On Sat, 2004-05-08 at 10:05, Jamie Cadorette wrote:
>> I'm' not a network expert, and others will probably
correct me if I am wrong, but I think it is unusual or
even plain wrong to have an IP address (inet addr)
ending in .0. The last number should be between 1 and
254. Did you set this yourself, or was it allocated
by DHCP? <<
This is correct. With an IP address, a hostid of all
zeroes (ending in .0) and a hostid of all ones (ending
in .255) are both reserved. A valid IP should end with
a number from 1 through 254. It has been my experience
that the number 1 is usually seen on DNS servers and
routers.
- Jamie
It all depends on the subnet mask which defines what portion of the IP
address represents the network and what portion represents the host
addresses. If your network uses a 16 bit subnet mask there can be
several host address that end in 0 and 255.
Very strange looking but perfectly valid.
In the case described above they have a 24 bit subnet mask, in that case
you are correct the address ending in 0 is the network and 255 is the
broadcast.
--
Scot L. Harris <webid(a)cfl.rr.com>