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Full Discussion: IP Range Assigning
Special Forums IP Networking IP Range Assigning Post 302974526 by TryllZ on Tuesday 31st of May 2016 12:21:34 PM
Old 05-31-2016
IP Range Assigning

Hi All,
I'm a bit confused about assigning IP address from IP Ranges.
I am using this scenario below to understand.
Scenario
Adatum.com an international IT solutions company, is launching 12 new branches in a new country where they currently have no existing branches. The sWin CIO has asked that each subnet should host at least 1000 devices.
sWin has obtained a network address of 192.168.0.0/18. This address needs to be subnetted further. The internal subnet mask will be /22
The company’s subnet plan allows for:
- Router Pool: 2 router interfaces for each subnet – the first 2 IP addresses from each subnet.
- Managed Network Device Pool: The first 20 IP addresses that follow the Router Pool are reserved for switches and other network devices
- Server Pool: The first 20 IP addresses following the Managed Network Device Pool are reserved for servers.
- Workstation Static Pool: The first 10 IP addresses following the Server Pool are reserved for Workstations that require static IP addresses.
- Workstation DHCP Pool: The remaining IP addresses are reserved for automatic IP configuration
You have been asked to use subnet 9 for your device addressing.
Configure the first IP address from the Server Pool to Lon-DC1.
Configure the first IP address from the Workstation Static Pool to sWinPC1.
Configure the first IP address from the Router Pool to be the default gateway.

So I have the IP address range as such:
192.168.0.0 is the Network ID and 192.168.3.255 is the Broadcast address.
Now can some one explain me how the IP ranges will be assigned having found the IP ranges as such, I understand that since the last borrowed bit is place holder of 4 the IP ranges will also be in 4, for example 192.168.0.0 - 192.168.0.3, which means that if I use the 9th subnet the IP Range is 192.68.0.32 - 192.168.0.35, however my teacher has explained me (which I did not understand for some reason) in a way that IP range 9th subnet will be 192.168.32.1 etc.
I'm confused as to when to use my method for IP ranges and when to use my teachers.

My basic question is how to know when does the subnet range changes and which is the subnet range the first one of the teacher method.
Please, Thank You

Last edited by TryllZ; 05-31-2016 at 01:27 PM..
 

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ZMQ_INPROC(7)							    0MQ Manual							     ZMQ_INPROC(7)

NAME
zmq_inproc - 0MQ local in-process (inter-thread) communication transport SYNOPSIS
The in-process transport passes messages via memory directly between threads sharing a single 0MQ context. Note No I/O threads are involved in passing messages using the inproc transport. Therefore, if you are using a 0MQ context for in-process messaging only you can initialise the context with zero I/O threads. See zmq_init(3) for details. ADDRESSING
A 0MQ address string consists of two parts as follows: transport://endpoint. The transport part specifies the underlying transport protocol to use, and for the in-process transport shall be set to inproc. The meaning of the endpoint part for the in-process transport is defined below. Assigning a local address to a socket When assigning a local address to a socket using zmq_bind() with the inproc transport, the endpoint shall be interpreted as an arbitrary string identifying the name to create. The name must be unique within the 0MQ context associated with the socket and may be up to 256 characters in length. No other restrictions are placed on the format of the name. Connecting a socket When connecting a socket to a peer address using zmq_connect() with the inproc transport, the endpoint shall be interpreted as an arbitrary string identifying the name to connect to. The name must have been previously created by assigning it to at least one socket within the same 0MQ context as the socket being connected. WIRE FORMAT
Not applicable. EXAMPLES
Assigning a local address to a socket. /* Assign the in-process name "#1" */ rc = zmq_bind(socket, "inproc://#1"); assert (rc == 0); /* Assign the in-process name "my-endpoint" */ rc = zmq_bind(socket, "inproc://my-endpoint"); assert (rc == 0); Connecting a socket. /* Connect to the in-process name "#1" */ rc = zmq_connect(socket, "inproc://#1"); assert (rc == 0); /* Connect to the in-process name "my-endpoint" */ rc = zmq_connect(socket, "inproc://my-endpoint"); assert (rc == 0); SEE ALSO
zmq_bind(3) zmq_connect(3) zmq_ipc(7) zmq_tcp(7) zmq_pgm(7) zmq(7) AUTHORS
This manual page was written by the 0MQ community. 0MQ 2.2.0 04/04/2012 ZMQ_INPROC(7)
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