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Cel Mai Temut Tiran
Cel Mai Temut Tiran
addresses assignable
addresses reserved
addresses assignable
addresses reserved
addresses assignable
addresses reserved
addresses assignable
addresses reserved
addresses assignable
addresses reserved
addresses assignable
addresses reserved
addresses assignable
44:0...127:193:0...255--+
|
+- 1,015,808 addresses reserved
44:0...127:223:0...255--+
44:0...127:224:0...255------- 32,768 addresses assignable
44:0...127:225:0...255--+
|
+- 1,015,808 addresses reserved
44:0...127:255:0...255--+
44:128:xxx:xxx----------+
|
+- 8,388,608 addresses assignable (non USA)
44:255:xxx:xxx----------+
The above allocation and assignment scheme allows network
(subnet) and intranet (host/user) addresses to begin to be
immediately assigned to experimenters while retaining the largest
possible contiguous block of unassigned bits whose assignments
can be defined in the future with little or no impact on
previously allocated addresses.
The USER @ HOSTNAME .
SUBNET/ADMINISTRATION naming scheme represents a human-friendly
network naming convention which maps easily into numerical
network addresses. I believe that the above approach is in
general conformance with the requirements of RFC-950, "Internet
Standard Subnetting Procedure."
The numbering scheme as initially proposed allows for up to
1024 AMPRNET subnetworks of up to 256 hosts in the USA while
retaining five bits for future expansion.
That's 262,144
individual AMPRNET addressable entities. If the proposed method
of address assignment is followed and we run out of Host/User
addresses before we run out of network addresses, we can simply
pick up the least significant reserved bit and assign more
Host/User addresses. Conversely, if network addresses are more
popular we could easily expand by taking the most significant
reserved bit and allocating it for network addressing.
If it should become clear that every user on a network needs his
or her own IP address, each network could allocate user blocks in
256 user increments from the least significant reserved bits.
Possible combinations are 1024 networks each with up to 8192
individually addressable units or 2048 networks each with 4096
hosts/users (8,388,608 individually addressable entities).
The writer presumes that 8 million plus addresses ought to
last the US amateur population for some time to come. All we need
to do to avoid painting ourselves in a corner is to assign them
in a logical sequence rather than randomly.
last
"all"
44.000.000.xxx
44.064.000.xxx
44.032.000.xxx
44.096.000.xxx
44.016.000.xxx
44.080.000.xxx
44.048.000.xxx
44.112.000.xxx
44.008.000.xxx
44.072.000.xxx
.
.
.
44.063.000.xxx
44.127.000.xxx
;special
;network
;network
;network
;network
;network
;network
;network
case
admin:
admin:
admin:
admin:
admin:
admin:
admin:
;special case
KA9Q
N3EUA
WB6RQN
WB5EKU
WB6RQN
WA6JPR
N3CVL