identifier
  is derived by other means, e.g., by analysis of the currently
  inserted chip card.  If the Payment instrument could not uniquely
  determined, the IOTP Payment Bridge may provide suitable dialogs for
  user input.

  E.g., this API function might be used during problem resolution with
  the Customer Care Provider of the issuer of the payment instrument,
  in order to inquire payment instrument specific values.

  Input parameters

  o  Brand Identifier
  o  Payment Instrument Identifier
  o  Protocol Identifier



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  o  Wallet Identifier and/or Pass Phrase
  o  Property Type List - sequence of values whose language is
     identified by xml:lang
  o  (Brand) PackagedContent Content - further payment brand
     description
  o  Protocol Brand Content - further payment brand information
  o  (Protocol Amount) PackagedContent Content - further payment
     protocol description
  o  (Pay Protocol) PackagedContent Content - further payment
     protocol description

  The codes in the property type list are of two types:

  o  generic codes which apply to all payment methods but might be
     unavailable
  o  Payment Brand specific codes.

  Generic codes for the Property Type List are:

  Property Type         Meaning
  Balance               Current balance
  Limit                 Maximum balance
  PaymentLimit          Maximum payment transaction limit
  Expiration            Expiration date
  Identifier            Issuer assigned identifier of the payment
                        instrument.  Usually, it does not match with
                        the API's payment instrument identifier.
  LogEntries            Number of stored payment transaction
                        entries.  The entries are numbered from 0
                        (the most recent) to some non-negative
                        value for the oldest entry.
  PayAmountn            Payment Amount of the n-th recorded payment
                        transaction, n may negative
  PayPartyn             Remote party of the n-th payment recorded
                        transaction, n may negative
  PayTimen              Time of the n-th payment recorded
                        transaction, n may negative

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT PaymentInstrumentInquiry (BrandPackagedContent*,
    ProtocolBrand?,
    ProtocolAmountPackagedContent*,
    PayProtocolPackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST PaymentInstrumentInquiry
    BrandId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    PaymentInstrumentId  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    ProtocolId  CDATA  #REQUIRED



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    PropertyTypeList  NMTOKENS  #REQUIRED
    xml:lang  NMTOKEN  #IMPLIED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Output parameters

  o  a list of zero or more unavailable property values whose
     language are identified by xml:lang.
  o  a list of zero or more sets of "Properties Types", "Property
     Values" and "Property Descriptions"

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT PaymentInstrumentInquiryResponse
    (PaymentInstrumentProperty*) >
  <!ATTLIST PaymentInstrumentInquiryResponse
    xml:lang  NMTOKEN  #REQUIRED
    UnavailablePropertyList NMTOKENS  #IMPLIED >
  <!ELEMENT PaymentInstrumentProperty EMPTY >
  <!ATTLIST PaymentInstrumentProperty
    PropertyType  NMTOKEN  #REQUIRED
    PropertyValue  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    PropertyDesc  CDATA  #REQUIRED >

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.

4.4.3.  Inquire Pending Payment

  This API function reports the party's payment identifiers of any
  pending payment transactions that the IOTP Payment Bridge/Existing
  Payment Software recommends be completed or suspended prior to the
  processing of new payment transactions.  It does not respond with
  further transaction details.  These have to be requested with
  "Inquire Process State".

  Note that the IOTP Payment Bridge has to respond without the benefit
  of any pass phrase if there exist no pending payment transaction.
  But if there are some pending payment transactions, the IOTP Payment
  Bridge may refuse the immediate response and may instead request the
  appropriate pass phase from the IOTP Application Core.

  Input Parameters

  o  Wallet Identifier and/or Passphrase





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  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT InquirePendingPayment EMPTY >
  <!ATTLIST InquirePendingPayment
    WalletId  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Output Parameters

  o  Party's Payment Identifier

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT InquirePendingPaymentResponse (PaymentId*) >

  <!ELEMENT PaymentId EMPTY >
  <!ATTLIST PaymentId
    PayId  CDATA  #REQUIRED >

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.

