Wiki User
∙ 12y ago255: 1111_1111
5: 0000_0101
1: 0000_0001
2: 0000_0010
Source IP address: 10.10.5.1
Subnet mask: 255.255.255.0
Subnet: 10.10.5.0 (host subnet)
Destination IP address: 10.10.5.2
Subnet mask: 255.255.255.0
Subnet: 10.10.5.0 (destination subnet)
The destination subnet address for 10.10.5.0 which is the same subnet as the host. Therefore, the packet stays in the LAN.
Wiki User
∙ 12y agoWiki User
∙ 11y agoIt would stay on the LAN because the network address is the same in both IP addresses. Both hosts are on the same sub-net (10.10.5.0) and would be using the same mask (255.255.255.0)
DHCP
Your dum to not no the answer.
subnet mask destination IP address
IP number and MAC address.
A local IP address (your computer) and a remote IP address (the destination computer).
the address Class
No, it is not. A destination IP address may be any address, usually on a completely different network. The default gateway address is used to determine where to send packets that need to be routed outside of the current local area network.
network portion of ip address
to initiate a ping to determine if a destination address is reachable
network portion of ip address
The destination address field in a frame refers to the physical (or MAC) address of the destination node.
The message must travel from your computer to your router. Every computer connected to a network has a network interface card (NIC) with a unique physical address, called a MAC address (for Media Access Control). At the data link level, two more headers are added, one for your computer's NIC address (the source MAC) and one for your router's NIC address. A data link layer structure with destination MAC, source MAC, and data is called a frame. Every NIC selects from the network those frames with its own address as a destination address. The data link layer adds the structure necessary for data to get from your computer to another computer (a router is just a dedicated computer) on your network. Data Link Layer Transformation.