Standard

ISO 12855:2015

Withdrawn

Note: Now under development: ISO/DIS 12855

Existing or new amendments and versions must be purchased separately.

Language
Services

Abstract

ISO 12855:2015 specifies - the interfaces between electronic fee collection (EFC) systems for vehicle related transport services, e.g. road user charging, parking and access control; it does not cover interfaces for EFC systems for public transport; an EFC system can include any EFC system, e.g. including systems that automatically read licence plate numbers of vehicles passing a toll point, - an exchange of information between the central equipment of the two roles of service provision and toll charging, e.g. - charging related data (toll declarations, billing details), - administrative data, and - confirmation data, - transfer mechanisms and supporting functions, - information objects, data syntax and semantics, - examples of data interchanges (see Annex C and Annex D), and - an example on how to use this International Standard for the European Electronic Tolling Service (EETS) (see Annex F). ISO 12855:2015 is applicable for any toll service and any technology used for charging. It is defined as a toolbox standard of transactions and Application Protocol Data Units (APDUs), which can be used for the assigned purpose. The detailed definitions of mandatory and optional elements in a real implementation are defined elsewhere. It does not define all communication sequences, communication stacks and timings. The scope of ISO 12855:2015 is illustrated in Figure 2. The data types and associated coding related to the data elements described in Clause 6 are defined in Annex A, using the abstract syntax notation one (ASN.1) according to ISO/IEC 8824‑1.

Products specifications

  • Standard from ISO
  • Published:
  • Withdrawn:
  • Period for objection until:
  • Edition: 2
  • Document type: IS
  • Pages
  • Publisher: ISO
  • Distributor: ISO
  • ICS: 03.220.20
  • ICS: 35.240.60
  • International TC: ISO/TC 204

Product Relations

Product life cycle