4.5.  Payment Related Inquiry API Calls

4.5.1.  Check Payment Receipt

  This function is used by the Consumer and might be used by the
  Payment Handler to check the consistency, validity, and integrity of
  IOTP payment receipts which might consist of Packaged Content
  Elements

  o  from the IOTP Payment Receipt Component - provided by the Payment
     Handler's "Inquire Process State" API call shortly before payment
     completion,

  o  from Payment Scheme Components being exchanged during the actual
     payment, or

  o  being returned by the Consumer's "Inquire Process State" API call
     shortly before payment completion

  The IOTP Application Core has to check the PayReceiptNameRefs
  attribute of the IOTP Payment Receipt Component and to supply exactly
  the Packaged Content Elements being referred to.

  Failed verification is returns a business error.





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  Note that this Payment API assumes that any payment receipt builds
  upon a subset of elements with reference to [IOTP].  Furthermore, the
  Packaged Content Element have to be distinguishable by their Name
  attribute.

  Input Parameters

  o  Party's Payment Identifier
  o  Wallet Identifier and/or Pass Phrase
  o  All Packaged Content Elements in the payment receipt

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT CheckPaymentReceipt (PackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST CheckPaymentReceipt
    PayId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Output Parameters

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT CheckPaymentReceiptResponse EMPTY >
  <!ATTLIST CheckPaymentReceiptResponse >

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.

4.5.2.  Expand Payment Receipt

  This API function expands any IOTP payment receipt into a form which
  may be used for display or printing purposes.  "Check Payment
  Receipt" should be used first if there is any question of the payment
  receipt containing errors.

  The same conventions apply to the input parameter as for "Check
  Payment Receipt" (cf. Section 4.5.1).

  Input Parameters

  o  Party's Payment Identifier
  o  Wallet Identifier and/or Pass Phrase
  o  All Packaged Content Elements that build the payment receipt







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  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT ExpandPaymentReceipt (PackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST ExpandPaymentReceipt
    PayId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Output Parameters

  o  Brand Identifier
  o  Protocol specific Brand Identifier
  o  Payment Instrument Identifier
  o  Currency Code and Currency Code Type
  o  Payment Amount
  o  Payment Direction
  o  Time Stamp - issuance of the receipt
  o  Protocol Identifier
  o  Protocol specific Transaction Identifier - this is an internal
     reference number which identifies the payment
  o  Consumer Description, Payment Handler Description, and a
     language annotation
  o  Style Sheet Net Location
  o  Payment Property List.  A list of type/value/description triples
     which contains additional information about the payment which
     is not covered by any of the other output parameters; property
     descriptions have to consider the language annotation.

  The Style Sheet Net Location refers to a Style Sheet (e.g., [XSLT])
  that contains presentation information about the reported XML encoded
  data.

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT ExpandPaymentReceiptResponse (PaymentProperty*) >
  <!ATTLIST ExpandPaymentReceiptResponse
    BrandId  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    PaymentInstrumentId  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Amount  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    CurrCodeType  NMTOKEN  #IMPLIED
    CurrCode  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    PayDirection  (Debit|Credit)  #IMPLIED
    TimeStamp  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    ProtocolId  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    ProtocolBrandId  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    ProtocolTransId  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    xml:lang  NMTOKEN  #IMPLIED
    ConsumerDesc  CDATA  #IMPLIED



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    PaymentHandlerDesc  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    StyleSheetNetLocn  CDATA  #IMPLIED>

  <!ELEMENT PaymentProperty EMPTY >
  <!ATTLIST PaymentProperty
    PropertyType  NMTOKEN  #REQUIRED
    PropertyValue  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    PropertyDesc  CDATA  #REQUIRED >

  The Existing Payment Software should return as many attributes as
  possible from the supplied IOTP Payment Receipt.  The payment
  supplement defines the attribute values for the payment properties.

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.

4.5.3.  Inquire Process State

  This API function returns the current payment state and optionally
  further Packaged Content Elements that form the payment receipt.
  Called by the Payment Handler, the IOTP Payment Bridge might respond
  with data intended for inclusion in the IOTP Payment Receipt
  Component's Packaged Content.  When the Consumer calls this function
  shortly before payment completion, it may respond with further items
  of the payment receipt.  Such items might be created by a chip card.

