Classless Inter-Domain Routing: Difference between revisions

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'''Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR)''' is a set of administrative and technical measures, which were one of the "just in time" fixes that allowed continued growth of the public [[Internet]] which had not been planned for such growth. It dealt with the procedures for assigning [[Internet Protocol version 4]] (IPv4) space, working around the limitations of [[routing]] technology of the time, a move to [[routing protocol]]s that could usefully distribute CIDR information, and, with difficulty, a large user education problem.
==Background==
===Internet Protocol addressing===
All versions of the [[Internet Protocol]] assume that the address is split into a ''locator'' part that tells routers how to move it closer to its destination, and an ''identifier'' that brings it to the specific destination host on the final medium on the route. In the very first version of IPv4,<ref name=RFC760>{{citation
| title = Internet Protocol
| id = RFC 760
| publisher = [[Internet Engineering Task Force]]
| url = http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc760.txt}}</ref>the locator field was a fixed 8 bits, allowing for a maximum of 255 possible locators (i.e., possible internconnected networks0. This fit the early research ARPANET, which principally linked large time-sharing computers; there were no [[personal computers]], [[local area network]], or routing within organizations.
The 8-bit locator very quickly proved inadequate, and a quick fix was applied with RFC 791. By constraining the value of the first three bits of the locator field, without changing the address length, which would need substantial equipment change, it became possible, among other things, to have more locators with different lengths, appropriate for large, medium and small networks:<ref name=RFC791>{{citation
| title = Internet Protocol
| id = RFC 791
| publisher = [[Internet Engineering Task Force]]
| url = http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc791.txt}}</ref>
*Class A: 8-bit locator
*Class B: 16-bit locator
*Class C: 24-bit locator
This change also defined an address space for [[multicasting]].
==References==
"Classless Routing (CIDR)", Section 4.3.2 in Computer Networks, 4th ed., Peterson & Davie (2007).
"Classless Routing (CIDR)", Section 4.3.2 in Computer Networks, 4th ed., Peterson & Davie (2007).


RFC-4632, BCP 122 (2006), "Classless Inter-domain Routing (CIDR): The Internet Address Assignment and Aggregation Plan", V.Fuller, T.Li, http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4632.
RFC-4632, BCP 122 (2006), "Classless Inter-domain Routing (CIDR): The Internet Address Assignment and Aggregation Plan", V.Fuller, T.Li, http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4632.

Revision as of 11:42, 1 November 2009

Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) is a set of administrative and technical measures, which were one of the "just in time" fixes that allowed continued growth of the public Internet which had not been planned for such growth. It dealt with the procedures for assigning Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) space, working around the limitations of routing technology of the time, a move to routing protocols that could usefully distribute CIDR information, and, with difficulty, a large user education problem.

Background

Internet Protocol addressing

All versions of the Internet Protocol assume that the address is split into a locator part that tells routers how to move it closer to its destination, and an identifier that brings it to the specific destination host on the final medium on the route. In the very first version of IPv4,[1]the locator field was a fixed 8 bits, allowing for a maximum of 255 possible locators (i.e., possible internconnected networks0. This fit the early research ARPANET, which principally linked large time-sharing computers; there were no personal computers, local area network, or routing within organizations.

The 8-bit locator very quickly proved inadequate, and a quick fix was applied with RFC 791. By constraining the value of the first three bits of the locator field, without changing the address length, which would need substantial equipment change, it became possible, among other things, to have more locators with different lengths, appropriate for large, medium and small networks:[2]

  • Class A: 8-bit locator
  • Class B: 16-bit locator
  • Class C: 24-bit locator

This change also defined an address space for multicasting.

References

"Classless Routing (CIDR)", Section 4.3.2 in Computer Networks, 4th ed., Peterson & Davie (2007).

RFC-4632, BCP 122 (2006), "Classless Inter-domain Routing (CIDR): The Internet Address Assignment and Aggregation Plan", V.Fuller, T.Li, http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4632.