In message <498A3514.1050608@internode.com.au>, Matthew Moyle-Croft writes:
Patrick W. Gilmore wrote:
And before anyone says "there are 281474976710656 /48s!", just remember your history. I was not there when v4 was spec'ed out, but I bet when someone said "four-point-two BILLION addresses", someone else said "no $@#%'ing way we will EVER use THAT many...."
Let's face it - the current v6 assignment rules are to solve a 1990s set of problems. A /64 isn't needed now that we have DHCP(v6). Setting the idea in people's heads that a /64 IS going to be their own statically is insane and will blow out provider's own routing tables more than is rational. (Think of the processing overhead of all the DSL/Cable customers going up and down). This is going to be far more of an issue and drive network design than a minor blow out in the v6 routing table.
Assign the prefixes using PD and use aggregate routes out side of the pop. IPv6 nodes are designed to be renumbered. Use the technology. Stop thinking IPv4 and start thinking IPv6. IPv6 is not just IPv4 with bigger addresses. Mark -- Mark Andrews, ISC 1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742 INTERNET: Mark_Andrews@isc.org