ZyXEL p-660hwp Manual Do Utilizador

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Appendix E IP Subnetting
P-660HWP-Dx User’s Guide
36
IP Address Classes and Network ID
The value of the first octet of an IP address determines the class of an address. 
• Class A addresses have a 0 in the leftmost bit. 
• Class B addresses have a 1 in the leftmost bit and a in the next leftmost bit. 
• Class C addresses start with 1 1 0 in the first three leftmost bits. 
• Class D addresses begin with 1 1 1 0. Class D addresses are used for multicasting, which is 
used to send information to groups of computers.
• There is also a class E. It is reserved for future use.
The following table shows the allowed ranges for the first octet of each class. This range 
determines the number of subnets you can have in a network.
Subnet Masks
A subnet mask is used to determine which bits are part of the network number, and which bits 
are part of the host ID (using a logical AND operation). 
A subnet mask has 32 bits. If a bit in the subnet mask is a “1” then the corresponding bit in the 
IP address is part of the network number. If a bit in the subnet mask is “0” then the 
corresponding bit in the IP address is part of the host ID. 
Subnet masks are expressed in dotted decimal notation just like IP addresses. The “natural” 
masks for class A, B and C IP addresses are as follows.
Subnetting
With subnetting, the class arrangement of an IP address is ignored. For example, a class C 
address no longer has to have 24 bits of network number and 8 bits of host ID. With 
subnetting, some of the host ID bits are converted into network number bits. 
Table 155   Allowed IP Address Range By Class
CLASS
ALLOWED RANGE OF FIRST OCTET (BINARY)
ALLOWED RANGE OF FIRST 
OCTET (DECIMAL)
Class A
00000000 to 01111111
0 to 127
Class B
10000000 to 10111111
128 to 191
Class C
11000000 to 11011111
192 to 223
Class D
11100000 to 11101111
224 to 239
Class E
(reserved)
11110000 to 11111111
240 to 255 
Table 156   “Natural” Masks
CLASS
NATURAL MASK
A
255.0.0.0
B
255.255.0.0
C
255.255.255.0