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Prestige 861H Series User’s Guide
297
Appendix C
Since the first octet of a class “A” IP address must contain a “0”, the first octet of a class “A”
address can have a value of 0 to 127.
Similarly the first octet of a class “B” must begin with “10”, therefore the first octet of a class
“B” address has a valid range of 128 to 191. The first octet of a class “C” address begins with
“110”, and therefore has a range of 192 to 223.
Table 94
Allowed IP Address Range By Class
CLASS
ALLOWED RANGE OF FIRST OCTET
(BINARY)
ALLOWED RANGE OF FIRST OCTET
(DECIMAL)
Class A
0
0000000 to
0
1111111
0 to 127
Class B
10
000000 to
10
111111
128 to 191
Class C
110
00000 to
110
11111
192 to 223
Class D
1110
0000 to
1110
1111
224 to 239
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 has 32 is a “1” then
the corresponding bit in 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.
Table 95
“Natural” Masks
CLASS
NATURAL MASK
A
255.0.0.0
B
255.255.0.0
C
255.255.255.0
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.
Summary of Contents for P-861H-G1
Page 1: ...Prestige 861H Series VDSL Router Bridge User s Guide Version 3 40 8 2005...
Page 2: ......
Page 10: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 9 Customer Support...
Page 22: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 21 Table of Contents...
Page 28: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 27 List of Figures...
Page 36: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 35 Introduction to DSL...
Page 62: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 61 Chapter 3 Wizard Setup for Internet Access...
Page 70: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 69 Chapter 4 LAN Setup...
Page 84: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 83 Chapter 5 WAN Setup...
Page 96: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 95 Chapter 6 Network Address Translation NAT Screens...
Page 106: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 105 Chapter 9 Remote Management Configuration...
Page 120: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 119 Chapter 10 Universal Plug and Play UPnP...
Page 134: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 133 Chapter 12 Maintenance...
Page 140: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 139 Chapter 13 Introducing the SMT...
Page 148: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 147 Chapter 15 Menu 3 LAN Setup...
Page 168: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 167 Chapter 18 Static Route Setup...
Page 202: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 201 Chapter 21 Filter Configuration...
Page 214: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 213 Chapter 23 System Information and Diagnosis...
Page 226: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 225 Chapter 24 Firmware and Configuration File Maintenance...
Page 236: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 235 Chapter 26 Remote Management...
Page 250: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 249 Chapter 28 Call Scheduling...
Page 258: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 257 Chapter 30 System Commands...
Page 284: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 283 Appendix A...
Page 304: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 303 Appendix C...
Page 310: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 309 Appendix E NetBIOS Filter Commands...
Page 334: ...Prestige 861H Series User s Guide 333 Appendix J...