IE20050056U1 - A test system for testing transaction processing equipment - Google Patents
A test system for testing transaction processing equipment Download PDFInfo
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- IE20050056U1 IE20050056U1 IE2005/0056A IE20050056A IE20050056U1 IE 20050056 U1 IE20050056 U1 IE 20050056U1 IE 2005/0056 A IE2005/0056 A IE 2005/0056A IE 20050056 A IE20050056 A IE 20050056A IE 20050056 U1 IE20050056 U1 IE 20050056U1
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- 239000000523 sample Substances 0.000 claims abstract description 46
- 210000003414 Extremities Anatomy 0.000 claims description 2
- 238000003780 insertion Methods 0.000 claims description 2
- 210000002370 ICC Anatomy 0.000 abstract description 3
- 238000010586 diagram Methods 0.000 description 3
- 235000010384 tocopherol Nutrition 0.000 description 3
- 235000019731 tricalcium phosphate Nutrition 0.000 description 3
- 230000005540 biological transmission Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000006243 chemical reaction Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000010276 construction Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000001514 detection method Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000003278 mimic Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000004088 simulation Methods 0.000 description 1
Abstract
ABSTRACT A test system (1) has a test controller (2) and at least one probe (3). An ICC card (C) is inserted into a slot (8) of the probe (3), and a card—simulating interface (5) of the probe (3) is inserted in the slot (S) of the terminal (T) under test. The test controller (2) communicates bi—directionally with terminal (T) and an external transaction processing system (B). Up to six data monitoring points (100 to 105) are possible, different numbers of points providing different modes of operation.
Description
INTRODUCTION
Field of the Invention
The invention relates to testing of transaction processing systems such as those
including a merchant terminal for reading transaction cards and a transaction
processing system.
Prior Art Discussion
US2004/0220875 describes a test system having a number of processors for
generating scripts and transmitting them to a system under test. US6336590 describes
a test system for simulating a switch by generating scripts and a validator for
comparing responses with standards. US6l29271 also describes a test system which
builds scripts.
The invention is directed towards providing a test system for more versatile and/or
more comprehensive testing of transaction processing equipment of the type identified
above.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
According to the invention there is provided a test system for testing transaction
processing equipment, the test system comprising:
a probe comprising:
an interface to a transaction terminal, JNI. (If
T a monitoring circuit to passively monitor data transmitted from the
terminal and transmitted to the terminal;
a test controller;
a controller interface for capturing monitored data;
a database for storing monitored data and transaction conformance data; and
a transaction conformance verifier for verifying operations of the transaction
processing equipment under test by comparing monitored data and the
conformance data.
Thus, the test system can test the transaction processing system in a comprehensive
manner without being intrusive.
In one embodiment, the monitoring circuit passively monitors data transmitted from
the terminal to a card and data transmitted from the card to the terminal.
In one embodiment, the probe comprises a card reader for reading the card presented
for a test and for routing card data to the terminal.
In one embodiment, the probe routes the card data to the controller interface.
In another embodiment, the probe routes the card data on a hard—wired link to contact
pads on an interface for insertion in the terminal.
In a further embodiment, the interface has at its extremity a configuration identical to
that of a card, but is longer than a card to accommodate different terminal physical
configurations.
In one embodiment, the monitoring circuit monitors signals via an opto—isolator. This
helps to ensure that testing is non-intrusive.
|EO50056
In one embodiment, the probe comprises a switch for switching between card signal
frequencies to choose an appropriate frequency.
In one embodiment, the probe comprises a control unit for generating probe status
outputs.
In one embodiment, the outputs indicate ifthe probe is transmitting monitored data to
the controller interface.
In one embodiment, the outputs indicate ifa card is correctly inserted into the probe.
In one embodiment, the outputs indicate if the probe is correctly connected to the
terminal.
In one embodiment, the probe converts the monitored data to a test controller format,
and routes it in that format to the test controller.
