90.93 Standard confirmed Sep 15, 2015
CEN
CEN/WS JXF XFS for the Java Platform
CEN/CENELEC Workshop Agreement
35.240.40 IT applications in banking
This document describes the Pin Keypad Device (PIN) classes based on the basic
architecture of J/XFS which is similar to the JavaPOS architecture. It is event driven
and asynchronous.
Three basic levels are defined in JavaPOS. For J/XFS this model is extended by a
communication layer, which provides device communication that allows distribution of
applications and devices within a network. So we have the following layers in J/XFS :
• Application
• Device Control and Device Manager
• Device Communication
• Device Service
Application developers program against control objects and the Device Manager
which reside in the Device Control layer. This is the usual interface between
applications and J/XFS devices. Device Control objects access the Device Manager
to find an associated Device Service. Device Service objects provide the functionality
to access the real device (i.e. like a device driver).
During application startup the Device Manager is responsible for locating the desired
Device Service object and attaching this to the requesting Device Control object.
Location and/or routing information for the Device Manager reside in a central
repository.
To support Pin Keypad devices the basic Device Control structure is extended with
various properties and methods specific to this device which are described on the
following pages
WITHDRAWN
CWA 13937-2:2003
PUBLISHED
CWA 14923-2:2004
90.93
Standard confirmed
Sep 15, 2015