NETGEAR DG632 Reference Manual page 96

Adsl modem router
Hide thumbs Also See for DG632:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Reference Manual for the Model DG632 ADSL Modem Router
Although the preceding example uses the entire third octet for a subnet address, note that you are
not restricted to octet boundaries in subnetting. To create more network numbers, you need only
shift some bits from the host address to the network address. For instance, to partition a Class C
network number (192.68.135.0) into two, you shift one bit from the host address to the network
address. The new netmask (or subnet mask) is 255.255.255.128. The first subnet has network
number 192.68.135.0 with hosts 192.68.135.1 to 129.68.135.126, and the second subnet has
network number 192.68.135.128 with hosts 192.68.135.129 to 192.68.135.254.
Note: The number 192.68.135.127 is not assigned because it is the broadcast address
of the first subnet. The number 192.68.135.128 is not assigned because it is the network
address of the second subnet.
The following table lists the additional subnet mask bits in dotted-decimal notation. To use the
table, write down the original class netmask and replace the 0 value octets with the dotted-decimal
value of the additional subnet bits. For example, to partition your Class C network with subnet
mask 255.255.255.0 into 16 subnets (4 bits), the new subnet mask becomes 255.255.255.240.
Table 7-1.
Netmask Notation Translation Table for One Octet
Number of Bits
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
The following table displays several common netmask values in both the dotted-decimal and the
masklength formats.
Table 7-2.
Netmask Formats
Dotted-Decimal
255.0.0.0
255.255.0.0
B-6
Dotted-Decimal Value
128
192
224
240
248
252
254
255
Masklength
/8
/16
Network and Routing Basics

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Dg632na

Table of Contents