Chapter 12. IP Addresses, Network Masks, and Subnets | RX3141 User’s Manual |
12.2 Network classes
The three commonly used network classes are A, B, and C. (There is also a class D but it has a special use beyond the scope of this discussion.) These classes have different uses and characteristics.
Class A networks are the Internet's largest networks, each with room for over 16 million hosts. Up to 126 of these huge networks can exist, for a total of over 2 billion hosts. Because of their huge size, these networks are used for WANs and by organizations at the infrastructure level of the Internet, such as your ISP.
Class B networks are smaller but still quite large, each able to hold over 65,000 hosts. There can be up to 16,384 class B networks in existence. A class B network might be appropriate for a large organization such as a business or government agency.
Class C networks are the smallest, only able to hold 254 hosts at most, but the total possible number of class C networks exceeds 2 million (2,097,152 to be exact). LANs connected to the Internet are usually class C networks.
Some important notes regarding IP addresses:
fThe class can be determined easily from field1:
field1 = | Class A |
field1 = | Class B |
field1 = | Class C |
(field1 values not shown are reserved for special uses)
fA host ID can have any value except all fields set to 0 or all fields set to 255, as those values are reserved for special uses.
84