Homepage

What is the Playground?

The playground is a collaborative environment used to support testing and integration of partners within the Potential project. It allows partners to interact with systems and applications, conduct tests, and validate information exchange processes. With continuous integrations, it aims to enhance communication and track developments with a focus on continuous improvement.

The goal of the playground is to promote smooth interoperability between partners by providing necessary resources such as testing environments and reporting tools to standardize processes across partners.

Illustration Playground

Test interoperability

Provide a functional platform to test the interoperability of wallets and use cases

Pictogrammes DSFR — System — Success

Integrate test interfaces from stakeholders

We expect the playground to outlast POTENTIAL as a global interop testbed for all stakeholders

Pictogrammes DSFR — Digital — In Progress

Provide reglementation feedback

Provide field feedback for the ARF and EUDIW reference implementation

Pictogrammes DSFR — Leisure — Community

What is an interface ?

An interface is a technical component that simulates a specific environment or service to allow partners to test and validate the interoperability of their systems before full integration. It is a simplified version of a service or interface that mimics the behavior of a real service but does not necessarily handle all functionalities or processes.

Interfaces enable Playground participants to test different implementations or features by simulating interactions with other entities without requiring that all parties be fully set up. Interfaces are used to facilitate the testing process before moving to real tests, particularly in the context of validating systems through peer-to-peer testing, thus ensuring the interoperability and compliance of different systems within the digital identity ecosystem.

Few examples of interfaces on the Playground:

IN Groupe (Wallet Issuers - SD-JWT)

This Relying Party simulator is developed and designed to validate the interactions between relying parties and EUDI wallet implementations on the SD-JWT data format.

Idakto (Wallet Issuers - mDoc)

This Relying Party simulator is developed and designed to validate the interactions between relying parties and EUDI wallet implementations on the mDoc data format.

Idakto (Relying Party - mDoc)

This demonstration application is used to test the implementation of the 2 protocols needed to create a wallet, the openID for Verifiable Credential Issuance (VCI) and the openID for Verifiable Presentation (VP) on the mDoc data format.

Valera (Relying Party - SD-JWT)

This demonstration application is used to test the implementation of the 2 protocols needed to create a wallet, the openID for Verifiable Credential Issuance (VCI) and the openID for Verifiable Presentation (VP) on the SD-JWT data format.

Yes, you can integrate your own test interface into the Playground. The documentation for this process will be available soon.

ffz

Yes, you can integrate your own interface into the Playground. The documentation for this process will be available soon.