(ASN.1, X.208, X.680) An
ISO/
ITU-T standard for transmitting structured
data on
networks, originally defined in 1984 as part of CCITT X.409 '84. ASN.1 moved to its own standard, X.208, in 1988
due to wide applicability. The substantially revised 1995
version is covered by the X.680 series.
ASN.1 defines the
abstract syntax of
information but does
not restrict the way the information is encoded. Various
ASN.1 encoding rules provide the
transfer syntax (a
concrete representation) of the data values whose
abstract syntax is described in ASN.1. The standard ASN.1 encoding
rules include
BER (Basic Encoding Rules - X.209),
CER
(Canonical Encoding Rules),
DER (Distinguished Encoding
Rules) and
PER (Packed Encoding Rules).
ASN.1 together with specific ASN.1 encoding rules facilitates
the exchange of structured data especially between
application programs over networks by describing data
structures in a way that is independent of machine
architecture and implementation language.
OSI Application layer protocols such as
X.400 MHS
electronic mail,
X.500 directory services and
SNMP use
ASN.1 to describe the
PDUs they exchange.
Documents describing the ASN.1 notations:
ITU-T Rec. X.680,
ISO 8824-1;
ITU-T Rec. X.681,
ISO 8824-2;
ITU-T
Rec. X.682,
ISO 8824-3;
ITU-T Rec. X.683,
ISO 8824-4
Documents describing the ASN.1 encoding rules:
ITU-T
Rec. X.690,
ISO 8825-1;
ITU-T Rec. X.691,
ISO 8825-2.
[M. Sample et al, "Implementing Efficient Encoders and
Decoders for Network Data Representations", IEEE Infocom 93
Proc, v.3, pp. 1143-1153, Mar 1993. Available from Logica,
UK].
See also
snacc.