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

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Date: Thu Jan 03 2008 - 09:49:13 EST

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    > Is it even a possibility then? A /48 to everyone means 48
    > bits left over for the network portion of the address.
    >
    > That's 281,474,976,710,656 /48 customer networks. It's 16
    > million times the number of class C's in the current IPv4
    > Internet. Am I just not thinking large or long term enough?

    No, you are just counting wrong. When you are talking /48's
    you are talking "number of bits of of subnet hierarchy", not
    "pile of pebbles on the beach". If you read the ARIN IPv6 policy
    you will see that they don't count /48's like pebbles, instead
    they use something called the HD Ratio.

    Basically, this recognizes that IP networks are not flat piles
    of pebbles, but have a hierarchical aggregation structure in
    them. At each level of aggregation, you have to do a fitting
    exercise, where you fit what you have into a power of two
    sized block. If you have 5 subnets that need to be aggregated
    into a single higher level subnet, then you must use 3 bits
    of your subnet hierarchy, even though those 3 bits could be
    used for as many as 8 subnets.

    This is not waste. It is a fact imposed by the structure of
    IPv6 (and IPv4) subnet addresses. In fact, when you "throw away"
    subnets (addresses) like that, you are actually following a
    prudent conservation policy. That's because this kind of bitwise
    network addressing is cheaper to implement in hardware and
    can be processed faster in hardware when doing things like
    FIB lookups. That conserves MONEY and TIME which are vastly
    more important to conserve than theoretical counting capacity
    of a bitstring.

    Remember, IP addresses don't really exist. They are just bitstrings
    which some people like to arrange in orderly sets such as:

    111000
    111001
    111010
    111011
    111100
    111101
    111110
    111111

    which is equivalent to 111000/3 or (111000,000111)

    --Michael Dillon


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