  Input Parameters

  o  Party's Payment Identifier
  o  Wallet Identifier and/or Pass Phrase

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT InquireProcessState EMPTY >
  <!ATTLIST InquireProcessState
    PayId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Output Parameters

  o  Current Process State and Percent Complete
  o  Completion Code
  o  Status Description and its language annotation
  o  Payment Receipt Name References to all Packaged Content
     Elements that build the payment receipt (cf. Section 4.5.1),
     even if they have not been created so far (Consumer's share)




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  o  Any Packaged Content Element being available that form the
     payment receipt

  The IOTP provides a linking capability to the payment receipt
  delivery.  Instead of encapsulating the whole payment specific data
  into the packaged content of the payment receipt, other Payment
  Scheme Components' Packaged Content might be referred to.

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT InquireProcessStateResponse
  (PackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST InquireProcessStateResponse
    ProcessState  (NotYetStarted |
     InProgress |
     Suspended |
     CompletedOk |
     Failed |
     ProcessError)  #REQUIRED
    PercentComplete  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    CompletionCode  NMTOKEN  #IMPLIED
    xml:lang  NMTOKEN  #IMPLIED
    StatusDesc  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    PayReceiptNameRefs  NMTOKENS  #IMPLIED >

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.

4.5.4.  Start Payment Inquiry

  This API function responds with any additional payment scheme
  specific data that is needed by the Payment Handler for Consumer
  initiated payment transaction inquiry processing.  Probably, the IOTP
  Payment Bridge (or the corresponding Existing Payment Software) has
  to determine the payment related items that were provided with the
  "Start Payment Consumer" API function call.

  Input Parameters

  o  Consumer Payment Identifier
  o  Wallet Identifier and/or Pass Phrase










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  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT StartPaymentInquiry EMPTY >
  <!ATTLIST StartPaymentInquiry
    ConsumerPayId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Output Parameters

  o  (Payment Scheme) Packaged Content - intended for insertion in
     the Payment Scheme Component of  the Inquiry Request Block

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT StartPaymentInquiryResponse
    (PaySchemePackagedContent*) >

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.

4.5.5.  Inquire Payment Status

  The Payment Handler calls this API function for Consumer initiated
  inquiry processing.  It differs from the previous "Inquire Process
  State" API function by the optional inclusion of payment scheme
  specific data.  The response may encapsulate further details about
  the payment transaction.

  Input Parameters

  o  Payment Handler Payment Identifier
  o  Wallet Identifier and/or Pass Phrase
  o  (Payment Scheme) Packaged Content - copied from the Inquiry
     Request Block's Payment Scheme Component

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT InquirePaymentStatus (PaySchemePackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST InquirePaymentStatus
    PaymentHandlerPayId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Output Parameters

  o  Current Process State
  o  Completion Code



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  o  Status Description and its language annotation
  o  (Payment Scheme) Packaged Content - intended for insertion in
     the Payment Scheme Component of the Inquiry Response Block

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT InquirePaymentStatusResponse
  (PaySchemePackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST InquirePaymentStatusResponse
    PaymentHandlerPayId  CDATA  #REQUIRED
    ProcessState  (NotYetStarted |
     InProgress |
     Suspended |
     CompletedOk |
     Failed |
     ProcessError)  #REQUIRED
    CompletionCode  NMTOKEN  #IMPLIED
    xml:lang  NMTOKEN  #IMPLIED
    StatusDesc  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.

4.6.  Other API Calls

4.6.1.  Manage Payment Software

  The following API function notifies the IOTP Payment Bridge about the
  intended registration, modification, or deletion of a payment
  instrument.  The actual processing is up to the IOTP Payment Bridge.

  This API request may also be used to activate the IOTP Payment Bridge
  (and the corresponding Existing Payment Software) for general
  administration purposes.

