1 / 27

A presentation by Binh Lam Ming-Ching Chu Kumiko Tominaga Mai Ai Tu

IP ADDRESS. A presentation by Binh Lam Ming-Ching Chu Kumiko Tominaga Mai Ai Tu. Modules. IP Address and Classes IP Address Architecture Sub-netting New Version of IP Address. What is IP Address?. 32 bits. Network ID Host ID. - Has 4 dotted decimal notation. (000 . 00 . 000 . 00)

byron-ewing
Télécharger la présentation

A presentation by Binh Lam Ming-Ching Chu Kumiko Tominaga Mai Ai Tu

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. IP ADDRESS A presentation by Binh Lam Ming-Ching Chu Kumiko Tominaga Mai Ai Tu

  2. Modules • IP Address and Classes • IP Address Architecture • Sub-netting • New Version of IP Address

  3. What is IP Address? 32 bits Network IDHost ID • - Has 4 dotted decimal notation. (000 . 00 . 000 . 00) • Each 4 dotted decimal or octets has Eight positions as a Binary format Ex: (00100100). • - The largest eight bits binary number is 11111111. • Have been divided into classes: A, B, C, D, and E • - There are three main CLASSES: A, B, and C.

  4. 0 Network (7 bits) Host -ID (24 bits) CLASS A • - Referred as 8 bits network • 24 bit host-ID • The 1st bit of the 1st octet is always 0. • Total number of networks octet is from 0 to 126 • Number of networks supported is 127 • Number of hosts supported per network 16,777,214 • For very large organizations

  5. CLASS B 10Network (14-bits)Host-ID (16-bits) • - Referred as 16 bits network • 16 bits host-ID • The 1st two bits of the 1st octet are always 10 • Number of networks octet is 128-191 • Number of networks supported is 16000 • Number of hosts supported per network is 65534 • For medium size organizations

  6. CLASS C 110Network (21- bits)Host-ID (8-bits) • Referred as 24-bits network • 8 bits host-id • The 1st three bits of the 1st octet are always 110 • Number of networks octet is 192-254 • Number of networks supported is 2,097,152 • Number of hosts supported per network is 254 • For small organizations

  7. CLASS E & CLASS D - Class D is reserved for IP multicasting. - First 4 higher-order bits are 1 1 1 0. - Supports by Microsoft for multicasting. - Class E is reserved for possible future use. - First 4 higher-order bits are 1 1 1 1.

  8. IP in Network Layer • The transmission mechanism by the TCP/IP protocols. • Unreliable and connectionless datagram protocol • It must be paired with a reliable protocol, such as TCP

  9. TCP/IP Communication • Basic communication language or protocol of the Internet, Intranet, and extranet • Direct access to the Internet—a copy of the TCP/IP program • Uses the Client/Server model of communication • Point-to-point

  10. TCP/IP and the Internet • A single network connecting many computers of any size and type • A host—a computer • All interconnected physical networks—one huge network • All the hosts to be connected to this larger logical network

  11. IP Address in Network and Local • Brief introduction of IP address in TCP/IP • The network part of the IP address ---Internet network address or number ---Network Information Center(NIC) • The local or host part of the IP address ---unique network number and a host number ---identify a subnetwork or subnet address

  12. Two Method for IP Addressing • Dynamic addressing • IP address is obtained automatically by DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) • Static Addressing • IP address is manually configured by a network administrator

  13. Subnet • Networks can be subdivided into subnets. • Subnetting allows to take one large network and break it into many smaller networks. • Subnetting appears as one network to the outsides. • Subnets are assigned by network administrators.

  14. Reasons for Subnetting • Reduce network traffic • Optimize network performance • Simplify management • Facilitate spanning of large geographical distances

  15. Subnet Divisions • All three divisions are subnets of 131. 108. 0. 0. 131. 108. 3. 0 Router 131. 108. 1. 0 131. 108. 2. 0

  16. How to Create Subnet • Subnets are created by borrowing bits from host portion of the IP address to be used as network bits. • Two factors determine the number of host bits borrowed • Maximum number of subnets needed. • Maximum number of hosts per subnet needed.

  17. Subnet Rules • Subnet bits are borrowed from host bits. • Any numbers of bits can be borrowed with 2 bits remaining in the host field. • For class A, B, C, maximum of 22 bits, 14 bits, and 6 bits can be borrowed respectively from the host fields. • In the IP address, all host fields of 1’s for broadcast.

  18. How to Identify Subnet from IP Address • Use the subnet mask to AND with the IP address. • Subnet mask is used to tell which part of the IP Address is the network number, the subnet number and the host number. • Subnet mask has all 1’s in the network and subnet portions and all 0’s in the host portions.

  19. Example: • Subnet Mask 255. 255. 255. 0 11111111. 11111111. 11111111.00000000 Class C • Subnet Mask 255. 255. 255. 224 11111111. 11111111. 11111111. 11100000 Class C with 3 bits borrowed from host field for subnet.

  20. IP Address next Generation • Also know as IPv6 and design by IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force) • 128 bits • Design as an evolutionary set of improvements to the current IP Address.

  21. Key features in IPv6 • Larger IP address space • Deploy more recent technologies • Autoconfiguration • Security • Friendly to traffic engineering technologies • Multicast • Better support for ad-hoc networking

  22. Continues • A cure to routing table growth • Simplified header structures • Smooth transition from IPv4 • Follows the key design principles of IPv4

  23. Advantages of IPv6 • Rule for 3 types of addressing • Unicast (one host to one other host) • Anycast (one host to the nearest of multiple hosts) • Multicast (one host to multiple hosts) • Speed network performance • Anycast messages can be used to update routing tables along the line.

  24. Continues • Packets can be identified as belonging to a particular “flow” so that packets that are part of a multimedia presentation that needs to arrive in “real time” can be provided a higher quality-of-service relative to other customers. • Include extensions that allow a packet to specify a mechanism for authenticating its origin, for ensuring data integrity, and for ensuring privacy.

  25. The End Thank You And Good Luck On Your Finals

More Related