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IP Addresses: Classful Addressing - JMU

The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000 Adapted for use at JMU by Mohamed Aboutabl, 200311 Chapter 4IP Addresses: ClassfulAddressing The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000 Adapted for use at JMU by Mohamed Aboutabl, 200322 CONTENTSCONTENTS INTRODUCTION Classful Addressing OTHER ISSUES A SAMPLE INTERNET The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2000 Adapted for use at JMU by Mohamed Aboutabl, Introduction An IP address is a 32-bit address that identifies a connection to the Internet. The IP addresses are universally unique. The address space of IPv4 is 232or 4,294,967,296. IP address is written as a Binary (hexadecimal) or a Dotted-Decimal (w/out leading zeros) notation. See examples in the textbook. The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

IP address →Network Address 1. Find the class, then the Netid, then set Hostid = 0 Example: IP=134.45.78.2 is a class B (128-191) with Netid=134.45, so its network address is 134.45.0.0 2. Use a Mask which is a 32-bit binary number that gives the first address in the block (the network address) when bitwise ANDed with an address in the block.

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