In a message written on Wed, Aug 10, 2005 at 03:55:32PM +0100, sdb@stewartb.com wrote:
The current recommendation for a /48 for any customer (pretty much) does initially seem to me to be a bit wasteful, though that's perhaps because I keep thinking in IPv4 terms. Having said that, I think that perhaps a /48 for home users isn't _really_ necessary. How many domestic appliances can you connect to the net :)
That's not really the question you want to be asking. The current mantra is a /64 per subnet. Now, we can argue that point separately, but taking that as a given for now (so autoconfiguration will work) what a /48 is really telling you is that a home user gets 65536 subnets. 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. -- Leo Bicknell - bicknell@ufp.org - CCIE 3440 PGP keys at http://www.ufp.org/~bicknell/ Read TMBG List - tmbg-list-request@tmbg.org, www.tmbg.org