Subnetting And Subnet Masks - Belkin ePowerSwitch F1D001 User Manual

Belkin epowerswitch user manual
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IP addresses appear in dotted decimal (rather than in binary)
notation. Dotted decimal notation divides the 32-bit value into
four 8-bit groups, or octets, and separates each octet with a
period. For example, 199.217.132.1 is an IP address in dotted
decimal notation.
To accommodate networks of different sizes, the IP address
has three divisions—Classes A for large, B for medium, and C
for small. The difference among the network classes is the
number of octets reserved for the network ID and the number
of octets reserved for the host ID.
Class
Value of First
Network ID
Octet
A
1-126
first octet
B
128-191
first two octets
C
192-223
first three octets
Any value between 0 and 255 is valid as a host ID octet except
for those values the InterNIC reserves for other purposes.
Value
Purpose
0, 255
Subnet masking
Loopback testing and interprocess communi-
127
cation on local devices
224-254
IGMP multicast and other special protocols

Subnetting and Subnet Masks

Subnetting divides a network address into subnetwork
addresses to accommodate more than one physical network on
a logical network.
For example: A Class B company has 100 LANs (Local Area
Networks) with 100 to 200 nodes on each LAN. To classify
the nodes by its LANs on one main network, this company
Host ID
Number of Hosts
last three octets
16,387,064
last two octets
64,516
last octet
254
31

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