package Business::CreditCard;
require Exporter;
-use vars qw( @ISA $VERSION $Country );
+use vars qw( @ISA $VERSION @EXPORT @EXPORT_OK %EXPORT_TAGS $Country );
@ISA = qw( Exporter );
-$VERSION = "0.32";
+$VERSION = "0.39_01";
+
+@EXPORT = qw( cardtype validate generate_last_digit );
+@EXPORT_OK = qw( receipt_cardtype validate_card );
+$EXPORT_TAGS{NEW} = [ qw( validate_card cardtype receipt_cardtype ) ];
$Country = 'US';
=head1 SYNOPSIS
+ ##
+ # new-style, supported since 0.36 released Jun 14 2016
+ ##
+
+ use Business::CreditCard qw( 0.36 :NEW );
+
+ print validate_card("5276 4400 6542 1319");
+ print cardtype("5276 4400 6542 1319");
+
+
+ ##
+ # old interface, deprecated but still supported for backwards compatibility
+ ##
+
use Business::CreditCard;
print validate("5276 4400 6542 1319");
print cardtype("5276 4400 6542 1319");
- print generate_last_digit("5276 4400 6542 131");
+
Business::CreditCard is available at a CPAN site near you.
self-consistent -- whether the last digit of the number is a valid
checksum for the preceding digits.
-The validate() subroutine returns 1 if the card number provided passes
+The validate_card() subroutine returns 1 if the card number provided passes
the checksum test, and 0 otherwise.
The cardtype() subroutine returns a string containing the type of
Versions before 0.31 may also have returned "Diner's Club/Carte Blanche" (these
cards are now recognized as "Discover card").
-As of 0.30, cardtype() will accept a partial card masked with "x", "X', ".",
+cardtype() will accept a partial card masked with "x", "X", ".",
"*" or "_". Only the first 2-6 digits and the length are significant;
-whitespace and dashes are removed. To recognize just Visa, MasterCard and
-Amex, you only need the first two digits; to recognize almost all cards
-except some Switch cards, you need the first four digits, and to recognize
-all cards including the remaining Switch cards, you need the first six
-digits.
+whitespace and dashes are removed. With two digits, Visa, MasterCard, Discover
+and Amex are recognized (versions before 0.36 needed four digits to recognize
+all Discover cards). With four digits, almost all cards except some
+Switch cards are recognized. With six digits (the full "BIN" or "IIN"), all
+cards are recognized. Six digits are also required for receipt_cardtype().
The generate_last_digit() subroutine computes and returns the last
digit of the card given the preceding digits. With a 16-digit card,
charges, you need a Merchant account. See L<Business::OnlinePayment>.
These subroutines will also work if you provide the arguments
-as numbers instead of strings, e.g. C<validate(5276440065421319)>.
+as numbers instead of strings, e.g. C<validate_card(5276440065421319)>.
=head1 PROCESSING AGREEMENTS
other networks, in which one type of card is processed as another card type.
By default, Business::CreditCard returns the type the card should be treated as
-in the US and Canada. You can change this to return the type the card should
+in the US. You can change this to return the type the card should
be treated as in a different country by setting
C<$Business::CreditCard::Country> to your two-letter country code. This
is probably what you want to determine if you accept the card, or which
=item Most Diner's club is now identified as Discover. (This supercedes the earlier identification of some Diner's club cards as MasterCard inside the US and Canada.)
-=item JCB cards in the 3528-3589 range are identified as Discover inside the US and Canada.
+=item JCB cards in the 3528-3589 range are identified as Discover inside the US and territories.
-=item China Union Pay cards are identified as Discover cards outside China.
+=item China Union Pay cards are identified as Discover cards in the US, Mexico and most Caribbean countries.
=back
-=head1 NOTE ON INTENDED PURPOSE
+=head1 RECEIPT REQUIREMENTS
+
+Discover requires some cards processed on its network to display "PayPal"
+on receipts instead of "Discover". The receipt_cardtype() subroutine will
+return "PayPal card" for these cards only, and otherwise the same output as
+cardtype().
+
+Use this for receipt display/printing only.
+
+Note: this subroutine is not exported by default like the others.
+Before 0.36, you needed to call this subroutine fully-qualified, as
+Business::CreditCard::receipt_cardtype()
-This module is for verifying I<real world> B<credit cards>. It is B<NOT> a
-pedantic implementation of the ISO 7812 standard, a general-purpose LUHN
-implementation, or intended for use with "creditcard-like account numbers".
