On Thu, Aug 8, 2013 at 12:04 AM, s m <sam.gh1...@gmail.com> wrote: > hello guys, > > i have a question about ip addresses. i know my question is not related to > freebsd but i googled a lot and found nothing useful and don't know where i > should ask my question. > > i want to know how can i calculate the number of ip addresses in a range? > for example if i have 192.0.0.1 192.100.255.254 with mask 8, how many ip > addresses are available in this range? is there any formula to calculate > the number of ip addresses for any range? > > i'm confusing about it. please help me to clear my mind. > thanks in advance,
My immediate reaction is.. is this a homework / classwork / assignment? Anyway, you can think of it by converting your start and end addresses to an integer. Over simplified: $ cat homework.c main() { int start = (192 << 24) | (0 << 16) | (0 << 8) | 1; int end = (192 << 24) | (100 << 16) | (255 << 8) | 254; printf("start %d end %d range %d\n", start, end, (end - start) + 1); } $ ./homework start -1073741823 end -1067122690 range 6619134 The +1 is correcting for base zero. 192.0.0.1 - 192.0.0.2 is two usable addresses. I'm not sure what you want to do with the mask of 8. You can also do it with ntohl(inet_addr("address")) as well and a multitude of other ways. -- Peter Wemm - pe...@wemm.org; pe...@freebsd.org; pe...@yahoo-inc.com; KI6FJV UTF-8: for when a ' just won\342\200\231t do. <brueffer> ZFS must be the bacon of file systems. "everything's better with ZFS" _______________________________________________ freebsd-net@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-net To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-net-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"