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- What range of IP addresses is represented by the CIDR block 172. 16. 0. 0 12?
Thus this block represents the IP addresses from 172 16 0 0 to 172 31 255 255 The netid is 1010 1010 0001 and the CIDR block contains 2^20 addresses * I fully understand that the CIDR block has 2^20 host ID addresses and that it is in a Class B network
- How to divide an IPv4 network into subnets of different sizes as . . .
I need to divide a network 172 16 0 0 12 into 3 different subnets for different purposes One of them needs 6 host addresses, another 85 host addresses and the last 100 host addresses
- nat - Why isnt 10. 0. 0. 0 8 used instead of 192. 168. 0. 0 16 for private . . .
In our company we use 172 16 0 0 12 for historical reasons, with 24 subnets When setting up something new I very often have to adjust the default 16 mask to 24
- How to tell if an ipv4 address is public or private? - network
172 16 0 0 12 IP addresses: 172 16 0 0 – 172 31 255 255 192 168 0 0 16 IP addresses: 192 168 0 0 – 192 168 255 255 My doubt is Should private addresses be only from the above mentioned ip range or can they have any ip address range? Can public ip address be from the above mentioned ip addresses ? If so then will that be valid in the internet?
- ipv4 - Network Engineering Stack Exchange
2 Don't do that! 172 32 0 0 11 is assigned to T-Mobile It's announced to the DFZ (since 2012) and most likely in use for real Internet traffic If you squat on that address space, some portion of the Internet will become inaccessible to your network!
- ipv4 - Finding the network and host address, and maximum number of host . . .
A subnet of an IP network has a range of IP host address from 172 19 40 1 to 172 19 47 254 What is the maximum number of host addresses that can exist on this subnetwork?
- How do you calculate the prefix, network, subnet, and host numbers?
10 0 0 0 8 172 16 0 0 12 192 168 0 0 16 You are free to use any or all the Private IP addressing in your own private network, but you cannot use any addresses in any of the three Private address ranges on the public Internet, and you must use a workaround, e g some variant of NAT, to use the public Internet from a privately addressed network
- Overlaps with VLANS - Network Engineering Stack Exchange
172 16 0 128 29 and 172 16 0 144 27 are in differents subnets, I tested that address in a Router, setting in a FastEthernet Interface, and works! interface FastEthernet0 1
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