nanog mailing list archives

Re: IPv6 Address Planning


From: Mark Andrews <Mark_Andrews () isc org>
Date: Thu, 11 Aug 2005 16:33:30 +1000 (EST)


In article <1B11954B-DF25-458E-B2A7-E3A5FCBEC74E () muada com> you write:

On 10-aug-2005, at 18:03, Leo Bicknell wrote:

IPv6 allocations in the host portion (with /64 boundaries) are
sparce, even for the largest networks.  The number of hosts becomes
unimportant.  The question we need to ask is how many independant
subnets will they need.

This is why many people are proposing a /56 for home users, as it
gives you 256 subnets.  Still more than most people will need.

Others have proposed /52 and /60, since many want to claim DNS is
easier if done in nibbles.

And the extra precision offered by the intermediate values isn't  
really required at this point in the discussion.  :-)

I'm very much oppossed to /56 because it's still more than most users  
need. In and of itself that doesn't matter, but it's also less than  
what some users need. This creates the situation where people try to  
make do with a /56, find out that they need a /48 after all (all  
those /64 ptps...) and have to renumber. I.e., /56 provides too much  
potential for shooting yourself in the foot.

        So they need to renumber.  This really should not be a big
        deal.  IPv6 nodes should all support multiple prefixes,
        unlike the IPv4 world, so they should be able to transition
        gracefully from one prefix to the next.

        Add the new address to the DNS, withdraw the old one after
        a short period.  Similarly for PTR records.  With DNAME they
        don't even need to update the PTR's.  The routers just need
        to add new DNAME records.

        This still leaves firewall and other products which use raw
        IPv6 addresses.  However if the vendors of these products
        were to go through the exercise of renumbering I'm sure the
        most/all of the gotchas would disappear.

I think we should go for /60 for (presumably) one-router networks.  
That's still 3 to 5 times as many subnets as most of those will need.  
Anyone else should get a /48.


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