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Date:      Thu, 15 Feb 1996 15:23:13 -0700
From:      Nate Williams <nate@sri.MT.net>
To:        davidg@Root.COM
Cc:        Nate Williams <nate@sri.MT.net>, hackers@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Broadcast, Netmask, and other such information 
Message-ID:  <199602152223.PAA01710@rocky.sri.MT.net>
In-Reply-To: <199602152215.OAA07636@Root.COM>
References:  <199602152115.OAA01407@rocky.sri.MT.net> <199602152215.OAA07636@Root.COM>

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David Greenman writes:
> >Maybe I'm not making myself clear.  When I say 'addresses in the
> >subnet', I'm trying to convey a number which *should* be a power of 2 #.
> >In the above example, there are 32 addresses assigned in each subnet, of
> >which there are only 31 usable as host addresses (except in the first
> >and last subnets due to the .0 & .255 addresses being unusable).
> 
>    Actually, no, you would only get 30 hosts per subnet. The all-ones host
> part on each subnet is the subnet's broadcast address and all-zeros host
> can't be used, either.

I'm assigned 32 IP addresses out of the 10.5.5.0/24, which is
10.5.5.96/27. Are you saying that I can't use the address 10.5.5.96
since it's the 'all zeroes' address?



Nate



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