Chapter 8 IP Addressing
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Transcript Chapter 8 IP Addressing
Chapter 8
Intro to Routing & Switching
Upon completion of this chapter, you should be able
to:
Describe the structure of an IPv4 address.
Describe the purpose of the subnet mask.
Compare the characteristics and uses of the unicast,
broadcast and multicast IPv4 addresses.
Compare the use of public and private addresses.
Explain the need for IPv6 addressing.
Describe the representation of an IPv6 address.
Describe types of IPv6 network addresses.
Configure global unicast addresses.
Describe multicast addresses.
Describe the role of ICMP in an IP network.
Use ping & traceroute to test network connectivity.
8.1
Each
host needs IP to communicate
Logical address
Assigned to the NIC
Computers, network printer, router interfaces
Remember
Packet has source & destination IP
What
protocol translates the name to the IP
address?
DNS
What
53
port does it use?
Logical
(not physical like MAC)
IPv4 has 32 bits, 4 octets
8 bits in each octet
11111111.10101010.11001100.00100101
Convert
192.101.28.36
Value
that to decimal:
in each octet from 0-255
That’s a total of 256 numbers.
Add
up the values of the binary 1’s
128
64
32
16
8
4
2
1
1
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
156
11100101
229
8.1.1.4
Add up the bit values to come up with the
decimal answer
8.1.1.7
Decimal to Binary Conversions
Convert the decimal number to bits
8.1.1.8
Binary to Decimal Conversions
Binary Game
Create an account on cisco.com
How
32
How
many bits in an IPv4 address?
many octets? How many bits in each?
4 octets; 8 bits in each
What
can be the decimal value range of each
octet?
0-255
How
256
many numbers is 0-255?
8.2
Network
Identifies network to the router
Router cares about this part
Host
portion
portion
Identifies the specific host
Router doesn’t care about this part
Hierarchical Addressing
192.175.36.9
Subnet
Mask
Helps router decide which network packet is on
Helps show which part of IP is network & host
32 bits
192.168.6.5 255.255.255.0
Binary
1’s - ID the network portion
Binary 0’s - ID the host portion
199.81.210.17
255.255.255.240
What
network does this belong to?
What
is the purpose of the subnet mask?
To help the router identify the destination
network
A
packet enters a router. Which address does
it look at?
Destination IP
What
process does it do with the destination
IP & the subnet mask?
ANDs it
What
is the result of the ANDing?
The destination network
SM
helps tells us how many hosts are on that
network
255.255.255.00000000
Binary 0= identifies # of hosts on that network
8 ZEROS is 28=256
Subtract 2 for useable number
Unusable:
00000000 (.0) is the network ID
11111111 (.255) is the broadcast address for a
network
Total Useable is 254
SM
128= 10000000
27= 128-2 is 126 hosts
SM
255.255.255.224
224= 11100000
25= 32-2 is 30 hosts
SM
255.255.255.128
255.255.240.0
.240.0= 11110000.00000000
212= 4096-2 is 4094 hosts
One
PC is 192.168.18.107 255.255.255.0
What is network does it belong to?
How many useable hosts?
Give PC’s addresses.
8.1.4
Class
A
Large organizations
1-126
Default SM= 255.0.0.0
How many hosts available?
One octet for network, 3 octets for hosts
224= over 16 million
10.52.33.7
N.H.H.H
255.0.0.0
120.111.99.87
15.7.92.5
255.0.0.0
15=
Class A
Default SM for Class A= 255.0.0.0
Network portion of address= 15.
Host portion= .7.92.5
Network ID= 15.0.0.0
All zero’s in the host portion
Broadcast
address= 15.255.255.255
All binary one’s in the host portion
Class
B
Medium organizations
128-191
Default SM= 255.255.0.0
How many hosts available?
Two octets for network, 2 octets for hosts
216= over 65,000
130.52.33.7
N.N.H.H
255.255.0.0
185.111.99.87
167.101.52.36
255.255.0.0
167=
Class B
Default SM for Class B= 255.255.0.0
Network portion of address= 167.101
Host portion= .52.36
Network ID= 167.101.0.0
All zero’s in the host portion
Broadcast
address= 167.101.255.255
All binary one’s in the host portion
Class
C
Small organizations
192-223
Default SM= 255.255.255.0
How many hosts available?
