P-660HW-T v2 User’s Guide
Appendix F IP Subnetting
301
Host IDs of all zeros represent the subnet itself and host IDs of all ones are the broadcast
address for that subnet, so the actual number of hosts available on each subnet in the example
above is 2
7
– 2 or 126 hosts for each subnet.
192.168.1.0 with mask 255.255.255.128 is the subnet itself, and 192.168.1.127 with mask
255.255.255.128 is the directed broadcast address for the first subnet. Therefore, the lowest IP
address that can be assigned to an actual host for the first subnet is 192.168.1.1 and the highest
is 192.168.1.126. Similarly the host ID range for the second subnet is 192.168.1.129 to
192.168.1.254.
Example: Four Subnets
The above example illustrated using a 25-bit subnet mask to divide a class “C” address space
into two subnets. Similarly to divide a class “C” address into four subnets, you need to
“borrow” two host ID bits to give four possible combinations (00, 01, 10 and 11). The subnet
mask is 26 bits (11111111.11111111.11111111.
11
000000) or 255.255.255.192. Each subnet
contains 6 host ID bits, giving 2
6
-2 or 62 hosts for each subnet (all zeroes is the subnet itself,
all ones is the broadcast address on the subnet).
Subnet Address:
192.168.1.128
Lowest Host ID: 192.168.1.129
Broadcast Address:
192.168.1.255
Highest Host ID: 192.168.1.254
Table 136
Subnet 2 (continued)
IP/SUBNET MASK
NETWORK NUMBER
LAST OCTET BIT VALUE
Table 137
Subnet 1
IP/SUBNET MASK
NETWORK NUMBER
LAST OCTET BIT
VALUE
IP Address
192.168.1.
0
IP Address (Binary)
11000000.10101000.00000001.
00
000000
Subnet Mask (Binary)
11111111.11111111.11111111.
11
000000
Subnet Address: 192.168.1.0
Lowest Host ID: 192.168.1.1
Broadcast Address:
192.168.1.63
Highest Host ID: 192.168.1.62
Table 138
Subnet 2
IP/SUBNET MASK
NETWORK NUMBER
LAST OCTET BIT
VALUE
IP Address
192.168.1.
64
IP Address (Binary)
11000000.10101000.00000001.
01
000000
Subnet Mask (Binary)
11111111.11111111.11111111.
11
000000
Summary of Contents for P-660HW-T - V2
Page 2: ......
Page 7: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide Safety Warnings 7 This product is recyclable Dispose of it properly...
Page 26: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 26 List of Figures...
Page 40: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 40 Chapter 1 Getting To Know Your ZyXEL Device...
Page 54: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 54 Chapter 2 Introducing the Web Configurator...
Page 74: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 74 Chapter 4 Bandwidth Management Wizard...
Page 92: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 92 Chapter 5 WAN Setup...
Page 124: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 124 Chapter 7 LAN Setup...
Page 156: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 156 Chapter 10 Firewall Configuration Figure 85 Firewall Edit Rule...
Page 170: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 170 Chapter 10 Firewall Configuration...
Page 174: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 174 Chapter 11 Content Filtering...
Page 178: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 178 Chapter 12 Static Route...
Page 190: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 190 Chapter 13 Bandwidth Management...
Page 194: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 194 Chapter 14 Dynamic DNS Setup...
Page 206: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 206 Chapter 15 Remote Management Configuration...
Page 218: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 218 Chapter 16 Universal Plug and Play UPnP...
Page 224: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 224 Chapter 17 System...
Page 244: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 244 Chapter 18 Logs...
Page 250: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 250 Chapter 19 Tools...
Page 256: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 256 Chapter 21 Troubleshooting...
Page 260: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 260 Appendix A Product Specifications...
Page 280: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 280 Appendix D Wall mounting Instructions...
Page 308: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 308 Appendix G Command Interpreter...
Page 320: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 320 Appendix J Splitters and Microfilters...
Page 334: ...P 660HW T v2 User s Guide 334 Appendix K Wireless LANs...