A Waste of VLSM
1.1.2 This page will explain how certain address schemes can waste address space.
In the past, the first and last subnet were not supposed to be
used. The use of the first subnet, which was known as subnet zero, was
discouraged because of the confusion that could occur if a network and a subnet
had the same address. This also applied to the use of the last subnet, which
was known as the all-ones subnet. With the evolution of network technologies
and IP address depletion, the use of the first and last subnets have become an
acceptable practice in conjunction with VLSM.
In Figure , the network management team has borrowed
three bits from the host portion of the Class C address that has been selected
for this address scheme.
If the team decides to use subnet zero, there will be eight
useable subnets. Each subnet can support 30 hosts. If the team decides to use
the no ip
subnet-zero command, there will be seven usable subnets with 30 hosts in each
subnet. Cisco routers with Cisco IOS version 12.0 or later, use subnet zero by
default.
In Figure , the
Such an address scheme is fine for a small LAN. However, it is
extremely wasteful if point-to-point connections are used.
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