answersLogoWhite

0

E series

User Avatar

Wiki User

15y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

What class of network is reserved for special purposes?

A class D network is reserved for multi-casting. The class E series of network addresses are reserved for experimental purposes. 240 - 255 are reserved for class E addresses.


A class network class is reserved for special purposes?

Class A(government) and E are reserved for special purposes.


Which IP address class is reserved for small network ho st in each network?

Class C


What class network is reserved for special purposes?

Class D and E are reserved for special purposes. A Class D is 1110 the decimal range will be 224-239. Class E is reserved for InterNIC experiments.


How many class c network are reserved by RFC 1918?

17


Why can't the ip address 242.18.20.255 be used?

You can't use this because this is a class E network. It's reserved and it's not being used for anything.


Maximum number of hosts class c Address?

254 - a class C subnet uses 8 bits for the hosts and 0 and 255 are reserved.


How many hosts can each class b network have?

16 384 networks are available in Class B network.


How big are the network and host ID fields for a Class A address?

A class A address is one of the IPv4 class-full networks. There are 3 of these class-full networks in IPv4; class (A, B, and C). The entire IPv4 address range is 32 bits long. The address range is broken up into 4 x (8 bits) referred to as octets, and then giving the whole 32 bit address range. The classes are defined as follows… Class A = reserve the first octet, or 8 bits for network addresses and leave the remaining three for host addresses. Reserving the addresses for the network is also referred to as the network mask. In other words do not assign any address in the reserved, first octet, to a host. Class A = 11111111.00000000.00000000.00000000 also known as a /8 bits reserved for net Class B = 11111111.11111111.00000000.00000000 also known as a /16 bits reserved for net Class C = 11111111.11111111.11111111.00000000 also known as a /24 bits reserved for net So the answer is; a class A network has an 8 bit field for the network, and a 24 bit field for the host


What are special IPv4 addresses and what are they used for?

0.0.0.0 --> Current network (only valid as source address) 10.x.x.x --> Private address space for class A networks 14.x.x.x --> Public data network 127.0.0.1 --> Loopback (refers to own computer) 128.0.0.x --> Reserved (IANA) 169.254.0.x --> Zeroconf network 172.16.x.x through 172.31.x.x --> Private address space for class B networks 191.255.0.x --> Reserved (IANA) 192.0.0.x --> Reserved (IANA) 192.88.99.0 --> IPv6 to IPv4 relay 192.168.x.x --> Private address space for class C networks 198.18.0.0 --> Benchmark tests 223.255.255.0 --> Reserved (IANA) 224.0.0.x --> Multicasting 240.0.0.x --> Reserved 255.255.255.255 --> Broadcast I think I've got that right.


What is freight class 92.5 description?

Usually reserved for used electronics.


What are the valid class C ip addresses that can be assigned to hosts?

Class C IP addresses range from 192.0.0.0 to 223.255.255.255. However, the first address in each subnet is reserved as the network address, and the last address is reserved for the broadcast address. Therefore, valid Class C addresses that can be assigned to hosts typically range from 192.0.0.1 to 223.255.255.254, excluding the network and broadcast addresses within any specific subnet.