Jason,
That calculator is awesome. Great post!
Thanks a million.
-Scott M. Trieste
""Jason J. Roysdon"" wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> I'm not exactly sure what you're looking for, but I'd suggest grabbing
> 3Com's Subnet calculator, which will let you select
ead cover to cover.
- Original Message -
From: Sam Hebert
To:
Sent: Monday, April 23, 2001 12:06 PM
Subject: RE: ip subnetting question [7:1607]
> www.learntosubnet.com
>
>
> Should have everything you need.
>
> S.H
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Lowell Shar
>Does anybody out there have a soft copy of a table that lists the subnet
>mask, number of networks and number of host per subnet for class a,b, and c
>networks? Appreciate it very much.\
http://www.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc1878.txt
>
"Chuck Larrieu" 04/23/01 11:07AM >>>
>Idle curiousity - wh
www.learntosubnet.com
Should have everything you need.
S.H
-Original Message-
From: Lowell Sharrah [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, April 23, 2001 9:48 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: ip subnetting question [7:1607]
Does anybody out there have a soft copy of a table that li
I'm not exactly sure what you're looking for, but I'd suggest grabbing
3Com's Subnet calculator, which will let you select by network bits, subnet
mask, subnet networks, or hosts. Somewhere on their support site under
Windows applications (free). I keep a copy on my server as well if you
like:
As
phil has said mate, it is in the question!
They
have probably asked how many bits of subnetting are being used in which case the
answer is perfectly correct. You are giving the answer as the
full mask = natural mask + subnet mask
-Original Message-From: Robert Cabeca
[mai
You must have been using that god-awful
CiscoPress ACRC book. You are absolutely correct, and the book is absolutely
wrong. The sad part is that these kind of mistakes are rampant in CiscoPress
books, and they make you begin to doubt whether you understand the concept. It
is simple. /n is th
, October 17, 2000
1:29 PMTo: 'Robert Cabeca'; cisco group studySubject:
RE: IP Subnetting Question
/28
= 255.255.255.240
You
are correct!!!
the
/28 just means a 28 bit mask... that is .240
:--)
-Original Message-From: Robert Cabeca
[mai
/28 =
255.255.255.240
You
are correct!!!
the
/28 just means a 28 bit mask... that is .240
:--)
-Original Message-From: Robert Cabeca
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]Sent: Tuesday, October 17, 2000 10:00
AMTo: cisco group studySubject: IP Subnetting
Question
I am not u
Robert,
You need to read up on the difference between
classfull and classless networks.
Take the address 100.1.0.0 The classfull mask for this
network is class A which is 255.0.0.0 or /8 . There is
no subnetting yet.
Lets say you want to provide 8 bits of subnetting.
then you have 100.1.0.0
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