Difference between revisions of "Unrouteable private ip address"
Mrjcleaver (talk | contribs) (Subnetting chart) |
(there is only one class A network; all 192.168 is private; excessive newline removed; formatting) |
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There are three address ranges designated as private as per RFC 1918: | There are three address ranges designated as private as per RFC 1918: | ||
| − | * 10.0.0.0 | + | * <code>10.0.0.0</code> … <code>10.255.255.255</code> (<code>10/8</code>) - (Class A network that start with <code>10.</code>) |
| − | * 172.16.0.0 | + | * <code>172.16.0.0</code> … <code>172.31.255.255</code> (<code>172.16/12</code>) - (Class B networks that start with <code>172.16.</code>) |
| − | * 192.168.0.0 | + | * <code>192.168.0.0</code> … <code>192.168.255.255</code> (<code>192.168/16</code>) - (Class C networks that start with <code>192.168.</code>) |
| − | |||
== External links == | == External links == | ||
Revision as of 07:57, 3 June 2008
There are three address ranges designated as private as per RFC 1918:
10.0.0.0…10.255.255.255(10/8) - (Class A network that start with10.)172.16.0.0…172.31.255.255(172.16/12) - (Class B networks that start with172.16.)192.168.0.0…192.168.255.255(192.168/16) - (Class C networks that start with192.168.)