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Appendix c - ip concepts, Ip addresses, Ip network classes – D-Link DI-1162M User Manual

Page 130: Ip a, Ddresses

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DI-1162/DI-1162M Remote Access Router

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Appendix C - IP Concepts

This appendix describes some basic IP concepts, the TCP/IP addressing scheme and show how to assign IP Addresses.

When setting up the router, you must make sure all ports to be utilized on the router have valid IP addresses. Even if you will not use the WAN
ports, you should, at the very least, make sure the LAN port is assigned a valid IP address. This is required for telnet, in-band SNMP
management, and related functions such as “trap” handling and TFTP firmware download.

IP Addresses

The Internet Protocol (IP) was designed for routing data between network sites all over the world, and was later adapted to allow routing
between networks (often referred to as “subnets”) within any site. IP includes a system by which a unique number can be assigned to each of
the millions of networks and each of the computers on those networks. Such a number is called an IP address.

To make IP addresses easy to understand, the originators of IP adopted a system of representation called “dotted decimal” or “dotted quad”
notation. Below are examples of IP addresses written in this format:

201.202.203.204 189.21.241.56 125.87.0.1

Each of the four values in an IP address is the ordinary decimal (base 10) representation of a value that a computer can handle using eight
“bits” (binary digits — 1s and 0s). The dots are simply convenient visual separators.

Zeros are often used as placeholders in dotted decimal notation; 189.21.241.56 can therefore also appear as 189.021.241.056.

IP networks are divided into three classes on the basis of size. A full IP address contains a network portion and a “host” (device) portion. The
network and host portions of the address are different lengths for different classes of networks, as shown in the table below.

Networks attached to the Internet are assigned class types that determine the maximum number of possible hosts per network. The previous
figure illustrates how the net and host portions of the IP address differ among the three classes. Class A is assigned to networks that have more
than 65,535 hosts; Class B is for networks that have 256 to 65534 hosts; Class C is for networks with less than 256 hosts.

IP Network Classes

Class

Maximum

Number of

Networks in

Class

Network Addresses (Host

Portion in Parenthesis)

Maximum

Number of

Hosts per

Network

A

126

1(.0.0.0) to 126(.0.0.0)

16,777,214

B

16,382

128.1(.0.0) to 191.254(.0.0)

65,534

C

2,097,150

192.0.1(.0) to 223.255.254(.0)

254

Note:

All network addresses outside of these ranges (Class D and E) are either reserved or set aside for experimental networks or multicasting.

When an IP address's host portion contains only zero(s), the address identifies a network and not a host. No physical device may be given such
an address.