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Waste will kill ipv6 too
And /48 was chosen as the site size so that we didnâ??t have to think about that either. Itâ??s large enough to cover almost all sites with additional /48s to be provided if you run out of /64s.
Nothing in the last 20+ years has lead me to believe that these decisions were wrong. In fact NOT following these rules has consequences for everybody else as you canâ??t policy filter at the /48 boundary without collateral damage. I would recommend that all ISPâ??s using longer prefixes for customer assignment shorten them to /48s.
Mark
> On 29 Dec 2017, at 8:35 am, Owen DeLong <owen at delong.com> wrote:
>
> Sighâ?¦ Letâ??s stop with the IPv4-think.
>
> Wasting 2^64 addresses was intentional because the original plan was for a 64-bit total
> address and the additional 64 bits was added to make universal 64-bit subnets a no-brainer.
>
> Owen
>
>> On Dec 28, 2017, at 09:55 , Michael Crapse <michael at wi-fiber.io> wrote:
>>
>> Yes, let's talk about waste, Lets waste 2^64 addresses for a ptp.
>> If that was ipv4 you could recreate the entire internet with that many addresses.
>>
>> On 28 December 2017 at 10:39, Owen DeLong <owen at delong.com <mailto:owen at delong.com>> wrote:
>>
>>> On Dec 28, 2017, at 09:23 , Octavio Alvarez <octalnanog at alvarezp.org <mailto:octalnanog at alvarezp.org>> wrote:
>>>
>>> On 12/20/2017 12:23 PM, Mike wrote:
>>>> On 12/17/2017 08:31 PM, Eric Kuhnke wrote:
>>>> Call this the 'shavings', in IPv4 for example, when you assign a P2P
>>>> link with a /30, you are using 2 and wasting 2 addresses. But in IPv6,
>>>> due to ping-pong and just so many technical manuals and other advices,
>>>> you are told to "just use a /64' for your point to points.
>>>
>>> Isn't it a /127 nowadays, per RFC 6547 and RFC 6164? I guess the
>>> exception would be if a router does not support it.
>>>
>>> Best regards,
>>> Octavio.
>>
>> Best practice used most places is to assign a /64 and put a /127 on the interfaces.
>>
>> Owen
>>
>>
>>
>
--
Mark Andrews, ISC
1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia
PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742 INTERNET: marka at isc.org