Files
G4G0-2/Networking and Security/Week 2/Lecture 3 - IP4 and Subnetting.md
2025-03-16 18:59:42 +00:00

30 lines
981 B
Markdown
Executable File

# IPv4 Address
- 32-bit
- 2^32 4,294,967,296 possible addresses under IPv4 - now ran out.
- Can be referred to in binary, hex, octal, dotted decimal and decimal.
- 10.10.10.10 (Dotted Decimal)
- 00001010.00001010.00001010.00001010 (Decimal)
- Structured to aid routing
- Network Number (globally unique, find correct network)
- Host Number (locally unique, find correct node)
- ^ outdated
- No. bits allocated to each part varies depending on how many host numbers needed (see: subnetting, netmask)
- Nodes with the same network number are on same network, and vice versa.
- Network number tells transmitter which case is true.
## Classful IP Addresses
![](Pasted%20image%2020240923122346.png)
- A and B have large address ranges.
- Either need multiple network numbers, or use subnets to pretend you have multiple network numbers
- One LAN per building, big network likely to be split into smaller networks. (Subnets)
255.0.0.0
/8
16.0.0.0
255.255.0.0
/16
255.255.255.0