03-17-2006 02:09 AM - edited 03-03-2019 02:19 AM
If I have a ip of 172.19.51.0/24 is this all a subnet of the 172 and 172.19 network ?
03-17-2006 02:28 AM
Hi Carl,
Since the mask is /24 ie)255.255.255.0, first three octet is a network portion.
172.19.51.0 is a network with 255 hosts. It is came from by subneting the network 172.19.0.0.
Rgs.
03-17-2006 04:07 AM
I still dont understand why its a subnet of the 172.19 network, so would say 185.100.34.0/24 be a subnet of the 185.100 network ?
03-17-2006 02:13 PM
Absolutely. 185.100.0.0 is a class B and 185.100.34.0/24 is its subnet.
Hope this helps,
03-17-2006 03:36 AM
If you go based on the classful model then 172 is a class B and your major net is 172.19/16.
With the classless model you only rely on the prefix and prefix length and you could say that 172.19.51.0/24 is a more specific prefix of both 172/8 and 172.19/16.
Hope this helps,
03-18-2006 11:15 PM
first off: 172.0.0.0 is one of the reserved ip addresses....10.- 127.- 172 - 192 are the reserved ip addresses made by the IETF..
03-19-2006 07:02 AM
You probably meant that it is part of the private address space defined by RFC1918 as follow:
10.0.0.0/8 (10.0.0.0 - 10.255.255.255)
172.16.0.0/12 (172.16.0.0 - 172.31.255.255)
192.168.0.0/16 (192.168.0.0 - 192.168.255.255)
Hope this helps,
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