In another embodiment, the test controller comprises an interface to the terminal and
an interface to an external transaction processing system.
In one embodiment, the test controller performs bi—directional routing between the
terminal and the external system.
In one embodiment, the test controller comprises parsers for parsing monitored data
and converting it into normalized format for the database. This allows excellent
versatility for processing the data to perform various verification operations.
In one embodiment, the test controller comprises a switch engine for reading
normalized data from the database and routing normalized data according to rules in
the database.
In one embodiment, the switch engine uses elements of normalized data to execute
said rules.
ED501056
In one embodiment, the routing decisions may be to reject traffic, authorise data and
return it to its source, or route data to a different communications parser.
In one embodiment, the switch engine routes data to the conformance verifier for
verification according to rules in the database.
In one embodiment, the verifier is configured to perform conformance verification in
a mode having the following data monitoring points:
a first point between the card and the terminal;
a second point between the terminal and the card;
a third point between the terminal and the test system;
a fourth point between the test system and the terminal;
a fifth point between the external transaction processing system and the test
system; and
a sixth point between the test system and the external transaction processing
system.
In one embodiment, the verifier is configured to perform conformance Verification in
a mode having only the first, second, third, and fourth points.
In one embodiment, the test controller comprises a simulator for simulating an
external transaction processing system as seen by the terminal.
In one embodiment, the verifier is configured to perform conformance verification
with data from only the first and second points.
|E050o55
In a further embodiment, the verifier is configured to perform conformance
verification with data from only the fifth and sixth points.
In one embodiment, the test system comprises a simulator for simulating a terminal as
seen by an external transaction processing system.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
Brief Description of the Drawings
The invention will be more clearly understood from the following description of some
embodiments thereof, given by way of example only with reference to the
accompanying drawings in which:—
Fig. 1 is a diagram of the components of a test system of the invention;
Fig. 2 shows a probe of the test system interfacing with a terminal under test;
Fig. 3 shows architecture of the probe in more detail;
Fig. 4 is a diagram showing generalised structure of the overall test system;
Fig. 5 is a diagram showing the four modes of operation of the test system and
the data monitoring points in each.
Description of the Embodiments
Referring to Fig. 1 a test system 1 comprises a test controller 2 and a probe 3. While
only one probe is shown, the controller 2 may be connected to multiple probes, only
one being shown for clarity. There is an interface 4 between the probe 3 and the
controller 2, and a card-simulating interface 5 between the probe 3 and a point of sale
(POS) terminal T under test. In this embodiment the terminal is a point—of-sale
IE050o55
terminal for receiving integrated chip cards (ICCS) as defined by lSO7816 inter alia.
However, it may alternatively be a transaction gathering device of any type, such as
one which does not receive a card but instead user codes entered at a keypad.
The terminal T can, as is conventional, communicate via a TCP/IP network 6 with an
external bank transaction processing host system B. The controller 2 of the test system
is PC-based and can also communicate via the network 6 with the terminal T and/or
the external system B.
Referring to Figs 2 and 3 the probe 3 comprises a housing 7 containing an internal
probe circuit, a card reader 8, and status LEDS 9. The internal circuit is on the same
PCB as that of the interface 5 extending from the housing and taking the form of an
elongated card. It has tracks 10 extending directly from the card reader 8 to contact
pads 11 which are exposed to mimic those of a conventional ICC card. As shown in
Fig. 2, for interfacing of the probe 3 with the terminal T under test, the interface 5 is
simply inserted into the conventional ICC card slot S of the terminal T.
Referring particularly to Fig. 3, the internal circuit of the probe 3 comprises the tracks
extending between the card reader 8 and the Contact pads 11. That part of the tracks
which are covered over by the housing 7 are tapped to an opto-isolator 16, in turn
connected to a sampler 17 which samples at the relevant rate. The sampler feeds the
monitored signals to a converter 18 which converts them to a USB format for
transmission via a USB port to the test controller 2. Fig. 3 also shows a probe control
unit 19 and a driver 20 for the status LEDS 9. The status indications are to activate one
LED for each of:
- USB Active, probe 3 transmitting to the controller 2;
— Card Active: card is correctly inserted into the probe 3;
- T Active: interface 5 correctly inserted into terminal T; and
- Data Active: signal processing in progress (LED flickering).
