Gateway address – Rockwell Automation 1738-AENT, Series B ArmorPOINT I/O Dual Port EtherNet/IP Adapters User Manual User Manual

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Rockwell Automation Publication 1738-UM005A-EN-P - July 2013

15

Configure the Adapter with RSLogix5000 software Chapter 3

IP addresses are written as four decimal integers (0…255) separated by periods
where each integer gives the value of one byte of the IP address

.

Gateway Address

This section applies to multi-network systems. If you have a single network
system, refer to the next section.

The Gateway Address is the default address of a network. It provides a single
domain name and point of entry to the site. Gateways connect individual physical
networks into a system of networks.

When a node needs to communicate with a node on another network, a gateway
transfers the data between the two networks. The figure shows gateway G
connecting Network 1 with Network 2.

When host B with IP address 128.2.0.1 communicates with host C, it knows
from C’s IP address that C is on the same network. in an Ethernet environment, B
can then resolve C’s IP address into a hardware address (MAC address) and
communicate with C directly.

When host B communicates with host A, it knows from A’s IP address that A is
on another network (the network IDs are different). In order to send data to A, B
must use the IP address of the gateway connecting the two networks. In this
example, the gateway’s IP address on Network 2 is 128.2.0.3.

The gateway has two IP addresses (128.1.0.2 and 128.2.0.3). The first must be
used by hosts on Network 1 and the second must be used by hosts on Network 2.
To be usable, a gateway of a host must be addressed using a network ID matching
its own.

EXAMPLE

For example, the 32-bit IP address:

10000000 00000001 00000000 00000001 is written as
128.1.0.1

Network 1

Network 2

128.1.0.1

128.2.0.1

128.2.0.2

128.2.0.3

128.1.0.2

A

B

G

C

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