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Full Discussion: Subnetting
Special Forums IP Networking Subnetting Post 302993554 by lobsang on Saturday 11th of March 2017 04:54:42 AM
Old 03-11-2017
thanks a lot for wonderful explanation. Does that means
Code:
192.168.1.0/24

has 254 usable host address and that 254 host has to share only one network address. ie i can have only one network and within that network i cannot have more than 254 computers.

And using that subnetting i get two network with each network having 126 usable host address.

can you please check what i quoted below make sense or its wrong

Quote:
SmilieSmilielogically every public address without subnetting has only one network address no matter its class A,B or C. With difference class it makes only difference with how much Host it will have .. is that correct SmilieSmilie

Last edited by lobsang; 03-11-2017 at 06:00 AM..
 

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WHOIS.CONF(5)							 Debian GNU/Linux						     WHOIS.CONF(5)

NAME
whois.conf - alternative WHOIS servers list for whois client SYNOPSIS
/etc/whois.conf DESCRIPTION
This file contains a list of WHOIS servers which can augment or override the built-in list of the client. It's a plain text file in ASCII encoding. Each line consists of two fields: a pattern to match WHOIS object identifier and a corresponding WHOIS server domain name. Fields are separated by non-empty sequence of space or a tabular characters. A line starting with a hash character is a free comment and it's not considered. The pattern is case-insensitive extended regular expression if whois client has been compiled with POSIX regular expressions support. Oth- erwise, simple case-insensitive suffix comparison against WHOIS object identifier is used. Internationalized domain names (IDN) must be specified in ascii-compatible encoding (ACE) format. EXAMPLE
.nz$ nz.whois-servers.net # Hangul Korean TLD .xn--3e0b707e$ whois.kr # Private ASNs ^as645(1[2-9]|2[0-9]|3[0-4])$ whois.example.net FILES
/etc/whois.conf SEE ALSO
whois(1) AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Petr Pisa <ppisar@redhat.com> and is licensed under the terms of the GNU General Public License, version 2 or higher. Petr Pisa 9 April 2013 WHOIS.CONF(5)
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