Netopia R2020 User Manual

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11-2  User’s Reference Guide
IPX address 
An IPX address consists of a network number, a node number, and a socket number. An IPX network number is 
composed of eight hexadecimal digits. The network number must be the same for all nodes on a par ticular 
physical network segment. The node number is composed of twelve hexadecimal digits and is usually the 
hardware address of the inter face card. The node number must be unique inside the par ticular IPX network. 
Socket numbers correspond to the par ticular ser vice being accessed.
Socket 
A socket in IPX is the equivalent of a por t in TCP/IP. Sockets route packets to different processes within a 
single node. Novell has reser ved several sockets for use in the NetWare environment:
Routing Information Protocol (RIP)
RIP, which was also derived from XNS, is a protocol that allows for the bidirectional transfer of routing tables 
and provides timing information (ticks), so that the fastest route to a destination can be determined. IPX 
routers use RIP to create and dynamically maintain databases of internetwork routing information. See the last 
section in this chapter for more information on routing tables.
Service Advertising Protocol (SAP)
SAP is a protocol that provides ser vers and routers with a method to exchange ser vice information. Using SAP, 
ser vers adver tise their ser vices and addresses. Routers collect this information to dynamically update their 
routing tables and share it with other routers. These broadcasts keep all routers on the internetwork 
synchronized and provide real-time information on accessible ser vers on the internetwork.
Field Value
Packet Type
Description
00h
Unknown Packet Type
Used for all packets not clas-
sified by any other type
01h
Routing Information Packet
Unused for RIP packets
04h
Ser vice Adver tising Packet
Used for SAP packets
05h
Sequenced Packet
Used for SPX packets
11h
NetWare Core Protocol Packet
Used for NCP packets
14h
Propagated Packet
Used for Novell NetBIOS