RE: Assigning IPv6 /48's to CPE's?

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Date: Thu Jan 03 2008 - 07:25:39 EST

  • Next message: Donald Stahl: "Re: Assigning IPv6 /48's to CPE's?"

    > > No, it gives them 16 bits for subnetting. Everybody gets
    > > 64 bits for addressing because everybody (except oddballs and
    > > enevelope pushers) uses a /64 subnet size. Since 64 bits
    > are more than
    > > anyone could ever possibly need for addressing and 16 bits is more
    > > than an end site could ever possibly need for subnetting,
    > the /48 is
    > > an ideal allocation size.
    >
    > As should be clear from the previous discussion, there are
    > plenty of us who disagree here, and lean towards /56 for end
    > users (typically residential customers) while business users
    > would get a /48 or more based on need.

    I wouldn't say that is a disagreement, more of an extension.
    In other words, many of us believe that 16 bits per end site
    is an ideal customer allocation, but feel that residential
    customers in their home are not in any way penalized by
    reducing this to 8 bits. They still have scope for a significant
    amount of subnetting even in extreme cases like constructing an
    inlaw suite plus operating a family business out of the home.

    I do agree that /56 per residential customer is the ideal allocation
    for a mid-sized to large ISP that has a large number of residential
    customer sites on its network. I expect that most such ISPs will
    implement a model with /48's to business and /56's to residential
    addresses. But I also expect that smaller ISPs or those who mainly
    supply business access services, will find it simpler to just give
    everyone a /48.

    The only place in which people have noted that there is a possibility
    of running out of bits in the existing IPv6 addressing hierarchy
    is when they look at a model where every residential customer gets
    a /48. In that scenario there is a possibility that we might runout
    in 50 to 100 years from now. If only the ISPs with a large residential
    user population go to a /56 per residential site, then we have solved
    the problem.

    --Michael Dillon


  • Next message: Donald Stahl: "Re: Assigning IPv6 /48's to CPE's?"





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