About ipconfig and ping For each question below, type the question number follow
ID: 3604140 • Letter: A
Question
About ipconfig and ping
For each question below, type the question number followed by your answer directly in the provided Text Entry field (you see it after clicking the Submit Assignment button to the far upper right of your screen). 10 point each question. No file attachment.
1. First, connect your PC (wired or wireless) to a LAN wherever appropriate, including at home or work place, and execute the command "ipconfig -all" to find your IPv4 and subnet mask from the output display. Then, use them to calculate your LAN network address. Write down the data you collect or calculate for the following items to complete this first work.
(a) Your PC and LAN location (e.g., your room/house or McDonald or Walmart or USF, etc.)
(b) Host name and primary DNS suffix (they can be found from ipconfig output)
(b) The IPv4 address, subnet mask, and your calculated network address.
2. Repeat the above work but at a different place/LAN.
3. Use the ipconfig output of the first work, find and write down
(a) the DHCP Server's IP address
(b) the lease obtained date/time and lease expires date/time,
(c) calculate the total lease amount of time (i.e., the difference of the above (a) and (b))
4. From the output of "ipconfig -all", you should see Tunnel adapter Teredo and Tunnel adapter isatap. Do a quick simple research to explain what they are.
5. Execute the command "ping www.myflorida.com" (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. in your command prompt.Links to an external site.
5.1 How many packets sent, received, and lost?
5.2 What's the average round trip times (in msec)?
6. In order to ping the destination www.google.com with 6 Echo Request messages, each of which has a Data field of 580 bytes, what command should you type in the command line? (You need to study about "ping" and its parameters using the reference provided in the lab to answer this correctly.)
7. In many cases, the 'ping' command successfully gets several replies, for instance, to google.com or bestbuy.com or NewYorkTimes.com. In some cases, however, it returns nothing but a few 'request timed out' for some hosts like my.usf.edu or ibm.com. Explain why.
Explanation / Answer
Question 1:(MY HOME NETWORD WIFI)
a) I did not find location in result of ipconfig -all
b) IP address: 192.168.1.177
Netmask: 0xffffff00 = 255.255.255.0
calculated network address: IP address XOR Netmask
network address: 192.168.1.0
Question 2:(MY COLLEGE NETWORK LAN)
a) I tried connect to some other network.
Here also I could not find location in result of ipconfig -all
b) IP address: 10.3.4.191
Netmask: 0xffff0000 = 255.255.0.0
network address: 10.3.0.0
Question 3:
DHCP server’s address in my home network is 192.168.1.1
DHCP server’s addresses in my college are 10.1.3.5 and 10.1.3.6 also.
I have no access to DHCP server. So, I cannot provide you lease times.
Question 4:
I did not see anything regarding below 2 things in my system. But I did research.
Teredo tunneling is a transition technology that gives full IPv6 connectivity for IPv6-capable hosts which are on the IPv4 Internet but which have no direct native connection to an IPv6 network
ISATAP (Intra-Site Automatic Tunnel Addressing Protocol) is an IPv6 transition mechanism meant to transmit IPv6 packets between dual-stack nodes on top of an IPv4 network
Question 5:
5.1) When I did “ping www.myflorida.com”, packets are continuously going from my system to destination server. I stopped abruptly when 10 packets are completed sending.
10 packets were sent. 10 packets were received. 0.0% loss
5.2) Average RTT: 595.915 ms
Question 6:
ping www.google.com -c 6 -s 580
Question 7:
Request Time Out will come when host gets no response from destination server within specified time.