+In 0.36 and later, you can import it into your namespace:
-=head1 AUTHOR
+ use Business::CreditCard qw( :DEFAULT receipt_cardtype );
+
+
+=head1 ORIGINAL AUTHOR
Jon Orwant
The Perl Journal and MIT Media Lab
-orwant@tpj.com
+=head1 MAINTAINER
Current maintainer is Ivan Kohler <ivan-business-creditcard@420.am>.
-Please don't bother Jon with emails about this module.
Lee Lawrence <LeeL@aspin.co.uk>, Neale Banks <neale@lowendale.com.au> and
Max Becker <Max.Becker@firstgate.com> contributed support for additional card
types. Lee also contributed a working test.pl. Alexandr Ciornii
<alexchorny@gmail.com> contributed code cleanups. Jason Terry
-<jterry@bluhost.com> contributed updates for Discover BIN ranges.
+<jterry@bluehost.com> contributed updates for Discover BIN ranges.
=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 1995,1996,1997 Jon Orwant
Copyright (C) 2001-2006 Ivan Kohler
-Copyright (C) 2007-2013 Freeside Internet Services, Inc.
+Copyright (C) 2007-2021 Freeside Internet Services, Inc.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.8 or,
at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
+=head1 HOMEPAGE
+
+Homepage: http://perl.business/creditcard
+
+=head1 REPOSITORY
+
+The code is available from our public git repository:
+
+ git clone git://git.freeside.biz/Business-CreditCard.git
+
+Or on the web:
+
+ http://freeside.biz/gitweb/?p=Business-CreditCard.git
+ Or:
+ http://freeside.biz/gitlist/Business-CreditCard.git
+
=head1 BUGS
(paraphrasing Neil Bowers) We export all functions by default. It would be
existing code? "use Business::CreditCard <some_minimum_version>" turns it off?
Explicitly ask to turn it off and list that in the SYNOPSIS?
+=head2 validate() and @EXPORT transition plan
+
+First (done in 0.36):
+
+validate_card() is the new name for validate(). Both work for now.
+
+New-style usage (not recommended for code that needs to support B:CC before 0.36):
+
+ use Business::CreditCard qw( :NEW );
+
+You get validate_card(), cardtype() and receipt_cardtype(). You can also ask
+for them explicitly / individually:
+
+ use Business::CreditCard qw( validate_card cardtype receipt_cardtype );
+
+
+Second:
+
+Waiting for 0.36+ to become more prevalent.
+
+
+Third (we're at now now):
+
+Recommend new-style usage. Maybe asking for a specific minimum version turns
+it on too?
+
+
+Fourth:
+ (this is the incompatible part):
+
+Don't export validate() (or anything else [separately?]) by default.
+
+This is the part that will break things and we probably won't do for a long
+time, until new-style usage is the norm and the tradeoff of breaking old code
+is worth it to stop our namespace pollution. Maybe do a 1.00 release with the
+current API and 2.00 is when this happens (with a 1.99_01 pre-release)?
+
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<Business::CreditCard::Object> is a wrapper around Business::CreditCard
=cut
-@EXPORT = qw(cardtype validate generate_last_digit);
