ZyXEL Communications 802.11 a/g User Manual page 371

802.11 a/g dual radio wireless business ap
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Table 102 Subnet Masks
Network Number
Host ID
By convention, subnet masks always consist of a continuous sequence of ones
beginning from the leftmost bit of the mask, followed by a continuous sequence of
zeros, for a total number of 32 bits.
Subnet masks can be referred to by the size of the network number part (the bits
with a "1" value). For example, an "8-bit mask" means that the first 8 bits of the
mask are ones and the remaining 24 bits are zeroes.
Subnet masks are expressed in dotted decimal notation just like IP addresses. The
following examples show the binary and decimal notation for 8-bit, 16-bit, 24-bit
and 29-bit subnet masks.
Table 103 Subnet Masks
8-bit mask
16-bit
mask
24-bit
mask
29-bit
mask
Network Size
The size of the network number determines the maximum number of possible
hosts you can have on your network. The larger the number of network number
bits, the smaller the number of remaining host ID bits.
An IP address with host IDs of all zeros is the IP address of the network
(192.168.1.0 with a 24-bit subnet mask, for example). An IP address with host
IDs of all ones is the broadcast address for that network (192.168.1.255 with a
24-bit subnet mask, for example).
NWA-3500/NWA-3550 User's Guide
1ST
OCTET:
(192)
11000000 10101000 00000001
BINARY
1ST
2ND
OCTET
OCTET
11111111
00000000
11111111
11111111
11111111
11111111
11111111
11111111
Appendix E IP Addresses and Subnetting
2ND
3RD
OCTET:
OCTET:
(168)
(1)
3RD
4TH
OCTET
OCTET
00000000
00000000
00000000
00000000
11111111
00000000
11111111
11111000
4TH
OCTET
(2)
00000010
DECIMAL
255.0.0.0
255.255.0.0
255.255.255.0
255.255.255.24
8
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