Name _______________________ Lyons Township High School Networking Essentials (Net+)
Transcription
Name _______________________ Lyons Township High School Networking Essentials (Net+)
Name _______________________ Lyons Township High School Networking Essentials (Net+) Borrowing bits to create subnets Borrowing bits to create subnets Why? bits are borrowed to allow for the creation of subnets. by doing so, broadcasts can be localized and not effect efficiency on other parts of a network also allows for easier administration of LANs by designating certain ranges of IPs for certain rooms. How? Remember that all IP addresses have four octets, each octet number containing eight bits. Class A addresses designate the first octet as that of the network (non-changeable). Class B addresses designate the first AND second octets as the network. Class C addresses designate the first, second, AND third. Class A Network Class B Network Class C Network Network / Host Determination N.H.H.H N.N.H.H N.N.H.H Value of first octet 0-127 128-191 192-223 Bits are borrowed from the host portion of the IP address. The number of bits borrowed depends on how many hosts or subnets you want to create. Network Type # octets from which you can borrow bits Class A 3 Number of bits you can borrow (# octets * 8) – 2 22 (3 * 8 – 2) Class B Class C 2 1 14 (2 * 8 – 2) 6 (1 * 8 – 2) Max. number of subnets you can create 4,194,302 (2^22 – 2) 16,382 (2^14 – 2) 62 (2^6 – 2) Bits borrowed 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 Class A # # hosts subnets 2 4,194,302 6 2,097,150 14 1,048,574 30 524,286 62 262,142 126 131,070 254 65,534 510 32,766 1,022 16,382 2,046 8,190 4,094 4,094 8,190 2,046 16,382 1,022 32,766 510 65,534 254 131,070 126 262,142 62 524,286 30 1,048,57 14 4 2,097,15 6 0 4,194,30 2 2 Class B # # hosts subnets 2 16,382 6 8,190 14 4,094 30 2,046 62 1,022 126 510 254 254 510 126 1,022 62 2,046 30 4,094 14 8,190 6 16,382 2 Class C # subnets # hosts 2 6 14 30 62 62 30 14 6 2 Determining subnet, broadcast, subnet mask, and range of IP addresses for a subnet An IP address is first designated with its Class (A, B, or C); you then need to calculate the subnet mask. The subnet mask is nothing more than the IP address divided into its three parts (Network, Subnet, and Host). The subnet part is designated by the bits borrowed. 134.15.10.76, with an 10-bit subnet mask Step one – convert the IP address (network and host portions) into binary: 134.15. 10 . 76 becomes 134.15.00001010.01001100 Step two – divide the binary section into subnet and host portions (using number of bits borrowed): 134.15.00001010.01 001100 NETWORK SUBNET HOST FYI – the host device is on the 41st subnet (0000101001 in decimal = 41), and is the the 12th device (001100 in decimal = 12) on the subnet. Step three – determine the subnet’s network address (host portion has all 0’s): 134.15.00001010.01000000 or 134.15.10.64 Step four – determine the subnet’s broadcast address (host portion has all 1’s): 134.15.00001010.01111111 or 134.15.10.127 Step five – determine the range of available IP addresses for ports and computers on that subnet: Network address First available IP address for device/port Last available IP address for device/port 134.15.10.64 134.15.10.65 134.15.10.126 Broadcast address 134.15.10.127 134.15.10.65 – 134.15.10.126 Step six – determine subnet mask (network & subnet portions are all 1’s; host portion is all 0’s): 255.255.11111111.11000000 or 255.255.255.192 Name _______________________ Lyons Township High School Networking Essentials (Net+) Knowing nothing more than the following two pieces of information, fill out the following table. IP address: 38.0.17.36 You will need to have 35 hosts in each subnet. Class of IP address (A, B, or C) Number of bits to borrow Subnet address Subnet broadcast address First available IP address for a device Last available IP address for a device Subnet mask Which device this is on the subnet (first, second, etc.) Which subnet this is (first, second, etc.) ANSWER KEY Lyons Township High School Networking Systems (CCNA) Borrowing bits to create subnets (Quiz) Knowing nothing more than the following two pieces of information, fill out the following table. IP address: 38.0.17.36 You will need to have 35 hosts in each subnet. Class of IP address (A, B, or C) Number of bits to borrow Subnet address Subnet broadcast address A 18 38.0.17.0 38.0.17.63 First available IP address for a device 38.0.17.1 Last available IP address for a device 38.0.17.62 Subnet mask 255.255.255.192 Which device this is on the subnet (first, second, etc.) 36th Which subnet this is (first, second, etc.) 68th 38.00000000.00010001.00100100