Appendix F IP subnetting
259
Nortel Business Secure Router 252 Configuration — Advanced
Subnet masks
A subnet mask is used to determine which bits are part of the network number,
and which bits are part of the host ID (using a logical AND operation). A subnet
mask contains 32 bits. If there is a 1 in the bit, then the corresponding bit of the IP
address is part of the network number. If a bit in the subnet mask is 0 then the
corresponding bit in the IP address is part of the host ID.
Subnet masks are expressed in dotted decimal notation just as IP addresses are.
The natural masks for class A, B, and C IP addresses are as follows.
Subnetting
With subnetting, the class arrangement of an IP address is ignored. For example, a
class C address no longer has to have 24 bits of network number and 8 bits of host
ID. With subnetting, some of the host ID bits are converted into network number
bits. By convention, subnet masks always consist of a continuous sequence of
ones beginning from the left most bit of the mask, followed by a continuous
sequence of zeros, for a total number of 32 bits.
Since the mask is always a continuous number of ones beginning from the left,
followed by a continuous number of zeros for the remainder of the 32-bit mask,
you can simply specify the number of ones instead of writing the value of each
octet. This is usually specified by writing a / followed by the number of bits in the
mask after the address.
For example, 192.1.1.0 /25 is equivalent to saying 192.1.1.0 with mask
255.255.255.128.
Table 53
Natural Masks
Class
Natural mask
A
255.0.0.0
B
255.255.0.0
C
255.255.255.0
Summary of Contents for 252
Page 14: ...14 Contents NN47923 501 ...
Page 20: ...20 Figures NN47923 501 ...
Page 24: ...24 Tables NN47923 501 ...
Page 30: ...30 Preface NN47923 501 ...
Page 42: ...42 Chapter 1 Getting to know your Nortel Business Secure Router 252 NN47923 501 ...
Page 48: ...48 Chapter 2 Introducing the SMT NN47923 501 SMT menus at a glance Figure 6 SMT overview ...
Page 72: ...72 Chapter 3 WAN and Dial Backup Setup NN47923 501 ...
Page 80: ...80 Chapter 4 LAN setup NN47923 501 ...
Page 84: ...84 Chapter 5 Internet access NN47923 501 ...
Page 98: ...98 Chapter 6 Remote Node setup NN47923 501 ...
Page 102: ...102 Chapter 7 IP Static Route Setup NN47923 501 ...
Page 130: ...130 Chapter 9 Network Address Translation NAT NN47923 501 ...
Page 156: ...156 Chapter 12 SNMP Configuration NN47923 501 ...
Page 178: ...178 Chapter 14 System information and diagnosis NN47923 501 ...
Page 198: ...198 Chapter 15 Firmware and configuration file maintenance NN47923 501 ...
Page 212: ...212 Chapter 17 Remote Management NN47923 501 ...
Page 232: ...232 Appendix B Triangle Route NN47923 501 ...
Page 252: ...252 Appendix D PPPoE NN47923 501 ...
Page 256: ...256 Appendix E Hardware specifications NN47923 501 ...
Page 266: ...266 Appendix F IP subnetting NN47923 501 ...
Page 308: ...308 Appendix H NetBIOS filter commands NN47923 501 ...
Page 332: ...332 Appendix K Brute force password guessing protection NN47923 501 ...