Too many 1's and 0's...  Going cross eyed.   So basically, the last octet of
the netmask is what determines the /# after the ip address.  Oh man, more
reading to do now again.  And I just got it figured out how my other Linux
boxes can get out to the internet, and need to look into why the W98se
can't.....  Will the madness ever end??? ;)


Shawn


"Austad, Jay" wrote:

> I dunno, I haven't used ipchains with a dialup connection.  If it works,
> good.  :)
>
> CIDR stands for Classless Inter-domain routing (or something like that).
> 192.168.2.0 with a netmask of 255.255.255.0 is the same as 192.168.2.0/24.
> If you take the netmask and write it in binary, you get:
> 11111111 11111111 11111111 00000000
>
> which is 24 bits, hence the /24.  255.255.0.0 is "11111111 11111111 00000000
> 00000000" which is /16. And my DSL is 255.255.255.240 which is "11111111
> 11111111 11111111 11110000" which is /28.
>
> Jay