Table 101 subnet 1 table 102 subnet 2 – ZyXEL Communications P-334U User Manual

Page 274

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P-334U/P-335U User’s Guide

274

Appendix D IP Subnetting

Note: In the following charts, shaded/bolded last octet bit values indicate host ID bits

“borrowed” to form network ID bits. The number of “borrowed” host ID bits
determines the number of subnets you can have. The remaining number of
host ID bits (after “borrowing”) determines the number of hosts you can have
on each subnet.

Table 101 Subnet 1

IP/SUBNET MASK

NETWORK NUMBER

LAST OCTET BIT
VALUE

IP Address

192.168.1.

0

IP Address (Binary)

11000000.10101000.00000001.

00000000

Subnet Mask

255.255.255.

128

Subnet Mask (Binary)

11111111.11111111.11111111.

10000000

Subnet Address: 192.168.1.0

Lowest Host ID: 192.168.1.1

Broadcast Address:

192.168.1.127

Highest Host ID: 192.168.1.126

Table 102 Subnet 2

IP/SUBNET MASK

NETWORK NUMBER

LAST OCTET BIT VALUE

IP Address

192.168.1.

128

IP Address (Binary)

11000000.10101000.00000001.

10000000

Subnet Mask

255.255.255.

128

Subnet Mask (Binary)

11111111.11111111.11111111.

10000000

Subnet Address:

192.168.1.128

Lowest Host ID: 192.168.1.129

Broadcast Address:

192.168.1.255

Highest Host ID: 192.168.1.254

The remaining 7 bits determine the number of hosts each subnet can have. Host IDs of all
zeros represent the subnet itself and host IDs of all ones are the broadcast address for that
subnet, so the actual number of hosts available on each subnet in the example above is 2

7

– 2

or 126 hosts for each subnet.

192.168.1.0 with mask 255.255.255.128 is the subnet itself, and 192.168.1.127 with mask
255.255.255.128 is the directed broadcast address for the first subnet. Therefore, the lowest IP
address that can be assigned to an actual host for the first subnet is 192.168.1.1 and the highest
is 192.168.1.126. Similarly the host ID range for the second subnet is 192.168.1.129 to
192.168.1.254.

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