CBXi IP Controller |
IP Networking
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Subject to change without notice
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IP ADDRESSING
Each device has at least one IP address, which uniquely identifies it from all other devices on the network.
There are several forms of IP addresses, but the most commonly used is IPv4, which consists of 4
numbers (between
0
and
255
) separated by dots e.g.
192
.
168
.
222
.
51
DHCP (DYNAMIC HOST CONFIGURATION PROTOCOL)
The address can be set manually on the device itself, or else the device can be assigned one by a master
controller on the network. This master controller is known as the Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol
(
DHCP
) server.
To use an IP address, a device must know several pieces of data, including the
IPv4
address that the
device will use, the IP address of the Domain Name Server (
DNS
) where the device can find IP addresses
of other devices, and the IP address of the Default Gateway device through which communications are
routed.
Using
DHCP
means that all these pieces of information are set automatically avoiding the need for
specialist knowledge of IP networking. If
DHCP
is available on your network is the most convenient way
to configure your devices.
DHCP reservation
A
DHCP
server can be configured to always assign a particular
IP address
to a specific device. This is
called a
DHCP reservation
and enables a user to access a device by
IP address
even if the device power-
cycles and makes a new
DHCP
request.
SUBNETWORK (SUBNET)
A subnet is a logical division of a network
–
that is while it might be physically connected to other
subnets, communications traffic from one subnet can be kept separate from comms origination on
other subnets.
A group of the most significant bits of the IPv4 address (the numbers at the start of the address)
specifies the address of a network or subnetwork. This is called the Network Prefix. The remainder
specifies the host
–
the address unique to the specific device.
For example:
•
on the 192.168 subnet, an IP address of 192.168.2.54 refers to device 2.54.
•
On the 55.231.77 subnet, IP address 55.231.77.3 refers to device 3
The specific parts of the address that
are in each portion is defined by the device’s ‘Subnet Mask’. This
can be expressed as a “bi
tm
ask” that is applied by a bitwise AND operation –
e.g. 255.255.0.0 means that
only the last 2 segments of the address apply to the local subnet.
For example,
•
if the address 192.168.2.54 has a subnet mask “255.255.0.0”, that means that 192.168 is the subnet
address, and 2.54 is the device address.
•
if the address 55.231.77.3 has a subnet mask “255.255.255.0”, that means that 55
.231.77 is the subnet
address, and 3 is the device address.
The network can also be identified by a decimal number following the first
IP
address on the network
–
e.g.
55
.
231
.
77
.
0
/
24
. This is called
Classless Inter-Domain Routing
CIDR
) notation. The decimal number
represents the number of bits allocated for the Network Prefix.
Each segment of an
IP
address represents 8 bits,
i.e.
192
.
168
.
2
.
54
could also be written
11000000
.
10101000
.
00000010
.
00110110