Hughes DIRECWAY DW4020 User Manual

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Appendix B • The Internet and the DW4020
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Private IP addresses
As Internet use has increased, more and more IP addresses have 
been assigned. There is not an infinite number of IP addresses, 
and IANA is concerned that the supply of unique IP addresses 
could be exhausted. One way to conserve IP addresses is to assign 
them only to hosts that are designated as "public." Hosts that are 
designated as "private" do not need unique IP addresses.
Types of hosts
IANA has created three categories of hosts:
Category 1: hosts that do not require access to hosts in other 
enterprises or the Internet at large; hosts within this category 
may use IP addresses that are unambiguous within an 
enterprise, but may be ambiguous between enterprises.
Category 2: hosts that need access to a limited set of outside 
services (e.g., E-mail, FTP, netnews, remote login) which can 
be handled by mediating gateways (e.g., application layer 
gateways). For many hosts in this category an unrestricted 
external access (provided via IP connectivity) may be 
unnecessary and even undesirable for privacy/security 
reasons. Just like hosts within the first category, such hosts 
may use IP addresses that are unambiguous within an 
enterprise, but may be ambiguous between enterprises.
Category 3: hosts that need network layer access outside the 
enterprise (provided via IP connectivity); hosts in the last 
category require IP addresses that are globally unambiguous.
Hosts in categories 1 and 2 are private hosts. Hosts in Category 3 
are public hosts. Hosts in categories 1 and 2 do not need to be 
directly accessible from other networks. These hosts might 
include airport arrival/departure displays, automatic teller 
machines, or equipment at clerical positions. Thus, these private 
hosts do not need unique IP address numbers. The IP addresses 
private hosts are assigned need only be unique within the 
network; they need not be directly accessible from other 
networks.
In addition, for security reasons, many enterprises use application 
layer gateways to connect their internal network to the Internet. 
The internal network usually does not have direct access to the 
Internet; thus, only one or more gateways are visible from the 
Internet. In this case, the internal network can use non-unique IP 
network numbers.
In short, there are many devices that can be connected on an 
internal Internet or intranet that need never be assigned unique IP 
addresses. In this way, IP addresses are conserved.
Private address space
IANA has reserved the following three blocks of the IP address 
space for private internets: