Chapter 5
Upon completion of this chapter, you should be able to: Configure IP addresses Identify & select valid IP addresses for networks Configure a DHCP server Configure a host to use DHCP for configuration Troubleshoot & resolve IP addresses configuration and communication issues Configure DNS addresses Configure an IPv6 address
5a.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
32 bit number Four octets of 8 bits Network & host portion of address Routers read network portion only To send to correct network Network is .16 is the host portion
Logical (not physical like MAC) IPv4 has 32 bits, 4 octets 8 bits in each octet Convert that to decimal: Value in each octet from That’s a total of 256 numbers.
Add up the values of the binary 1’s 156
Binary to Decimal Conversions Binary to Decimal Conversions Add up the bit values to come up with the decimal answer Decimal to Binary Conversions Decimal to Binary Conversions Convert the decimal number to bits Binary Game Binary Game Create an account on cisco.com
How many bits in an IPv4 address? 32 How many octets? How many bits in each? 4 octets; 8 bits in each What can be the decimal value range of each octet? How many numbers is 0-255? 256
5a.2
Network portion Identifies network to the router Router cares about this part Host portion Identifies the specific host Router doesn’t care about this part Hierarchical Addressing
How many total bits are on? (1’s) /24 notation How many total bits are on? (1’s) /16 notation How many total bits are on? (1’s) /29 notation
Subnet Mask Helps router decide which network packet is on Helps show which part of IP is network & host 32 bits Binary 1’s - ID the network portion Binary 0’s - ID the host portion
SM helps tells us how many hosts are on that network Binary 0’s= identifies # of hosts on that network 8 ZEROS is 2 8 =256 Subtract 2 for useable number Unusable: (.0) is the network ID (.255) is the broadcast address for a network Total Useable is 254
SM 128= 2 7 = is 126 hosts SM 224= 2 5 = 32-2 is 30 hosts SM .240.0= 2 12 = is 4094 hosts
Router ONLY knows which NETWORKS it is connected to!!! Doesn’t care about individual hosts It ANDs the IP & Subnet Mask Result= DESTINATION NETWORK Looks in routing table for destination network & sends it out the outgoing port
What network does this belong to?
One PC is What is network does it belong to? How many useable hosts? Give PC’s addresses.
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
5a.3
Large organizations Default SM= One octet for network, 3 octets for hosts How many hosts available? 2 24 = over 16 million N.H.H.H
15= Class A Default SM for Class A= Network portion of address= 15. Host portion= Network ID= All zero’s in the host portion Broadcast address= All binary one’s in the host portion
Medium organizations Default SM= Two octets for network, 2 octets for hosts How many hosts available? 2 16 = over 65,000 N.N.H.H
167= Class B Default SM for Class B= Network portion of address= Host portion= Network ID= All zero’s in the host portion Broadcast address= All binary one’s in the host portion
Small organizations Default SM= Three octets for network, 1 octet for hosts How many hosts available? 2 8 = (254 useable) N.N.N.H
210= Class C Default SM for Class C= Network portion of address= Host portion=.89 Network ID= All zero’s in the host portion Broadcast address= All binary one’s in the host portion
Class D not for hosts D is multicast (one to a group) Class E not for hosts For testing only All 0’s in host portion(s) = network ID All 1’s in host portion(s)= broadcast CAN NOT USE THESE ADDRESSES FOR HOSTS!
Class 1 st Octet Range Default Subnet Mask Network/ Host Portions # of Hosts per Network A N.H.H.H16 million B N.N.H.H65,000 C N.N.N.H254 DEDE D: Is used for multicasting, webcasts, streaming video E: Is used research only
Address What 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?
Lab ANDing Activity 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? 44 Which part of this address is the host portion? 66
Which network does this belong on? network How many total hosts can be on that network? Useable? 256 254, why?
5a.4
Address Class Address Range A B C 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
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 be seen from Internet range is reserved for loopback testing 169 is APIPA (local link)- no IP received from DHCP server
Pass or Block IP Addresses Pass or Block IP Addresses Decide to pass or block the IP depending upon if it’s private or public Public or Private Public or Private Drag each IP to public or private Handout Host, Network#, or Broadcast address, Class, default SM, usable/unusable for hosts
What is the private range for class A? 10 What is the private range for B? What is the private range for C? What is unique about the private addresses? They are not routable What does it mean if your address is 169? APIPA; you did not get an IP from DHCP server
5a.5
One-to-one (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 Last address in subnetwork (unusable for host) Broadcast IP & MAC (all F’s) Default Broadcasts A B C
One-to-group Class D Multicast MAC begins with E Where is it used? Gaming Distance learning
Unicast, Multicast, or Broadcast
Unicast, Broadcast, Multicast Unicast, Broadcast, Multicast Look at the destination IP & click the devices that will receive it Try it several time Handout CMD Netstat –e Do this every 10 seconds Pay attention to non-unicast packets
; What network is this on? Which default SM has the most hosts? Class A Over 16 million! How many useable hosts in a Class C? 254 ; What network is this on?
What are the private IP addresses? 10, , What is the MAC broadcast frame in hex? FF-FF-FF-FF-FF-FF What is the MAC for a multicast? E One to one communication is… Unicast To send a unicast message, which addresses do you need? Source & dest. IP & MAC
5a.6
How many bits in an IPv4 address? 32 How many octets in an IPv4 address? 44 What’s the range of numbers in each octet? What are the bit values? 128, 64, 32, 16, 8, 4, 2, 1 Convert
to decimal to decimal to decimal to decimal
192 to binary 224 to binary 47 to binary 115 to binary
Range: Default Subnet Mask: Which octets are Network & Host? How many hosts available? Give an example IP & SM:
5 to binary 77 to binary 100 to binary 127 to binary What’s in common with all of them?
Range: Default Subnet Mask: Which octets are Network & Host? How many hosts available? Give an example IP & SM:
128 to binary 142 to binary 191 to binary What’s in common here?
Range: Default Subnet Mask: Which octets are Network & Host? How many hosts available, total & useable? Give an example IP & SM:
192 to binary 200 to binary 223 to binary What’s common here?
Class D Multicasting Class E Experimental Use Private Addresses A- B- C-
Chapter 5