Short for
Internet Protocol,
IP is an address of a computer or other network device on a network using IP or TCP/IP. For example, the number "166.70.10.23" is an example of such an address. These addresses are similar to an addresses used on a house and is what allows data to reach the appropriate destination on a network.
There are five classes of available IP ranges: Class A, Class B, Class C, Class D and Class E, while only A, B and C are commonly used. Each class allows for a range of valid IP addresses. Below is a listing of these addresses.
Class | Address Range | Supports |
Class A | 1.0.0.1 to 126.255.255.254 | Supports 16 million hosts on each of 127 networks. |
Class B | 128.1.0.1 to 191.255.255.254 | Supports 65,000 hosts on each of 16,000 networks. |
Class C | 192.0.1.1 to 223.255.254.254 | Supports 254 hosts on each of 2 million networks. |
Class D | 224.0.0.0 to 239.255.255.255 | Reserved for multicast groups. |
Class E | 240.0.0.0 to 254.255.255.254 | Reserved for future use, or Research and Development Purposes. |
Ranges 127.x.x.x are reserved for loopback tests, for example,
127.0.0.1 is the common loopback address. Range
255.255.255.255 broadcasts to all hosts on the local network.
IP address breakdown
Every IP address is broke down into four sets of
octets that break down into
binary to represent the actual IP address. The below chart is an example of the IP 255.255.255.255. If you are new to binary, we highly recommend reading our
binary and hexadecimal conversions section to get a better understanding of what we're doing in the below charts.
IP: | 255 | 255 | 255 | 255 |
Binary value: | 11111111 | 11111111 | 11111111 | 11111111 |
Octet value: | 8 | 8 | 8 | 8 |
If we were to break down the IP "166.70.10.23", you would get the below value. The below fist row is the IP address, the second row the binary values, and the third row the binary value calculated to equal the total of that section of the IP address.
166 | 70 | 10 | 23 |
10100110 | 01000110 | 00001010 | 00010111 |
128+32+4+2=166 | 64+4+2=70 | 8+2=10 | 16+4+2+1=23 |
Automatically assigned addresses
There are several IP addresses that are automatically assigned when you setup a network. These default addresses are what allow your computer and other network devices to communicate and broadcast information over your network.
192.168.1.0 | 0 is the automatically assigned network address. |
192.168.1.1 | 1 is the commonly used address used as the gateway. |
192.168.1.2 | 2 is also a commonly used address used for a gateway. |
192.168.1.255 | 255 is automatically assigned on most networks as the broadcast address. |
Getting an IP address
By default the
router you use will assign each of your computers their own IP address, often using
NAT to forward the data coming from those computers to outside networks such as the Internet. If you need to register an IP address that can be seen on the Internet, you must register through
InterNIC or use a web host that can assign you addresses.
- Use our system information tool to see what your IP address and other system settings are.
- Additional information about network commands used to determine network information can be found on document CH000444.
- See document CH000483 for information on determining your IP address.
- See document CH000962 for additional information about determining another computer or a website IP address.
- Information about how to find the physical location of an IP address can be found on document CH001044.
- See our network help section for additional help and support with computer networking.
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