Chapter 2: Advanced IP Addressing Management
Media:
2.1.1
The Internet Used a Two-Level Hierarchy
2.1.2
Address Architecture
The Internet Used a Two-Level Hierarchy
Routing Table with Host-Based Routing
Routing Table with Network-Based Routing
2.1.3
Address Architecture
IP Address Classes
2.2.1
Why Classless Interdomain Routing
2.2.2
CIDR Example
2.2.3
20 Bit CIDR Network Number
2.3.1
How Big Is The Internet?
How Big Is The Internet?
2.3.2
Telephone Number Hierarchy
2.3.3
Slowing IP Address Depletion
2.3.4
IPv6 Prefix and Address Format
Allocation of IPv6 Prefixes
IPv6 Address Assignment Hierarchy
IPv6 Address Assignment Hierarchy
Local-Use Address Formats
2.4.1
Variable-Length Subnet Masks
2.4.2
Classless and Classful Updates
2.4.3
Calculating VLSMs
Class B IP Address Quantities
Class C IP Address Quantities
2.4.4
VLSM Internetwork
2.5.1
Route Summarization
Route Summarization
2.5.2
Summarizing Within an Octet
2.5.3
Summarization by Multiple Routers
2.5.4
RIP1 and IGRP Do Not Advertise Subnets
2.6.1
NAT Router
2.6.2
Translating Inside Local Addresses (0-6)
2.6.3
NAT Implementation Considerations
2.7.1
Using IP Unnumbered
2.7.2
Configuring IP Unnumbered on Serial Interfaces (0-2)
2.7.3
RIP with IP Unnumbered Configured Properly (0-2)
2.7.4
Host Routes (0-6)
2.7.5
RIP with IP Unnumbered Configured Improperly
2.7.6
Example of Routing Updates (0-6)
2.7.7
New Major Network
2.8.1
Cisco IOS Easy IP
2.8.2
Easy IP Topology (1-3)
2.8.3
Configuration of the Cisco IOS DHCP Server
2.9.1
Purpose of Helper Addresses
2.9.2
Server Location
The IP Forward-Protocol Command
2.9.3
Route Exchange
Forwarding Default UDP Broadcasts
Forwarding Default and Other Broadcasts
Directed Broadcast into Subnet
Directed Broadcast and Unicast