CTI 2572-A Installation and Operation Guide V1.3
105
APPENDIX D. IP ADDRESS INFORMATION
IP Address Nomenclature
Every host interface on a TCP/IP network is identified by a unique IP address. This address is used to
uniquely identify the host and the network to which the node belongs.
Each IP address consists of 32 bits, divided into four 8 bit bytes (called
octets
). An IP address is
usually expressed in
dotted notation,
with each octet expressed as its decimal equivalent. See the
example below.
Notation
Byte 1
Byte 2
Byte 3
Byte 4
Binary
11000000
11011111 10110001
00000001
Decimal
192
223
177
1
Although an IP address is a single value, it contains two pieces of information: the
Network ID
and
the
Host ID
. The Network ID identifies a group of computers and other devices that are all located on
the same logical network. In internetworks (networks formed by a collection of local area
networks), there is a unique network ID for each network. The Host ID identifies a specific device
within a particular network.
The Internet community has defined address classes to accommodate networks of varying sizes. Each
network class can be discerned from the first octet of its IP address. The following table summarizes
the relationship between the first octet of a given address and its Network ID and Host ID fields. It
also identifies the total number of Network IDs and Host IDs for each address class that participates
in the Internet addressing scheme. This sample uses w.x.y.z to designate the bytes of the IP address.
Class
w values*
Network ID
Host ID
Number of
networks
Number of
hosts per net
A 1-126
w
x.y.z
126
16,777,214
B 128-191 w.x
y.z 16,384
65,534
C 192-223 w.x.y
z
2,097,151
254
* Inclusive range for the first octet in the IP address. The address 127 is reserved for loopback testing
and inter-process communication on the local computer; it is not a valid network address. W values
224 – 239 are used for Class D - IP multicast.
Private IP Addresses
If you are planning on connecting to the 2572-A modules via the Internet, you
must
obtain a set of IP
addresses from the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA). Contact you network administrator
or point your browser to
http://www.isi.edu/div7/infra/iana.html.
to obtain more information.
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