The control unit 19 determines the sample rate of the sampler 17 according to
configuration of the test controller 2.
E0b0o55
It will be noted that the probe 3 acts in a completely non—intrusive manner, and
possibility of intrusiveness arising from electrical noise is avoided because of the
opto—isolators 16 and the hard—wired links between the contacts 8 and 11. Its role is
passive and the outputs on the interfaces 4 and 5 are uni-directionally outgoing.
Referring again to Fig. 1, the terminal T relays signals to the test controller 2 by a
modem, and the test controller 2 relays signals to the external system B by a different
modem. There is typically some protocol conversion performed by the test
controller 2. In other embodiments alternative and differing transport mechanisms
such as TCP/1P, X.25 or serial may be used between each of the terminal T, the
external system B and the test controller 2 as desired. All interfaces are bi—directional.
Referring to Fig. 4, the structure of the test system 1 comprises listener hardware 30
including the probe 3 and physical links to systems such as the terminal T being
tested. Communication handlers 31 complete the interfaces between the components
of the test system 1 and the system under test. The controller 2 includes
communication parsers 12, a switch engine 13, a database 14, and a transaction
conformance verifier 15.
The parsers 12 parse raw data from the handlers 31 and generate and write normalized
data to the database 14, irrespective of its source. This allows the verifier 15 to operate
completely with data in a single, universal, normalized format. This allows a very
simple and versatile approach to verification operations. The switch engine 13 reads
routing rules from the database 15 and routes normalized traffic according to said
rules using data elements contained within the normalized data format, and either (a)
rejects the traffic (b) authorizes the data and returns it to whence it came or (c) passes
the data to another communications parser for dispatch to another system for
authorisation or further routing. Data to be conformance verified is likewise generated
in normalized format by the communications parsers 12 and routed by the switch
engine 13 to the transaction conformance verifier 15 according to rules in the database
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The main data transfer routes are shown in Fig. 5 for the typical mode of operation of
the test system 1 (Mode(i)), and also for three other modes. In Fig. 5 the test
controller, the components of a transaction processing system under test, and a card
are indicated by the same reference numerals and letters as in the preceding drawings.
The data monitoring points are indicated by small circles and the numerals 100-105
inclusive. The six points are:
— 100: terminal T to card C, monitored by the probe 3;
- 101: card C to terminal T, also monitored by the probe 3;
— 102: controller 2 to terminal T, intercepted by the controller 2;
- 103: terminal T to controller 2, intercepted by the controller 2;
— 104: controller 2 to system B, intercepted by the controller 2;
— 105: system B to controller 2, intercepted by the controller 2;
Test cards may be provided with the test system, or provided by the card or equipment
issuers. The issuer may require a retailer to purchase test cards for testing of their
equipment. Test cards provided by a third party can be used with the test system, and
will determine the nature of the test regime. The controller 2 comprises a user
interface which prompts the user with a given sequence of test transactions to perform
on specific test cards. There can be a number of different testing regimes for different
degrees of testing and different transaction conformance and classification purposes,
and for use with different test card sets. The desired test regime determines the Mode
(i) to (iv) to choose.
For each of the data—monitoring points 100-105, the database 14 contains, in
normalized format, the complete test/fail criteria for the operation of one or more tests
for one or more cards C in detail sufficient to verify the integrity of the real—time
communication between, or at, any, or all, of the data points 100-105 specified in the
database 14.
