An identifier for a computer or device  on a TCP/IP network. Networks   using the TCP/IP protocol route messages based on the IP address of the   destination. The format of an IP address is a 32-bit numeric address   written as four numbers separated by periods. Each number can be zero to   255. For example, 1.160.10.240 could be an IP address.
Within  an  isolated network, you can assign IP addresses at random as long as  each  one is unique. However, connecting a private network to the  Internet  requires using registered IP addresses (called Internet  addresses) to  avoid duplicates.
The four numbers in an IP  address are used in  different ways to identify a particular network and  a host on that  network. Four regional Internet registries -- ARIN,  RIPE NCC, LACNIC and  APNIC -- assign Internet addresses from the  following three classes.
#  Class A - supports 16 million hosts on  each of 126 networks
# Class B  - supports 65,000 hosts on each of  16,000 networks
# Class C -  supports 254 hosts on each of 2 million  networks
The number of  unassigned Internet addresses is running  out, so a new classless scheme  called CIDR is gradually replacing the  system based on classes A, B, and  C and is tied to adoption of IPv6.
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