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In IPv4, a so-called limited broadcast address is 255.255.255.255. Packets destined to this address are never routed through a router. In IPv4, each network and subnet has its specific broadcast address that is also called a directed broadcast. For example, the 192.168.1.0/24 network has the broadcast address of 192.168.1.255.
Currently, the most popular way, and the default, is a broadcast address consisting of all ones (255.255.255.255), although the IOS can be configured to generate any form of IP broadcast address. To change the broadcast address you use the command "ip broadcast-address". The destination address can be set to any desired address. Thus, the ...
1- Local broadcast address. 2- Subnet broadcast address. 3- Network broadcast address. Local is the broadcast for the local subnet which we are all already know: 255.255.255.255. Subnet is the broadcast that specific network. For example: 10.1.1.0/24 network , the broadcast is 10.1.1.255 for that network.
As I understood ff.ff.ff.ff.ff.ff is a layer 2 broadcast address and 10.10.10.255/24 is Layer 3 broadcast address. As per understanding this layer 2 address should convert to layer 2 mac address. So what will be the layer 2 address for 10.10.10.255/24 . Advance thanks for your help
The broadcast boundary stops at the router interface . So if you have 6 vlans on the switch going to a router you run a trunk from the switch to the router each encapsulated with its own vlan id . So say a broadcast in vlan 10 will not be seen in say vlan 20 . Subnetting has nothing to do whether its broadcast is contained in its own subnet.
For example, is it possible to SSH to 10.0.1.15 that's falling inside 10.0.1.0/28 subnet as a broadcast address? or it makes sense to SSH to a router with an IP adds that's considered to be a Community
The mainframe is on FE0/1 with an IP address of 192.168.0.35/24. This mainframe needs to receive the broadcast packets from the 172.20.0.5 host, but NAT needs to occur *first* on 172.20.0.5 so that it looks like the source address of the broadcast packet is really coming from 172.21.0.5/24.
Hello. My understanding is: Lets say I am aware of a network 192.168.1.0 /24 = which Provides a Broadcast address of 192.168.1.255 - And I ping that address, I can use it as a direct broadcast towards that particular subnet and if ip directed broadcast was enabled for the interface connected to that subnet then broadcast traffic would be flooded within that network
However my linksys wrt600N won't let me set the port forward from port 9 to 9 onto ip address 192.168.1.255.. It says I need to enter something between 1 and 254... How can I port forward to a broadcast address?
Because the client is declining the use of the IP address supplied by the server, the client broadcasts DHCPDECLINE messages. When the DHCP client knows the address of a DHCP server, in either INIT or REBOOTING state, the client may use that address in the DHCPDISCOVER or DHCPREQUEST rather than the IP broadcast address.