The database 14 also contains, as well as communication information from the parsers
12, the following information that is used by the verifier 15:
- a list of atomic communications that can or did (previously logged) occur
between card C and the terminal T,
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— and that can or did occur between the terminal T and card C,
- and can or did occur between terminal T and the system B,
- and can or did occur between the system B and the terminal T,
— a collection of rules which describe the correct data elements that form a legal
end-to-end transaction, and
- a further collection of more complex rules for security or tracking or fraud
detection purposes.
The Verifier 15 also comprises a rule engine, which interprets the rules, applies them
to the states and communications that have occurred in a transaction, and determines
whether the sequence of communications, the timings between communications, and
the series of states that each part was in (the card C, the terminal T, and the system B)
forms a legal transaction. Transactions, legal or not, can also be classified.
The database 14 stores valid communications that make up a transaction, and a list of
possible states that parties to a transaction can be in, as well as rules for conformance
checking to test validity. The data includes, but is not limited to, account type,
location (country), time, currency, amount, identity (card authorised, owner identity
verification), transaction type, merchant (retailer — acquirer equipment holder -
details), institution (financial), and acquirer equipment type.
The more detailed the context, the more detailed are the rules.
Referring again to Fig. 5, for Mode (i) the controller 2 is linked between the terminal
T and the system B. This allows a full set ofthe six data monitoring points.
In Mode (ii) the controller 2 simulates an external transaction processing system,
generating responses so that the terminal T “thinks” it is communicating with a
transaction processing system such as that of a financial institution. Of course, there
are therefore no data monitoring points 104 and 105 and no external system B to test.
The simulation programs of the controller 2 generate responses which are identical to
those which would be generated by an external transaction processing system in order
that testing can be performed locally to the person using the system 1 and that test
|E,n50056
logging information will be available immediately and in much greater detail than is
typical when a transaction is communicated to the external system B.
In Mode (iii) the controller 2 is not involved, the terminal T communicating directly
with the external system B as it would in use. With absence of the controller 2 there
are only two data monitoring points, 100 and 101.
Finally, in Mode (iv) the probe 3 is not used and the controller 2 simulates a terminal
communicating with the external system B, typically for purposes of testing the
performance or responses of the external system B, though there are other purposes.
The test controller permits a multiplicity of connections to be made to each of the data
points. This will permit, for example, in Mode (iv), a test controller 2 suitably
equipped with a bank of modems, to simulate an external system’s population of
terminals, to determine (for example) the performance characteristics of the external
system B. Likewise, by varying the type of the connection at each data point, the test
controller 2 permits the testing and conformance verification of different
configurations of external system B, for example, in extending the previous example,
by adding a group of TCP/IP connections and so simulating external traffic from other
external systems, in addition to its own terminal population.
Versatility of the test system 1 will be apparent from reference to Fig. 5.
Test Scenarios
The following are a number of scenarios in which the test system 1 could be used.
Terminal T testing, such as pre-certification testing for chip & pin cards.
Testing of specific supplied test—eards, such as are required for pre-
eeitification testing with international payment networks.
|E()50056
Testing new functionality of the terminal T. The system 1 can be updated to
incorporate tests for this additional functionality and minimises the need for
the system B to go to the retailer site to test this functionality, or require the
retailer to send an identical set-up to them or to a third party for manual
testing.
Testing of downloads of data to the card.
Testing of tracking of specific cards.
Testing of currency changeovers and/or specific currency processing.
Where the test system I is used for pre—certification testing, the terminal T may be
connected to a test system B rather than a live system. (Mode (iii)). The connections —
the actual link and the protocols used - between the terminal T and the test system B
will be the same as with a live system.
The use of the test system 1 proceeds in the following manner:
. The user is prompted to perform a specific test transaction using a particular
test card C. This involves placing the card in the probe 3, placing the interface
in the slot S, and performing the normal operations on the terminal T for that
transaction type.
. The user may be required to enter certain information, similar to what an actual
card user at a point-of-sale terminal would enter.
. The results of the card to reader communications are logged and checked,
using criteria stored in the database 14.
