Reference no: EM133466859
Exercise 1:
Convert the following IPv6 address given in binary to its canonical text representation shown in step 1:
11010011 00000101 11111100 10101010 00000000 11000000 11100111 00111100
01010000 11000001 10000101 00001111 00100100 11011011 10100011 01100110
Exercise 2:
Apply leading zero removal to the following address:
00000000 10001111 11000110 00000001 00001011 00111110 11111110 00011000
11101110 01110000 00111001 11111110 01010100 11000001 00000001 11100111
Be sure to convert the address to its canonical text notation representation and make sure to eliminate all leadings 0 digits as appropriate.
Exercise 3:
Apply zero compression to the following address:
00000000 10001111 11000110 00000001 00001011 00111110 11111110 00011000
11101110 01110000 00111001 11111110 01010100 11000001 00000001 11100111
Be sure to convert the address to its canonical text notation representation and apply zero compression. In this exercise, DO NOT apply leading zero removal
Exercise 4:
Apply zero compression AND leading zero removal to the following address:
00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 10101011
00001001 00010000 00000000 00000000 11110001 01010110 00001101 01010101
Be sure to convert the address to its canonical text notation representation and apply both zero compression AND leading zero removal.
Exercise 5:
Imagine that a computer is assigned IPv4 address 245.19.1.99. Create its corresponding IPv4-mapped IPv6 address as demonstrated in step 9, making sure to zero compress the result.