• Sign in
  • Sign up
Elektrine
EN
Log in Register
Modes
Overview Chat Timeline Communities Gallery Lists Friends Email Vault DNS VPN
Back to Timeline
  • Open on lemmy.zip

jrgd

@jrgd@lemmy.zip
lemmy 0.19.18-beta.0

previously @jrgd@lemm.ee, @jrgd@kbin.social

Lemmy.zip

0 Followers
0 Following
Joined June 03, 2025

Posts

Open post
In reply to
jrgd
jrgd
@jrgd@lemmy.zip

previously @jrgd@lemm.ee , @jrgd@kbin.social Lemmy.zip

lemmy.zip
jrgd
jrgd
@jrgd@lemmy.zip

previously @jrgd@lemm.ee , @jrgd@kbin.social Lemmy.zip

lemmy.zip
@jrgd@lemmy.zip in linux · Mar 03, 2026
Iproute2 definitely does write things a bit compact. ip address show and shorthands state the routed local address space (192.168.1.x/24) and the actual /32 address (192.168.1.214) you are assigned as one unit. Additionally, it shows the broadcast address for the space. Ironically, ip route show may genuinely give you less confusing information, clearly splitting the actual route and showing your straight IPv4 address as src. Typically in firewalling, you’d use /32 to allow a singular IPv4 host. This is analogous to using /128 for IPv6 hosts. You can absolutely use /24, /16, /8, or any other mask really if you need to target a range of IP addresses for a rule to apply to. Technically, /32 is a range itself, just with a size of 1. There are CIDR calculators available to play around and see what different CIDR masks actually target.
View full thread on lemmy.zip
0
1
0
0
Open post
In reply to
jrgd
jrgd
@jrgd@lemmy.zip

previously @jrgd@lemm.ee , @jrgd@kbin.social Lemmy.zip

lemmy.zip
jrgd
jrgd
@jrgd@lemmy.zip

previously @jrgd@lemm.ee , @jrgd@kbin.social Lemmy.zip

lemmy.zip
@jrgd@lemmy.zip in linux · Mar 03, 2026
The routing and firewalling is a bit different in terms of why certain CIDR masks are used. For the router, the /24 prefix is usually defined for itself on the LAN interface to denote the address space it may send route information to, and what addresses are controlled by the device. Almost certainly, (unless using a lower CIDR range and actually handing out /24 blocks to subsequent routers), you are granting /32 IPv4 addresses to your device from your router. For your system firewall, 192.168.1.135/24 is identical to 192.168.1.0/24 as they are the same address space. You’re simply allowing from a subnet of hosts to accept from. Given the /24 mask is 255.255.255.0, it does not matter what the last number of the IPv4 address is, but the lowest possible number to match the mask is standard form. Without knowing what rule(s) specifically are being applied, I couldn’t tell you if your firewall rules are something that would affect hostname resolution of other hosts from your system or not.
View full thread on lemmy.zip
0
11
0
0
313k7r1n3

Company

  • About
  • Contact
  • FAQ

Legal

  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • VPN Policy

Email Settings

IMAP: mail.elektrine.com:993

POP3: pop3.elektrine.com:995

SMTP: mail.elektrine.com:465

SSL/TLS required

Support

  • support@elektrine.com
  • Report Security Issue

Connect

Tor Hidden Service

khav7sdajxu6om3arvglevskg2vwuy7luyjcwfwg6xnkd7qtskr2vhad.onion
© 2026 Elektrine. All rights reserved. • Server: 07:17:00 UTC