User's Manual Part 3
Table Of Contents
- Chapter 9 Maintenance
- Chapter 10 Advanced Configuration
- Chapter 11 Troubleshooting
- Appendix A Technical Specifications
- Appendix B Networks, Routing, and Firewall Basics
- Appendix C Preparing Your Network
- Appendix D Firewall Log Formats
- Appendix E Wireless Networking Basics
- Appendix F Virtual Private Networking
- Appendix G NETGEAR VPN Configuration FVS318 or FVM318 to FWG114P
- Appendix H NETGEAR VPN Configuration FVS318 or FVM318 with FQDN to FVS328
- Glossary
- Index
Reference Manual for the ProSafe Wireless 802.11g Firewall/Print Server Model FWG114P
Networks, Routing, and Firewall Basics B-3
March 2004, 202-10027-01
Figure 11-1: Three Main Address Classes
The five address classes are:
• Class A
Class A addresses can have up to 16,777,214 hosts on a single network. They use an eight-bit
network number and a 24-bit node number. Class A addresses are in this range:
1.x.x.x to 126.x.x.x.
• Class B
Class B addresses can have up to 65,354 hosts on a network. A Class B address uses a 16-bit
network number and a 16-bit node number. Class B addresses are in this range:
128.1.x.x to 191.254.x.x.
• Class C
Class C addresses can have 254 hosts on a network. Class C addresses use 24 bits for the
network address and eight bits for the node. They are in this range:
192.0.1.x to 223.255.254.x.
• Class D
Class D addresses are used for multicasts (messages sent to many hosts). Class D addresses are
in this range:
224.0.0.0 to 239.255.255.255.
• Class E
Class E addresses are for experimental use.
C
lass A
N
etwork Node
C
lass B
C
lass C
Network Node
Network Node