oops. Sorry, that's what I meant. 216.13.3.192 for the IP and 255.255.255.192 for the netmask, just as you said. When doing so, it acted as an open relay to any connection.

At 01:17 PM 3/28/2002, R. Scott Perry wrote:


I have the top 64 IP's of a class C, so I was using 216.13.3.192 for both.

If you use 216.13.3.192 as the IP, and 255.255.255.192 as the netmask, it should work.

A netmask should (except in the most unusual cases, such as if one person got odd IPs in a given range whereas someone else got the even IPs) be a binary number of all 1's followed by all 0's.  By using 216.13.3.192 as the netmask, you'll get unusual results.
                     -Scott

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