beautypg.com

Appendix c: i p addressing – Linksys PLEBR10 User Manual

Page 23

background image

EtherFast

®

10/100 Bridge and USB Adapter

Appendix D: Specifications for

the EtherFast 10/100 Bridge

Standards:

IEEE 802.3, IEEE 802.3U, HomePlug 1.0

Ports:

Powerline

One Powerline Port

LAN

One 10BaseT/100BaseTX RJ-45 Port

Cabling Type:

Powerline

Power Cord

LAN

UTP Category 5 or Better

Topology:

Star (Ethernet), Bus (Powerline)

Speed:

Powerline

Up to 14Mbps (Powerline)

LAN

10/100Mbps

Encryption:

56-bit Data Encryption with
Key Management

LEDs:

Power

Powerline

Link, Activity, Collision

Ethernet

Link, 100, Activity

39

Instant PowerLine

TM

Series

Appendix C: I P Addressing

IP stands for Internet Protocol. Every device on an IP-based network, includ-
ing PCs, print servers, and routers, requires an IP address to identify its “loca-
tion,” or address, on the network. Since the Internet is simply one huge global
network, every PC that logs on to the Internet also needs an IP address.

There are two ways of assigning an IP address to your network devices.

A static IP address is a permanent IP address that you assign manually to a PC
or other device on a TCP/IP network. Since a static IP address remains valid
until you disable it, static IP addressing insures that the device assigned it will
always have that same IP address. Static IP addresses are commonly used with
network devices such as server PCs or print servers.

A dynamic IP address is automatically assigned to a device on a TCP/IP net-
work, such as PCs and print servers. These IP addresses are called “dynamic”
because they are only temporarily assigned to the PC or device. After a certain
time period, they expire and may change. Dynamic IP addresses are typically
assigned by a DHCP server, which can be a computer on the network or anoth-
er piece of hardware, such as a router.

If a PC logs on to the network (or the Internet) and its dynamic IP address has
expired, the DHCP server will assign it a new dynamic IP address.

DHCP is software that automatically assigns IP addresses to client stations log-
ging onto a TCP/IP network. DHCP frees you from having to manually assign
permanent IP addresses to every device on your network. DHCP software typ-
ically runs on servers and is also found on network devices such as routers.

38

Static IP Addresses

What’s an IP Address?

Dynamic IP Addresses

DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol)

This manual is related to the following products: