In message <CAPkb-7C5LX0QwYpFq5QYyvFaHSbQfvW7tkHsuezvqDtMVYCY_w@mail.gmail.com> , Baldur Norddahl writes:
Hello,
Let me introduce another first world problem. We use DHCPv4 to assign each user a IPv4 /32 and DHCPv6-PD to assign a IPv6 /128 WAN plus a /48 prefix. All good.
However we are an ISP where the customer chooses his own CPE. We just ship a modem/mediaconverter/ONU with one ethernet port. The customer is expected to plug his home router in here.
However sometimes we have a customer that wants to buy an extra IPv4 address. We are happy to sell him that. Now he has two (or more) IPv4 addresses. Turns out most of these customers are not configuring the extra IPv4 addresses on a single home router (most CPEs probably can not handle multiple WAN addresses anyway). Instead these people put in a switch and then have multiple devices, each with one IPv4.
A typical setup is a home router (CPE) plus a server, or they might have some VPN device forced on them by their employeers or they might simply be sharing the internet connection with the neighbour (we allow that).
However we are forbidden to deliver more than one /48. What to do?
Who is forbidding you? Not the IETF. Not the RIRs.
Currently we will deliver exactly one /48 to one device and just say sorry, you will have to figure out how to get IPv6 on your other devices. The experience is that 100% of the guys then simply do not have any IPv6 on the other devices. Figuring out how to route a slice of that /48 is too much for even most technical minded customers.
Would you deliver say /52 prefixes instead but reserve /48, so the DHCP server has the option to deliver up to 16x /52 per customer?
Regards,
Baldur
Just have them deploy a IPv6 router and configure it to brigde IPv4. As far as the existing clients are concerned they will just be on a LAN with a /64 out of the /48 and IPv4. A cheap linux / *bsd box will do this. -- Mark Andrews, ISC 1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742 INTERNET: marka@isc.org