. The results of the terminal T to system B are logged and checked according to
criteria stored in the database 14 (Mode (ii)).
. The above two sets of communications are checked for conformance and
classification, using rules in the database 14.
,,,_ IEo5on56
The response is immediate, and the test system 1 can specifically indicate at which of
the possible six data monitoring points 10()-105 a communication satisfied the criteria
defined within the database 14 for a test to be considered passed.
In one case, knowing the state of the card C and the terminal T and a communication
from the terminal T to the system B, the system 1 can determine if the communication
back from the system B to the terminal T is (a) valid as an independent and out of
context communication, and (b) is valid in the context of the state of the card and
tenninal communications that occurred before and after and any other conditions
stored in the database 14.
The example above demonstrates a means to check that the system B is operating
properly, that a communication is valid in the context of what went before, and the
states each component was in.
The three sets of results, as well as the communications logs are stored. The results
can be presented immediately after each test transaction on a given card.
The invention is not limited to the embodiments described but may be varied in
construction and detail. Where the terminal under test does not receive a card, the
details of the transaction can be inputted through a keypad attached to the terminal.
This type of transaction can occur when dealing with mail-order transactions initiated
without a physical card being present at the point-of-sale. When the terminal exists
only as a logical device within a computer, the details of the transaction can be
inputted through the computer’s keyboard or some other input device. This type of
transaction can occur over the intemet or other like network. In either case, the test
controller 2 functions as before, but without the use of the probe 3.
Claims (1)
- CLAIMS l. A test system(l) for testing transaction processing equipment (T, B), the test system comprising: a probe (3) comprising: an interface (5) to a transaction terminal (T), a monitoring circuit (16, l7, l8) to passively monitor data transmitted from the terminal (T) and transmitted to the terminal (T); a test controller (2); a controller interface (30) for capturing monitored data; a database (14) for storing monitored data and transaction conformance data; and a transaction conformance verifier (15) for verifying operations of the transaction processing equipment under test by comparing monitored data and the conformance data. A test system as claimed in claim 1, wherein the monitoring circuit passively monitors data transmitted from the terminal (T) to a card (C) and data transmitted from the card (C) to the terminal (T); and wherein the probe (3) comprises a card reader (8) for reading the card (C) presented for a test and for routing card data to the terminal (T); and wherein the probe (3) routes the card data to the controller interface (30); and wherein the probe (3) routes the card data on a hard—wired link (10) to contact pads (1 1) on an interface (5) for insertion in the terminal (T); and wherein the interface (5) has at its extremity a configuration identical to that of a card (C), but is longer than a card to 35950956 accommodate different terminal physical configurations; and wherein the monitoring circuit monitors signals via an opto—isolator (16). A test system as claimed in claim 2, wherein the probe (3) comprises a switch (17, 19) for switching between card signal frequencies to choose an appropriate frequency; and wherein the probe (3) comprises a control unit (19) for generating probe status outputs; and wherein the outputs indicate if the probe is transmitting monitored data to the controller interface (30); and wherein the outputs indicate if a card is correctly inserted into the probe (3); and wherein the outputs indicate if the probe is correctly connected to the terminal. A test system as claimed in any preceding claim, wherein the probe converts the monitored data to a test controller format, and routes it in that format to the test controller; and wherein the test controller comprises an interface (30) to the terminal (T) and an interface (30) to an external transaction processing system (B); and wherein the test controller (2) performs bi-directional routing between the terminal (T) and the external system (B); and wherein the test controller (2) comprises parsers (12) for parsing monitored data and converting it into normalized format for the database (14); and wherein the test controller (2) comprises a switch engine (13) for reading normalized data from the database (14) and routing normalized data according to rules in the database (14). A test system substantially as described with reference to the drawings.
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
IEIRELAND06/02/20042004/0073 |
Publications (2)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
IE20050056U1 true IE20050056U1 (en) | 2005-09-21 |
IES84022Y1 IES84022Y1 (en) | 2005-10-05 |
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