• Shopping Cart
    There are no items in your cart
We noticed you’re not on the correct regional site. Switch to our AMERICAS site for the best experience.
Dismiss alert

CAN/CSA-ISO 9160-94 (R2013)

Current

Current

The latest, up-to-date edition.

Information Processing - Data Encipherment - Physical Layer Interoperability Requirements (Adopted ISO 9160:1988)

Available format(s)

Hardcopy , PDF

Language(s)

English

Published date

01-01-1994

£64.50
Excluding VAT

Scope This International Standard applies to systems for encipherment of ADP information in the physical layer of data communications. This International Standard is equally applicable whether the Data Encipherment Equipment (DEE) is implemented as a physically separate piece of equipment or implemented as part of the Data Terminal Equipment (DTE) or as part of the Data Circuit terminating Equipment (DCE). When the encipherment is integrated into the DTE or DCE, this International Standard applies to those portions of the DTE or DCE design which implement the requirements of this International Standard. Interoperability requirements are defined for the following physical interface definitions: V.24, X.20 bis, X.21 bis, X.20, and X.21. The physical layer is described in the Open Systems Interconnectio n Reference Model, ISO 7498. In physical layer encipherment, all of the SDU is normally enciphered. The interoperability requirements described in this International Standard apply to both synchronous and asynchronous operation in both full duplex and half duplex modes. The main body of this International Standard specifies requirements which are applicable to the use of various encipherment algorithms. Annex B Specifies additional requirements for the use of DEA (ANSI X3.92-1981). This International Standard also specifies two alternative modes of synchronous operation - the delayed option and the immediate option - which are mutually incompatible. This International Standard also specifies two alternative actions for BREAK signalling for asynchronous operation - Class A and Class B - which are mutually incompatible.

DocumentType
Standard
Pages
14
ProductNote
THIS STANDARD IS ALSO REFERES TO ISO 8372, ANSI X3.92
PublisherName
Canadian Standards Association
Status
Current
Supersedes

Scope This International Standard applies to systems for encipherment of ADP information in the physical layer of data communications. This International Standard is equally applicable whether the Data Encipherment Equipment (DEE) is implemented as a physically separate piece of equipment or implemented as part of the Data Terminal Equipment (DTE) or as part of the Data Circuit terminating Equipment (DCE). When the encipherment is integrated into the DTE or DCE, this International Standard applies to those portions of the DTE or DCE design which implement the requirements of this International Standard. Interoperability requirements are defined for the following physical interface definitions: V.24, X.20 bis, X.21 bis, X.20, and X.21. The physical layer is described in the Open Systems Interconnectio n Reference Model, ISO 7498. In physical layer encipherment, all of the SDU is normally enciphered. The interoperability requirements described in this International Standard apply to both synchronous and asynchronous operation in both full duplex and half duplex modes. The main body of this International Standard specifies requirements which are applicable to the use of various encipherment algorithms. Annex B Specifies additional requirements for the use of DEA (ANSI X3.92-1981). This International Standard also specifies two alternative modes of synchronous operation - the delayed option and the immediate option - which are mutually incompatible. This International Standard also specifies two alternative actions for BREAK signalling for asynchronous operation - Class A and Class B - which are mutually incompatible.

Standards Relationship
ISO 9160:1988 Identical

Access your standards online with a subscription

Features

  • Simple online access to standards, technical information and regulations.

  • Critical updates of standards and customisable alerts and notifications.

  • Multi-user online standards collection: secure, flexible and cost effective.