> > It's a reserved address, which means that it will never be assigned. > > The ISP can still uses these addresses within their internal network. > > Speaking of which, where can I find the official list of reserved > addresses (like this one and 192.168.x.x)? RFC 1918 has one list. There is an internet draft that lists the others. --bill - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-net" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
- TCP Wrappers - Allow POP connections Chuck Gadd
- Re: TCP Wrappers - Allow POP connections Jason Mott
- Re: TCP Wrappers - Allow POP connecti... Alexander Feldman
- Re: TCP Wrappers - Allow POP connections Glynn Clements
- Re: TCP Wrappers - Allow POP connecti... Rivaldo Moreira
- 10.10.1.1 as a DNS server address... Warren Mira
- Re: 10.10.1.1 as a DNS server... Glynn Clements
- Re: 10.10.1.1 as a DNS s... Juan Carlos Castro y Castro
- Re: 10.10.1.1 as a D... bmanning
- Re: 10.10.1.1 as a D... Glynn Clements
- Re: 10.10.1.1 as... Michael Kujawa