-
## ref http://neilb.org/reviews/luhn.html#Comparison it looks like
## Business::CCCheck is 2x faster than we are. looking at their implementation
## not entirely a fair comparison, we also do the equivalent of their CC_clean,
## a lot more than just 6011*, they don't handle processing agreements, etc.
sub cardtype {
+ # Allow use as a class method
+ shift if UNIVERSAL::isa( $_[0], 'Business::CreditCard' );
+
my ($number) = @_;
$number =~ s/[\s\-]//go;
&& 0+$number;
}
- return "VISA card" if $number =~ /^4[0-8][\dx]{11}([\dx]{3})?$/o;
+ return "VISA card" if $number =~ /^4[0-8][\dx]{11,17}$/o;
return "MasterCard"
- if $number =~ /^5[1-5][\dx]{14}$/o
- ;# || ( $number =~ /^36[\dx]{12}/ && $Country =~ /^(US|CA)$/oi );
+ if $number =~ /^5[1-5][\dx]{14}$/o
+ || $number =~ /^2 ( 22[1-9] | 2[3-9][\dx] | [3-6][\dx]{2} | 7[0-1][\dx] | 720 ) [\dx]{12}$/xo
+ || $number =~ /^2[2-7]xx[\dx]{12}$/o;
return "American Express card" if $number =~ /^3[47][\dx]{13}$/o;
return "Discover card"
- if $number =~ /^30[0-5][\dx]{11}([\dx]{2})?$/o #diner's: 300-305
- || $number =~ /^3095[\dx]{10}([\dx]{2})?$/o #diner's: 3095
- || $number =~ /^3[689][\dx]{12}([\dx]{2})?$/o #diner's: 36 38 and 39
- || $number =~ /^6011[\dx]{12}$/o
- || $number =~ /^64[4-9][\dx]{13}$/o
- || $number =~ /^65[\dx]{14}$/o
- || ( $number =~ /^62[24-68][\dx]{13}$/o && uc($Country) ne 'CN' ) #CUP
- || ( $number =~ /^35(2[89]|[3-8][\dx])[\dx]{12}$/o && uc($Country) eq 'US' );
+ if $number =~ /^30[0-5x][\dx]{13,16}$/o #diner's: 300-305, 30x
+ || $number =~ /^309[5x][\dx]{12}$/o # 3095, 309x
+ || $number =~ /^36[\dx]{12,17}$/o # 36
+ || $number =~ /^3[89][\dx]{14,17}$/o # 38 and 39
+ || $number =~ /^60[1x]{2}[\dx]{12,15}$/o #discover: 6011 601x 60xx
+ || $number =~ /^64[4-9x][\dx]{13,16}$/o # 644-649, 64x
+ || $number =~ /^65[\dx]{14,17}$/o # 65
+ || ( $number =~ /^62[24-68x][\dx]{13,16}$/o && $Country =~ /^(US|MX|AI|AG|AW|BS|BB|BM|BQ|VG|KY|CW|DM|DO|GD|GP|JM|MQ|MS|BL|KN|LC|VC|MF|SX|TT|TC)$/oi ) #China Union Pay identified as Discover in US, Mexico and Caribbean
+ || ( $number =~ /^35(2[89x]|[3-8][\dx]|xx)[\dx]{12,15}$/o && $Country =~ /^(US|PR|VI|MP|PW|GU)$/oi ); #JCB cards in the 3528-3589 range are identified as Discover in US, Puerto Rico, US Virgin Islands, Northern Mariana Islands, Palau and Guam
return "Switch"
if $number =~ /^49(03(0[2-9]|3[5-9])|11(0[1-2]|7[4-9]|8[1-2])|36[0-9]{2})[\dx]{10}([\dx]{2,3})?$/o
|| $number =~ /^564182[\dx]{10}([\dx]{2,3})?$/o
|| $number =~ /^6(3(33[0-4][0-9])|759[0-9]{2})[\dx]{10}([\dx]{2,3})?$/o;
#redunant with above, catch 49* that's not Switch
- return "VISA card" if $number =~ /^4[\dx]{12}([\dx]{3})?$/o;
-
- #return "Diner's Club/Carte Blanche"
- # if $number =~ /^3(0[0-59]|[68][\dx])[\dx]{11}$/o;
+ return "VISA card" if $number =~ /^4[\dx]{12,18}$/o;
#"Diners Club enRoute"
return "enRoute" if $number =~ /^2(014|149)[\dx]{11}$/o;
return "Unknown";
}
+sub receipt_cardtype {
+ # Allow use as a class method
+ shift if UNIVERSAL::isa( $_[0], 'Business::CreditCard' );
+
+ my ($number) = @_;
+
+ $number =~ s/[\s\-]//go;
+ $number =~ s/[x\*\.\_]/x/gio;
+
+ #ref Discover IIN Bulletin Feb 2015_021715
+ return "PayPal card" if $number =~ /^6(01104|506[01]0)[\dx]{10,13}$/o;
+
+ cardtype($number);
+}
+
sub generate_last_digit {
+ # Allow use as a class method
+ shift if UNIVERSAL::isa( $_[0], 'Business::CreditCard' );
+
my ($number) = @_;
die "invalid operation" if length($number) == 8 || length($number) == 9;
## this (GPLed) code from Business::CCCheck is apparantly 4x faster than ours
## ref http://neilb.org/reviews/luhn.html#Comparison
-## maybe see if we can spped ours up a bit
+## maybe see if we can speed ours up a bit
# my @ccn = split('',$ccn);
# my $even = 0;
# $ccn = 0;
# }
# $type = '' if $ccn % 10;
# return $type;
-sub validate {
+
+sub validate { validate_card(@_); }
+
+sub validate_card {
+ # Allow use as a class method
+ shift if UNIVERSAL::isa( $_[0], 'Business::CreditCard' );
+
my ($number) = @_;
my ($i, $sum, $weight);