It's called a global multicast, and you're transmitting to all reachable nodes.
It represents the network portion
In this case, 'network' refers to a specific network prefix, such as 192.168.0.0/24 or 10.0.0.0/8. 'Advertising a network' typically refers to announcing a route for that network prefix into a routing protocol, most commonly BGP (but this term is sometimes also used when working with IGPs such as OSPF and IS-IS). In other words, if your network prefix is 172.16.0.0/24 and you want other networks to be able to reach your network, you advertise a route for 172.16.0.0/24 into the appropriate routing protocol, which allows the other networks to know how to find you. It's kind of like giving all your friends your home address, all at once.
An area of a network that shares a common address component. On TCP/IP networks, subnets are defined as all devices whose IP Addresses have the same prefix. Dividing a network into subnets is useful for both security and performance reasons. IP networks are divided using a subnet mask.
Yes - the first bits specify the network, the remaining bits, a host within a network. There is no fixed number of bits for the network; this may vary.Yes - the first bits specify the network, the remaining bits, a host within a network. There is no fixed number of bits for the network; this may vary.Yes - the first bits specify the network, the remaining bits, a host within a network. There is no fixed number of bits for the network; this may vary.Yes - the first bits specify the network, the remaining bits, a host within a network. There is no fixed number of bits for the network; this may vary.
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All devices that are reachable
All Devices that are reachable. Do your homework yourself. Man, if you dont like helping people with thir homework then do not help. Plain and simple. Get over yourself.
All devices on your network segment.
what is the subnet mask for this hst IP prefix format ? Host IP Address: 183.91.104.16
It is drome
Visafone
an IP address is represented as A.B.C.D /n, where "/n" is called the IP prefix or network prefix. The IP prefix identifies the number of significant bits used to identify a network. For example, 192.9.205.22 /18 means, the first 18 bits are used to represent the network and the remaining 14 bits are used to identify hosts.
an IP address is represented as A.B.C.D /n, where "/n" is called the IP prefix or network prefix. The IP prefix identifies the number of significant bits used to identify a network. For example, 192.9.205.22 /18 means, the first 18 bits are used to represent the network and the remaining 14 bits are used to identify hosts.
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In either IPv4 or IPv6, a network address is the first address in the network IP range. It has all zeroes in the host field, when written in binary. It cannot be assigned to a host device. It appears in a router's routing table to identify the network. For example:O 148.43.200.80/28 [110/586] via 148.43.200.30, 00:03:07, Serial0/0/0This shows that network 148.43.200.80 is reachable out interface s0/0/0. It is a /28 network, meaning 16 total IPv4 addresses. 148.43.200.80 is the first one, "the network address," and as said before, can't be assigned to a host device. This network would extend to 148.43.200 95, which would be the broadcast address for the network (all 1s in the binary host field), and also can't be assigned to a host.All the addresses in the network share the network prefix. It is simply the network portion of the address, in binary. Since these are /28 addresses, the network prefix is 28 bits long...the first 28 bits of the 32 bit address. For these addresses in the example network, the network prefix is (in bold):10010100.00101011.10001000.01010000. The remaining four bita at the end are the host bits, or host field, or host number (all the same thing).People will write this network prefix like so: 148.43.200.80 /28. Now 148.43.200.80 is the network address, so it's easy to see where the confusion comes from. You pretty much have to understand from context whether they're talking about the network prefix or the network address.Some people will refer to the CIDR prefix...the /28...just as the prefix, or even the network prefix, but it really is just a way to represent the subnet masking. It says that the first 28 bits of the address in question are the network bits, and will be identical for any IP in this network.
The country code for the US and Canada is +1. The plus sign means "insert your international access prefix here"; from Japan, that's 010, unless your phone company tells you to use a different prefix. Most mobile phones will allow you to program the number in international format, including the plus sign, and the mobile network automatically inserts the correct prefix.