Zero subnetworks, Zero subnetworks -3, Table 9-2 – Lucent Technologies 6000 User Manual

Page 367: Standard subnet masks and lucent notation -3

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Configuring IP Routing

Introduction to IP routing on the MAX

MAX 6000/3000 Network Configuration Guide

9-3

The broadcast address of any subnet has the host portion of the IP address set to all ones. The
network address (or base address) represents the network itself, because the host portion of the
IP address is all zeros. For example, if the MAX assigns the following address to a remote
router:

IP address=198.5.248.120/29

The Ethernet attached to that router has the following address range:

198.5.248.120 — 198.5.248.127

in which

198.5.248.120

is a network (base) address and

198.5.248.127

is a broadcast

address.

A host route is a special-case IP address with a subnet mask of /32. Host routes are required for
dial-in hosts. For example:

198.5.248.40/32

Table 9-2 shows standard subnet masks for a class C network and the subnet notation.

Zero subnetworks

Early implementations of TCP/IP do not allow zero subnets, that is, subnetwork addresses in
which the last octet is zero. As a result, in early TCP/IP implementation, subnetworks are not
permitted to have the same base address that a class A, B, or C network would have. Lucent’s
implementation of RIP 2 and OSPF, like other modern implementations of TCP/IP, treat zero
subnetworks as they would any other network.

You should decide whether to support and configure zero subnetworks for your environment.
If you configure them in some cases and treat them as unsupported in other cases, you will
encounter routing problems.

Table 9-2. Standard subnet masks and Lucent notation

Subnet mask

Number of host addresses

Subnet notation

255.255.255.0

254 hosts + 1 broadcast, 1 network (base)

/24

255.255.255.128

126 hosts + 1 broadcast, 1 network (base)

/25

255.255.255.192

62 hosts + 1 broadcast, 1 network (base)

/26

255.255.255.224

30 hosts + 1 broadcast, 1 network (base)

/27

255.255.255.240

14 hosts + 1 broadcast, 1 network (base)

/28

255.255.255.248

6 hosts + 1 broadcast, 1 network (base)

/29

255.255.255.252

2 hosts + 1 broadcast, 1 network (base)

/30

255.255.255.254

invalid subnet mask (no hosts)

/31

255.255.255.255

1 host—a host route

/32

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