Network Classes; Table 13.1 Ip Address Structure - Asus SL1200 User Manual

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Chapter 13 - IP Addresses, Network Masks, and Subnets
Table 13.1. IP Address structure
Class
Class A
Class B
Class C
Here are some examples of valid IP addresses:
Class A: 10.30.6.125 (network = 10, host = 30.6.125)
Class B: 129.88.16.49 (network = 129.88, host = 16.49)
Class C: 192.60.201.11 (network = 192.60.201, host = 11)

13.2 Network classes

The three commonly used network classes are A, B, and C. (There is also
a class D but it has a special use beyond the scope of this discussion.)
These classes have different uses and characteristics.
Class A networks are the Internet's largest networks, each with room for
over 16 million hosts. Up to 126 of these huge networks can exist, for a
total of over 2 billion hosts. Because of their huge size, these networks
are used for WANs and by organizations at the infrastructure level of the
Internet, such as your ISP. Class B networks are smaller but still quite
large, each able to hold over 65,000 hosts. There can be up to 16,384
class B networks in existence. A class B network might be appropriate for
a large organization such as a business or government agency.
Class C networks are the smallest, only able to hold 254 hosts at most, but
the total possible number of class C networks exceeds 2 million (2,097,152
to be exact). LANs connected to the Internet are usually class C networks.
Some important notes regarding IP addresses:
The class can be determined easily from field1:
field1 = 1-126: Class A
field1 = 128-191: Class B
field1 = 192-223: Class C
(field1 values not shown are reserved for special uses)
A host ID can have any value except all fields set to 0 or all fields set
to 255, as those values are reserved for special uses.
146
Field1
Field2
Network ID
Network ID
Network ID
ASUS SL1200
Field3
Field4
Host ID
Host ID
Host ID

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