Top Banner
JCHNE Presentation On IP ADDRESSING Submitted To: Submitted By: Mr. Vishnu Sir Gaurav Prashar LU, 0358
14
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
  • JCHNE Presentation On IP ADDRESSING

    Submitted To: Submitted By: Mr. Vishnu SirGaurav Prashar LU, 0358

  • BackgroundThe goal of Universal Service is such that all computers on all physically different networks can communicate.Physical addresses allow communication between computers on one network.

  • IP AddressesThe IP address provides virtual addressing. The address is software controlled, whereas the address for the network card is hardware based.The IP addressing scheme is quite complex, and there have been many revisions to the IP scheme.f

  • IP Addresses (cont.)32 bits binary in length (IPv4)128 bit hexadecimal in length (IPv6)Addresses are divided into a prefix and suffixThe suffix is the host addressThe prefix is the network number

  • IP ClassesPeople commonly throw around terms like Class C, but it should really be termed Class C address or Class C address space.Class A: 16777216 hosts!Class B: 65536Class C: 256

  • IP Class Scheme

  • IP Class SchemeFrom the previous figure, we see that the 32-bit address is split into 4 octets.IP addresses are self identifying.If the first 4 bits of the first octet are0xxx: Class A address10xx: Class B address110x: Class C address1110: Class D address (Multicast)1111: Class E address

  • Dotted DecimalIP addresses are generally read in dotted decimal format. 0.0.0.0 through 255.255.255.255

    Much better than reading: 10000001 00110100 00000110 00000000

  • Dotted Decimal with ClassesClass A: 1 prefix octet (128 networks)3 suffix octets (16777216 hosts)Class B: 2 prefix octets (16384 networks)2 suffix octets (65536 hosts)Class C:3 prefix octets (2097152 networks)1 suffix octet (256 hosts)

  • Address Space

  • Special Addresses (cont.)Loopback addressesLoopbacks are used for testing. An IP looback is application-level testing.Any information sent to the loopback address is never passed to the network segment. It is handled internally in the TCP/IP stack.127.x.x.x

  • Special Addresses (cont.)This computers addressIf a computer doesnt know what its own address is, but needs to communicate to another machine, it designates the address of 0.0.0.0 for itself.Applications include DHCP, BOOTPThe bootstrap protocol (BOOTP) is a host configuration protocol developed before DHCP.

  • Thanks