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VLSM Subnetting Chart

The document outlines a VLSM chart that shows how IP addresses can be subnetted using various prefix lengths. It shows the prefix, netmask, number of subnets, number of hosts per subnet, and total number of hosts for prefix lengths of /24 through /30. Each block represents a possible subnet, with the network address inside and the broadcast address being the next lower subnet. Valid host addresses are between the network address plus one and the broadcast address minus one.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
541 views1 page

VLSM Subnetting Chart

The document outlines a VLSM chart that shows how IP addresses can be subnetted using various prefix lengths. It shows the prefix, netmask, number of subnets, number of hosts per subnet, and total number of hosts for prefix lengths of /24 through /30. Each block represents a possible subnet, with the network address inside and the broadcast address being the next lower subnet. Valid host addresses are between the network address plus one and the broadcast address minus one.

Uploaded by

josperezlo
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

VLSM chart

Prefix:
/24
Netmask:
.0
00000000
1 subnet
254 hosts each
254 total hosts

Prefix:
/25
Netmask: .128
10000000
2 subnets
126 hosts each
252 total hosts

last octet subnetting


Prefix:
/26
Netmask: .192
11000000
4 subnets
62 hosts each
248 total hosts

Prefix:
/27
Netmask: .224
11100000
8 subnets
30 hosts each
240 total hosts

Prefix:
/28
Netmask: .240
11110000
16 subnets
14 hosts each
224 total hosts

Prefix:
/29
Netmask: .248
11111000
32 subnets
6 hosts each
192 total hosts
.0

.0
.8
.0
.16
.16
.24
.0
.32
.32
.40
.32
.48
.48
.56
.0
.64
.64
.72
.64
.80
.80
.88
.64
.96
.96
.104
.96
.112
.112
.120
.0
.128
.128
.136
.128
.144
.144
.152
.128
.160
.160
.168
.160
.176
.176
.184
.128
.192
.192
.200
.192
.208
.208
.216
.192
.224
.224
.232
.224
.240
.240
.248

Prefix:
/30
Netmask: .252
11111100
64 subnets
2 hosts each
128 total hosts
.0
.4
.8
.12
.16
.20
.24
.28
.32
.36
.40
.44
.48
.52
.56
.60
.64
.68
.72
.76
.80
.84
.88
.92
.96
.100
.104
.108
.112
.116
.120
.124
.128
.132
.136
.140
.144
.148
.152
.156
.160
.164
.168
.172
.176
.180
.184
.188
.192
.196
.200
.204
.208
.212
.216
.220
.224
.228
.232
.236
.240
.244
.248
.252

Each block of a specific column identifies a possible subnet.


The network address of the subnet is the number shown inside a block.
The broadcast address of the subnet is the network address of the block underneath minus 1. For the bottom block, the broadcast address is .255.
All valid hosts addresses for a particular subnet are in the range [network address plus 1 broadcast address minus 1], inclusive.

by Daniele Raffo

[Link]/~raffo

26/7/2006

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