User's Manual
Table Of Contents
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- Features and Benefits
- Features
- Chapter 2 Quick Start
- System Description
- Package Contents
- Installation Steps
- Installation Diagram
- Polarizations on a Grid Antenna
- Chapter 3 Hardware
- Drawings of Components
- Restoring Factory Default Settings on the SPEEDLAN
- Upgrading the Firmware
- Chapter 4 Overview of Configurator
- Installation and Setup
- Toolbar and Menus
- Chapter 5 Configuring SPEEDLAN
- General Setup
- Interface & Advanced Interface Setup
- The Setup Buttons
- Chapter 6 Bridging Setup
- Bridge Setup
- Chapter 7 Setting Up the IP Addresses (IP Host Setup)
- Part I - Quick Overview of IP Addressing
- Part II - Setting Up the IP Address
- Part III - Setting Up NAT
- Chapter 8 IP-Router Setup
- IP Routing Setup
- Chapter 9 SNMP Setup
- SNMP Setup
- Chapter 10 System Access Setup
- System Access Setup
- Chapter 11 SNMP Monitoring
SPEEDLAN Installation and Operation User Guide
7-4 Setting Up the IP Addresses (IP Host Setup)
In fact, IP defines five classes:
•
Class A addresses use 8 bits (1 octet) for the network portion and 24 bits (3 octets) for the
node (or host) section of the address. This provides up to 128 networks with 16.7 million
nodes for each network.
• First byte is assigned as network address
• Remaining bytes used for node addresses
• Format: network, node, node, node
• In IP address 49.22.102.70, "49" is network address and "22.102.70" is the node
address—all machines on this network have the "49" network address assigned to them
• Maximum of 224 or 16,777,216 nodes
• Class B addresses use 16 bits (two octets) for the network portion and 16 bits for the node
(or host) section of the address. This provides up to 16, 384 networks with 64,534 nodes
for each network.
• First two bytes are assigned as network address
• Remaining bytes used for node addresses
• Format: network, network, node, node
• In IP address 130.57.30.56, "130.57" is the network address, and "30.56" is the node
address
• Maximum of 216 or a total of 65,534 nodes
• Class C addresses use 24 bits (3 octets) for the network portion and 8 bits (two octets) for
the node (or host) section of the address. This provides 16.7 million networks with 256
nodes for each network.
• First three bytes are assigned as network address
• Remaining byte used for node address
• Format: network, network, network, node
• In IP address 198.21.74.102, "198.21.74" is the network address, and "102" is the
node address
• Maximum of 28 or 254 node addresses