In a network connection,the network has 60 people connected,when he assigns an ip to 61th person,it doesnt get assigned. Even in a CLASS C server,255 should be the minimum range of ip's assigned,any idea why is that happening?
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1There are no more network classes, this is an antiquated term. You are referring to a /24 subnet. – MDMarra Aug 21 '10 at 19:27
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What is the new standard ? – Aug 21 '10 at 20:13
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1CIDR: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CIDR, http://serverfault.com/questions/49765/how-does-subnetting-work – Sven Aug 21 '10 at 20:19
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@MarkM - thanks for pointing that out. I litereally screamed inside my head and saw red when I saw ANOTHER `class` based question. – Mark Henderson Aug 21 '10 at 21:48
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@Farseeker: I thought of you :) – squillman Aug 21 '10 at 22:53
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@squill - naawww I have a reputation! This makes a certain kitty proud. – Mark Henderson Aug 23 '10 at 01:19
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This seems like the DHCP server is only configured for 60 addresses. You would have to reconfigure it to make more addresses available.
But I get the feeling I am doing your homework for you, right?
Sven
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My friend runs a network and he told me that he has this problem so i discussed. – Aug 21 '10 at 20:12
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Sven is right, however you did not indicate whether the DHCP server was Unix or Windows or "other" - How you have your network Class C laid out eg: 1-10 reserved 11-20 network devices, 21-40 printers 41-100 DHCP 101 - 255 VPN Tunnels and static devices...
With a DHCP server, unless you have a very tiny infrastructure, you would not let DHCP have 1-255. Is this a test? ;^)
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Please do not call a /24 a Class C. There haven't been network classes for many years. – MDMarra Aug 21 '10 at 21:57
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"Old timer" habit, Mark. I been in the biz since the 80's - running multi-user Xenix BBS's in Silicon Valley before the internet was opened up for private use. /24 = Class C - I stand corrected.. I trust you had little else you found repugnant with my response? ;^) – Aug 22 '10 at 17:58