  Input Parameters

  o  Brand Identifier
  o  Protocol Identifier
  o  Any action code:
  o  New - add new payment method / instrument
  o  Update - change the payment method's / instrument's data
  o  Delete - delete a payment method / instrument
  o  Wallet Identifier and/or Pass Phrase
  o  (Brand) Packaged Content - further payment brand description
  o  (Pay Protocol) Packaged Content - further payment protocol
     description




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  o  (Protocol Amount) Packaged Content - further payment protocol
     description

  If the Action attribute is set, the Brand and Protocol Identifier
  have to also be set.  The IOTP Payment Bridge has to provide the
  required user dialogs and selection mechanisms.  E.g., updates and
  deletions may require the selection of the payment instrument.  A new
  wallet might be silently generated on the supplement of a new Wallet
  Identifier or after an additional end user acknowledge.  The IOTP
  Application Core should not provide any pass phrases for new wallets.
  Instead, the IOTP Payment Bridge has to request and verify them,
  which may return their value to the IOTP Application Core in plain
  text.  In addition, the IOTP Payment Bridge returns the supported
  authentication algorithms when a new brand and protocol pair has been
  registered.

  If the "Action" attribute is omitted, the IOTP Payment Bridge which
  is responsible for the Existing Payment Software pops up in a general
  interactive mode.

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT ManagePaymentSoftware (BrandPackagedContent*,
    ProtocolAmountPackagedContent*,
    PayProtocolPackagedContent*) >
  <!ATTLIST ManagePaymentSoftware
    BrandId  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    ProtocolId  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Action  (New |
     Update |
     Delete)  #IMPLIED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Output Parameters

  o  An action code:
  o  New - added new wallet
  o  Update - changed wallet's configuration
  o  Delete - removed a wallet
  o  Wallet Identifier and/or Pass Phrase

  The IOTP Payment Bridge does not return any information about the set
  of registered payment instruments because these data items are
  dynamically inferred during the brand selection process at the
  beginning of each IOTP transaction.  However, the IOTP Application
  Core has to be notified about new wallets and should be notified
  about updated and removed wallets (identifier).  Alternatively,



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  removed wallets can be implicitly detected during the next brand
  selection phase.  Updated wallets do no affect the processing of the
  IOTP Application Core.  The IOTP Payment Bridge should only support
  the addition of at most one wallet because it is not able to report
  multiple additions at once back to the IOTP Application Core.

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT ManagePaymentSoftwareResponse EMPTY >
  <!ATTLIST ManagePaymentSoftwareResponse
    Action  (New |
     Update |
     Delete)  #IMPLIED
    WalletID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    Passphrase  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    AuthNames  NMTOKENS  #REQUIRED >

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.

5.  Call Back Function

  This API function, called by the IOTP Payment Bridge, is used to
  provide information for Consumer or Payment Handler notification
  about the progress of the payment transaction.

  Its use is illustrated in the diagram below.

  *+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*
                        IOTP Application   ----calls----
                        |     Core     |               |
         display        |              |               v
           to  <----------  Call Back <--calls---  Payment
          user          |              |           Software
                        ----------------
  *+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*+*

                      Figure 9.  Call Back Function

  Whenever this function is called, the content of the status
  description should be made available to the user.  For example on a
  status bar, a pop up window, etc.

  A reference to the Call Back function is passed as an input parameter
  to the "Start Payment X" and "Resume Payment X" API function.
  Afterwards, this function might be called whenever the status changes
  or progress needs to be reported.




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  Input Parameters

  o  the software identifier of the caller
  o  Party's Payment Identifier
  o  Process State and Percent Complete
  o  Completion Code
  o  Status Description and its language annotation, text which
     provides information about the progress of the call.  It should be
     displayed or made available to, for example, the Consumer.

  Examples of Status Description could be:

  o  "Paying 12.30 USD to XYZ Inc"
  o  "Payment completed"
  o  "Payment aborted"

  The valid languages are announced in the Call Back Language List
  attribute in "Start Payment X" and "Resume Payment X" API function
  calls.

