User manual
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Appendix 
This section discusses: Communities, Gateways, IP Addresses, and Sub net masking. 
Communities 
A community is a string of printable ASCII characters that identifies a user group with the same access privileges. 
For example, a common community name is “public.” 
For security purposes, the SNMP agent validates requests before responding. The agent can be configured so 
that only trap managers that are members of a community can send requests and receive responses from a 
particular community. This prevents unauthorized managers from viewing or changing the configuration of a 
device. 
Gateways 
Gateway, also referred to as a router, is any computer with two or more network adapters connecting to different 
physical networks. Gateways allow for transmission of IP packets among networks on an Internet. 
IP Addresses 
Every device on an Internet must be assigned a unique IP (Internet Protocol) address. An IP address is a 32-bit 
value comprised of a network ID and a host ID. The network ID identifies the logical network to which a 
particular device belongs. The host ID identifies the particular device within the logical network. IP addresses 
distinguish devices on an Internet from one another so that IP packets are properly transmitted. 
IP addresses appear in dotted decimal (rather than in binary) notation. Dotted decimal notation divides the 32-
bit value into four 8-bit groups, or octets, and separates each octet with a period. For example, 199.217.132.1 is 
an IP address in dotted decimal notation. 
To accommodate networks of different sizes, the IP address has three divisions—Classes A for large, B for 
medium and C for small. The difference among the network classes is the number of octets reserved for the 
network ID and the number of octets reserved for the host ID. 
Class  Value of First Octet  Network ID  Host ID  Number of Hosts 
A  1-126  First octet  Last three octets 16,387,064 
B  128-191  First two octets  Last two octets 64,516 
C 192-223 First three octets Last octet  254 
Any value between 0 and 255 is valid as a host ID octet except for those values the InterNIC reserves for other 
purposes. 
Value  Purpose 
0, 255  Subnet masking 
127  Loopback testing and interprocess communication on local devices 
224-254  IGMP multicast and other special protocols 










