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Is a /48 still the smallest thing you can route independently?
- Subject: Is a /48 still the smallest thing you can route independently?
- From: surfer at mauigateway.com (Scott Weeks)
- Date: Thu, 11 Oct 2012 15:09:59 -0700
--- rcarpen at network1.net wrote:
From: Randy Carpenter <rcarpen at network1.net>
> --- jrhett at netconsonance.com wrote:
> From: Jo Rhett <jrhett at netconsonance.com>
> I've finally convinced $DAYJOB to deploy IPv6. Justification for the
> IP space is easy, however the truth is that a /64 is more than we
> need in all locations. However the last I heard was that you can't
> effectively announce anything smaller than a /48. Is this still
> true?
>
> Is this likely to change in the immediate future, or do I need to ask
> for a /44?
> ----------------------------------------------------
> A /48 is 65536 /64s and a /44 is 16x65536 /64s. If you
> only need one subnet (1 subnet = 1 /64), why would you
> try to get 16x65536 subnets, rather than the 65536 you
> have in the /48?
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He said it was for multiple sites.
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DOH!
Note to self: focus on the outage and don't respond to NANOG
while troubleshooting. ;-)
scott