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT CallBack EMPTY >
  <!ATTLIST CallBack
    ContentSoftwareID  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    PayId CDATA #REQUIRED
    ProcessState  (NotYetStarted |
     InProgress |
     Suspended |
     CompletedOk |
     Failed |
     ProcessError)  #IMPLIED
    PercentComplete  CDATA  #IMPLIED
    CompletionCode  NMTOKEN  #IMPLIED
    xml:lang  NMTOKEN  #IMPLIED
    StatusDesc  CDATA  #IMPLIED >

  Output Parameters

  XML definition:

  <!ELEMENT CallBackResponse EMPTY >
  <!ATTLIST CallBackResponse <!-- see below --> >

  Tables 4 and 5 explain the attributes and elements; Table 3
  introduces the Error Codes.





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  Basically, the call back function accepts all input arguments or
  rejects the whole request.  It may even accept malformed requests.

  Some payment schemes may support or require that the Consumer might
  be able to cancel the payment at any time.  The Call Back function
  can be used to facilitate this by returning the cancellation request
  on the next call (using the Business Error Code and Completion Code
  "ConsCancelled").

  Vice versa the Payment Handler's Application Core might use the
  similar mechanism to signal its IOTP Payment Bridges any exceptional
  need for a fast shutdown.  These IOTP Payment Bridges may initiate
  the appropriate steps for terminating/cancelling all pending payment
  transactions.

  Note that the "Change Process State" API function provides the second
  mechanism for such kind of notification.  Therefore, the IOTP Payment
  Bridge or Existing Payment Software may ignore the details of the
  "Call Back" response.

6.  Security Consideration

  The IOTP Payment APIs only supports security using pass phrase to
  access to payment Wallet.  These can be protected over TLS, which
  provides stronger security at the transport layer, but
  implementations are out the scope of this document.

  See also security consideration section of [IOTP].

7.  References

7.1.  Normative References

  [IOTP]     Burdett, D., "Internet Open Trading Protocol - IOTP
             version 1.0", RFC 2801, April 2000.

  [ISO4217]  ISO 4217: Codes for the Representation of Currencies.
             Available from ANSI or ISO.

  [URL]      Berners-Lee, T., Masinter, L. and M. McCahill, "Uniform
             Resource Locators (URL)", RFC 1738, December 1994.

  [UTC]      Universal Time Coordinated. A method of defining time
             absolutely relative to Greenwich Mean Time (GMT).
             Typically of the form: "CCYY-MM- DDTHH:MM:SS.sssZ+n" where
             the "+n" defines the number of hours from GMT. See ISO
             DIS8601.




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  [XML]      Extensible Mark Up Language (XML) 1.0 (Third Edition).  A
             W3C recommendation. See http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml

  [XML-NS]   Namespaces in XML Recommendation. T. Bray, D. Hollander,
             A. Layman. Janaury 1999.  http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-
             names

  [XSLT]     Extensible Style Language Transformations 1.0, November
             1999, See http://www.w3.org/TR/xslt

7.2.  Informative References

  [IOTPBOOK] D. Burdett, D.E. Eastlake III, and M. Goncalves, Internet
             Open Trading Protocol, McGraw-Hill, 2000. ISBN 0-07-
             135501-4.

  [SET]      SET Secure Electronic Transaction(TM) , Version 1.0, May
             31, 1997
             Book 1: Business Description
             Book 2: Programmer's Guide
             Book 3: Formal Protocol Definition

  [SET/IOTP] Kawatsura, Y., "Secure Electronic Transaction (SET)
             Supplement for the v1.0 Internet Open Trading Protocol
             (IOTP)", RFC 3538, June 2003.

  [TLS]      Dierks, T. and C. Allen, "The TLS Protocol Version 1.0",
             RFC 2246, January 1999.























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RFC 3867                  Payment API for IOTP             November 2004


Acknowledgement

  The contributions of Werner Hans of Atos Origin are gratefully
  acknowledged.

Authors' Addresses

  Hans-Bernhard Beykirch

  EMail: [email protected]


  Yoshiaki Kawatsura
  Hitachi, Ltd.
  890 Kashimada Saiwai-ku Kawasaki-shi
  Kanagawa, Japan 212-8567

  EMail: [email protected]


  Masaaki Hiroya
  Technoinfo Service, Inc.
  333-2-718 Uchikoshi-machi
  Hachioji-shi
  Tokyo 192-0911 JAPAN

  EMail: [email protected]
























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Full Copyright Statement

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