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Lab 1. IP Addressing Basics
Objective
Name the five different classes of IP addresses
Describe the characteristics and use of the different IP address classes
Identify the class of an IP address based on the network number
Determine which part, or octet, of an IP address is the network ID and which part is the
host ID
Identify valid and invalid IP host addresses based on the rules of IP addressing
Define the range of addresses and default subnet mask for each class
Background / Preparation
This lab exercise helps develop an understanding of IP addresses and how TCP/IP networks
operate. It is primarily a written lab exercise. However, it would be worthwhile to review some real
network IP addresses using the command line utilities ipconfig for Windows NT/2000/XP or
winipcfg for Windows 9x/ME. IP addresses are used to uniquely identify individual TCP/IP
networks and hosts, such as computers and printers, on those networks in order for devices to
communicate. Workstations and servers on a TCP/IP network are called hosts and each has a
unique IP address. This address is referred to as its host address. TCP/IP is the most widely
used protocol in the world. The Internet or World Wide Web only uses IP addressing. In order for
a host to access the Internet, it must have an IP address.
In its basic form, the IP address has two parts:
A network address
A host address
The network portion of the IP address is assigned to a company or organization by the Internet
Network Information Center (InterNIC). Routers use the IP address to move data packets
between networks. IP addresses are 32 bits long according to the current version IPv4 and are
divided into 4 octets of 8 bits each. They operate at the network layer (Layer 3) of the Open
System Interconnection (OSI) model, which is the Internet layer of the TCP/IP model. IP
addresses are assigned in the following ways:
Statically – manually, by a network administrator
Dynamically – automatically, by a Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) server
The IP address of a workstation, or host is a logical address, meaning it can be changed. The
Media Access Control (MAC) address of the workstation is a 48-bit physical address. This
address is burned into the network interface card (NIC) and cannot change unless the NIC is
replaced. The combination of the logical IP address and the physical MAC address helps route
packets to their proper destination.
There are five different classes of IP addresses, and depending on the class, the network and
host part of the address will use a different number of bits. In this lab, different classes of IP
addresses will be worked with and to help become familiar with the characteristics of each. The
understanding of IP addresses is critical to the understanding of TCP/IP and internetworks in
general. The following
PC workstation with Windows 9x/NT/2000/XP installed
Access to the Windows Calculator
Step 1 Review IP address classes and their characteristics
Address classes
There are five classes of IP addresses, A through E. Only the first three classes are used
commercially. A Class A network address is discussed in the table to get started. The first column
is the class of IP address. The second column is the first octet, which must fall within the range
shown for a given class of addresses. The Class A address must start with a number between 1
and 126.
The first bit of a Class A address is always a zero, meaning the High Order Bit (HOB) or the 128
bit cannot be used. 127 is reserved for loopback testing. The first octet alone defines the network
ID for a Class A network address.
Default subnet mask
The default subnet mask uses all binary ones, decimal 255, to mask the first 8 bits of the Class A
address. The default subnet mask helps routers and hosts determine if the destination host is on
this network or another one. Because there are only 126 Class A networks, the remaining 24 bits,
or 3 octets, can be used for hosts. Each Class A network can have 2 24, or over 16 million hosts. It
is common to subdivide the network into smaller groupings called subnets by using a custom
subnet mask, which is discussed in the next lab.
Network and host address
The network or host portion of the address cannot be all ones or all zeros. As an example, the
Class A address of 118.0.0.5 is a valid IP address. The network portion, or first 8 bits, which are
equal to 118, is not all zeros and the host portion, or last 24 bits, is not all zeros or all ones. If the
host portion were all zeros, it would be the network address itself. If the host portion were all
ones, it would be a broadcast for the network address. The value of any octet can never be
greater than decimal 255 or binary 11111111.
Step 2 Determine basic IP addressing
Use the IP address chart and your knowledge of IP address classes to answer the following
questions:
1. What is the decimal and binary range of the first octet of all possible Class B IP addresses?
Decimal: From: ________ To: ________
Binary: From: ________ To: ________
2. Which octet(s) represent the network portion of a Class C IP address?
___________________
3. Which octet(s) represent the host portion of a Class A IP address?
______________________
4. What is the maximum number of useable hosts with a Class C network address?
___________
5. How many Class B networks are there? ___________________
6. How many hosts can each Class B network have? __________________________
7. How many octets are there in an IP address? ________How many bits per octet?
__________
Step 3 Determine the host and network portions of the IP address
With the following IP host addresses, indicate the following:
Class of each address
Network address or ID
Host portion
Broadcast address for this network
Default subnet mask
The host portion will be all zeros for the network ID. Enter just the octets that make up the host.
The host portion will be all ones for a broadcast. The network portion of the address will be all
ones for the subnet mask. Fill in the following table:
Step 4 Given an IP address of 142.226.0.15 and a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0,
answer the following questions:
What is the binary equivalent of the second octet?
_____________________________________
What is the class of the address?
_________________________________________________
What is the network address of this IP address?
______________________________________
Is this a valid IP host address (Y/N)?
______________________________________________
Why or why not?
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Step 5 Determine which IP host addresses are valid for commercial networks
For the following IP host addresses, determine which are valid for commercial networks and
indicate why or why not. Valid means it could be assigned to any of the following:
Workstation
Server
Printer
Router interface
Any other compatible device
Fill in the following table:
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