C. ip subnetting, Ip addressing, Ip classes – ZyXEL Communications 802.11g Wireless Access Point ZyXEL G-560 User Manual
Page 133: Appendix c ip subnetting, Table 31 classes of ip addresses, Ip subnetting
ZyWALL 5/35/70 Series User’s Guide
Appendix C IP Subnetting
133
A
P P E N D I X
C
IP Subnetting
IP Addressing
Routers “route” based on the network number. The router that delivers the data packet to the
correct destination host uses the host ID.
IP Classes
An IP address is made up of four octets (eight bits), written in dotted decimal notation, for
example, 192.168.1.1. IP addresses are categorized into different classes. The class of an
address depends on the value of its first octet.
• Class “A” addresses have a 0 in the left most bit. In a class “A” address the first octet is
the network number and the remaining three octets make up the host ID.
• Class “B” addresses have a 1 in the left most bit and a 0 in the next left most bit. In a class
“B” address the first two octets make up the network number and the two remaining
octets make up the host ID.
• Class “C” addresses begin (starting from the left) with 1 1 0. In a class “C” address the
first three octets make up the network number and the last octet is the host ID.
• Class “D” addresses begin with 1 1 1 0. Class “D” addresses are used for multicasting.
(There is also a class “E” address. It is reserved for future use.)
Table 31 Classes of IP Addresses
IP ADDRESS:
OCTET 1
OCTET 2
OCTET 3
OCTET 4
Class A
0
Network number
Host ID
Host ID
Host ID
Class B
10
Network number
Network number
Host ID
Host ID
Class C
110
Network number
Network number
Network number
Host ID
Note: Host IDs of all zeros or all ones are not allowed.
Therefore:
A class “C” network (8 host bits) can have 2
8
–2 or 254 hosts.
A class “B” address (16 host bits) can have 2
16
–2 or 65534 hosts.
A class “A” address (24 host bits) can have 2
24
–2 hosts (approximately 16 million hosts).