I've been involved in IX renumbering efforts because exchange(s) decided to use /25's instead of /24's. It's painful because troubleshooting can be a little difficult as differing subnetmasks are in play. If you have the address space, use a /24. ARIN has IPv4 address space specifically reserved for the use by IXPs. charles On Sat, Apr 4, 2015 at 8:35 PM, Mike Hammett <nanog@ics-il.net> wrote:
Okay, so I decided to look at what current IXes are doing.
It looks like AMS-IX, Equinix and Coresite as well as some of the smaller IXes are all using /64s for their IX fabrics. Seems to be a slam dunk then as how to handle the IPv6. We've got a /48, so a /64 per IX. For all of those advocating otherwise, do you have much experience with IXes? Multiple people talked about routing. There is no routing within an IX. I may grow, but an IX in a tier-2 American city will never scale larger than AMS-IX. If it's good enough for them, it's good enough for me.
Back to v4, I went through a few pages of PeeringDB and most everyone used a /24 or larger. INEX appears to use a /25 for each of their segments. IX Australia uses mainly /24s, but two locations split a /24 into /25s. A couple of the smaller single location US IXes used /25s and /26s. It seems there's precedent for people using smaller than /24s, but it's not overly common. Cash and address space preservation. What does the community think about IXes on smaller than /24s?
----- Mike Hammett Intelligent Computing Solutions http://www.ics-il.com
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From: "Brendan Halley" <brendan@halley.net.au> To: "Mike Hammett" <nanog@ics-il.net> Cc: nanog@nanog.org Sent: Saturday, April 4, 2015 6:10:34 PM Subject: Re: Small IX IP Blocks
IPv4 and IPv6 subnets are different. While a single IPv4 is taken to be a single device, an IPv6 /64 is designed to be treated as an end user subnet. https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3177 section 3. On 05/04/2015 9:05 am, "Mike Hammett" < nanog@ics-il.net > wrote:
That makes sense. I do recall now reading about having that 8 bit separation between tiers of networks. However, in an IX everyone is supposed to be able to talk to everyone else. Traditionally (AFAIK), it's all been on the same subnet. At least the ones I've been involved with have been single subnets, but that's v4 too.
----- Mike Hammett Intelligent Computing Solutions http://www.ics-il.com
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From: "Valdis Kletnieks" < Valdis.Kletnieks@vt.edu > To: "Mike Hammett" < nanog@ics-il.net > Cc: "NANOG" < nanog@nanog.org > Sent: Saturday, April 4, 2015 5:49:37 PM Subject: Re: Small IX IP Blocks
On Sat, 04 Apr 2015 16:06:02 -0500, Mike Hammett said:
I am starting up a small IX. The thought process was a /24 for every IX location (there will be multiple of them geographically disparate), even though we nqever expected anywhere near that many on a given fabric. Then okay, how do < we d o v6? We got a /48, so the thought was a /64 for each.
You probably want a /56 for each so you can hand a /64 to each customner.
That way, customer isolation becomes easy because it's a routing problem. If customers share a subnet, it gets a little harder....