Re: cidr notation

2023-01-15 Thread Stephen Partington via PLUG-discuss
This is my fav tool for when I am too smoothbrained to do the CDIR in my head. https://www.subnet-calculator.com/cidr.php On Sun, Jan 15, 2023 at 3:14 PM Rusty Carruth via PLUG-discuss < plug-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org> wrote: > Hmm. I was momentarily confused. > > 10.* is class A, which means

Re: cidr notation

2023-01-15 Thread Rusty Carruth via PLUG-discuss
Hmm.  I was momentarily confused. 10.* is class A, which means all 24 bits after the first octet 'matter' and are controlled by whoever controls your network IP addresses. Which means that your network is 10.x.x.x, or 10.0.0.0/8, since all computers on your (non-subnetted) network will have

Re: cidr notation

2023-01-15 Thread Snyder, Alexander J via PLUG-discuss
No. Of you're trying to specify a whole network you would type "10.0.0.0/8", which would cover everything in "10.x.x.x" ... whereas "10.0.0.0/24" would cover everything in "10.0.0.x" Unless you've intentionally segmented your network, you're probably just running a /24, which is relatively

cidr notation

2023-01-15 Thread Michael via PLUG-discuss
I just installed snort ( or at least it is in process) and it is asking me about the address range of the network. So I ran ifconfig and see that it is on the 10 network. I know I could put any numbers in there but I want to understand I'm thinking I will put 10.0.0.2/8. Will that work? Why