Three octets for network, 1 octet for hosts
28= 256-2 (254 useable)
199.52.33.7
N.N.N.H
255.255.255.0
220.111.99.87
210.44.200.89
255.255.255.0
210=
Class C
Default SM for Class C= 255.255.255.0
Network portion of address= 210.44.200
Host portion= .89
Network ID= 210.44.200.0
All zero’s in the host portion
Broadcast
address= 210.44.200.255
All binary one’s in the host portion
Class
D is multicast (one to a group)
224.0.0.0- 239.255.255.255
Class
D not for hosts
E not for hosts
For testing only
240-255
All
0’s in host portion(s) = network ID
All 1’s in host portion(s)= broadcast
CAN NOT USE THESE ADDRESSES FOR HOSTS!
Address
What
168.19.203.12 255.255.0.0
class?
What are the network portions?
What are the host portions?
What is the network address/ID?
What is the broadcast address?
What is the first usable address?
8.1.2.8
Lab
8.1.2.9
ANDing Activity
Determine the network address
Lots
of Practice!
Which version IP addresses are we dealing
with?
IPv4
How many bits in an IP address?
32
How many octets in an IP address?
4
Which part of this address is the host portion?
199.81.71.6
6
Which network does this belong on? 201.14.6.5
255.255.255.0
201.14.6.0 network
How many total hosts can be on that network?
Useable?
256
254, why?
8.1.4
Some
addresses are reserved & can not be routed
across Internet
You can have a public IP for network/servers &
private for hosts inside
Saves IP addresses
Address
Class
Address Range
A
B
C
10.0.0.0- 10.255.255.255
172.16.0.0- 172.31.255.255
192.168.0.0- 192.168.255.255
If
host does not connect DIRECTLY to
Internet, it can have a private IP
Router
BLOCKS private IP’s
Great Security!!!
Private IP’s can not
127.0.0.0
testing
169
be seen from Internet
range is reserved for loopback
is APIPA (local link)- no IP received from
DHCP server
8.1.4.2
Decide to pass or block the IP depending upon if
it’s private or public
8.1.4.7
Pass or Block IP Addresses
Public or Private
Drag each IP to public or private
Handout
Host, Network#, or Broadcast address, Class,
default SM, usable/unusable for hosts
What
10
What
is unique about the private addresses?
They are not routable
What
is the private range for C?
192.168
What
is the private range for B?
172.16- 172.31
What
is the private range for class A?
does it mean if your address is 169?
APIPA; you did not get an IP from DHCP server
8.1.3
One-to-one
or Source to destination
One-to-all
(source to all) in segment
All hosts will look at it
All 1’s in host portion(s) of address
Broadcast IP & MAC (all F’s)
Default Broadcasts
A- 10.255.255.255 255.0.0.0
B- 172.16.255.255 255.255.0.0
C- 192.168.1.255 255.255.255.0
One-to-group
Class
D 224.0.0.0- 239.255.255.255
Multicast MAC begins with 01-00-5E
Where
is it used?
Gaming
Distance learning
Unicast,
Multicast, or Broadcast
8.1.3.6
Unicast, Broadcast, Multicast
Look at the destination IP & click the devices
that will receive it
Try it several time
Handout
DOS
Netstat –e
Do this every 10 seconds
Pay attention to non-unicast packets
160.50.23.6 255.255.0.0; What network is this on?
160.50.0.0
Which default SM has the most hosts?
Class A 255.0.0.0
Over 16 million!
How many useable hosts in a Class C?
254
220.101.5.90 255.255.255.0; What network is this
on?
220.101.5.0
What are the private IP addresses?
10, 172.16-172.31, 192.168.
What is the MAC broadcast frame in hex?
FF-FF-FF-FF-FF-FF
What is the MAC for a multicast?
01-00-5E
One to one communication is…
Unicast
To send a unicast message, which addresses do
you need?
Source & dest. IP & MAC
Complete
Take
the study guide handout
the quiz on netacad.com
Jeopardy
review
In this chapter, you learned:
Chapter 8
Intro to Routing & Switching