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Black Box LR5100A-T User Manual

Page 26

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Applications

18

Masks

The portion of the IP address to use as the network address is specified by using a mask; a

mask is the contiguous number of bits to be used for the network address all set to 1. When

the mask is logically ANDed with an IP address, the result is the network address. The mask

is specified by entering the mask size as the number of bits in the mask. For the standard

Class A, B and C Internet addresses, the mask sizes would be 8, 16 and 24 respectively.

Networks are not restricted to the above standard sizes; the mask (and hence the network

address it specifies) may be any number of bits from 8 to 32. This gives much more

flexibility to match the size of the two fields of the IP address to the number of networks

and hosts to be serviced.

IP Subnets

An IP network may be divided into smaller networks by a process called sub-netting. A

subnet is specified using some of the high order bits of the host field of the IP address for

sub-network addressing. The portion of the IP address to be used as the subnet address is

defined by using a subnet mask.

If the company in the example above (Class C IP address 199.169.100.0) decides to split

their network into two LANs to reduce the load on their network, the original IP network

address may be sub-netted into two or more smaller IP networks consisting of a smaller

number of host addresses in each LAN. This allows each of the sites to be a smaller IP

network and to be routed together to allow inter-network communication.

The subnet mask size is the number of bits in the subnet mask. In the above figure the subnet

mask size would be 26 (24 bits for the class C network address and 2 subnet bits). The subnet size

is the number of subnet bits - in the above figure, the subnet size would be 2.

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