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Cisco Press wrote: CCNA ICND2 Cert Guide: Variable Length Subnet Masks Assigning the Largest Subnet IDs First VLSM subnet assignment first occurs on paper, when the network engineer looks at a list of subnet IDs and chooses which subnet ID to use for which need in the network topology. For example, Figure 5-4 shows the need for two subnets with a /18 mask, three subnets with a /24 mask, and three subnets with a /30 mask. What specific subnets did the engineer choose? Which subnets could the engineer have chosen? This section explores how to answer these questions and how to go about choosing subnets. When assigning subnets, follow this strategy: Choose the largest subnets first. To show you why, we continue the example based in part on Figure 5-4. In that company, the LAN team will assign the subnets for the /18 and /24 subnets, and the WAN team will assign all the /30 subnets. The WAN team has already deployed some WAN links, and they have the political power and are unwilling to change. The WAN team has already used subnets 172.16.50.0/30, 172.16.100.0/30, 172.16.150.0/30, and 172.16.200.0/30. Although the four WAN subnets have consumed a mere 16 addresses, unfortunately, those subnets have already busted the VLSM design. The four small subnet assignments have created an overlap with all four possible /18 subnets of network 172.16.0.0. Figure 5-5 shows the idea, with the four possible /18 subnets at the top and the overlapping WAN subnets at the bottom. Figure 5-5 Overlaps Caused by Unfortunate Assignments of Smaller Subnets When using mask /18, with Class B network 172.16.0.0, only four possible subnets exist: 172.16.0.0, 172.16.64.0, 172.16.128.0, and 172.16.192.0. The four small /30 WAN subnets each overlap with one of these four, as shown in Figure 5-5. How can you avoid making such mistakes? Either assign the smaller subnets from a much tighter range or assign the larger subnet IDs first, as suggested in this chapter. In this case, the LAN team could have allocated the first two /18 subnets first, and made the WAN team avoid using IP addresses from the first half of class B network 172.16.0.0. Admittedly, the WAN team could not have been any more shortsighted in this contrived example. Regardless, it shows how a small subnet assignment can prevent you from having a larger subnet available. You should always strive to keep large holes open in your address space in anticipation of assigning large subnets in the future.
myb20 wrote: » The examiner have given me reference of some examples in the course material where bigger subnets were created first... Do I really deserve zero marks if the subnets were not in ascending order.
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