In message <56157950.5040400@lugosys.com>, "Israel G. Lugo" writes:
On 10/03/2015 08:40 PM, Owen DeLong wrote:
So a /48 isn’t about being able to support 295,147,905,179,352,825,856 devic es in every home, it’s about being able to have 16 bits of subnet mask to use in delegating addresses in a dynamic plug-and-play hierarchical topology that can evolve on demand without user configuration or intervention.
Which is IMO scarcely enough to be as flexible as IPv6 is being touted. I've always considered 16 bits of subnetting way too small for an end site. Especially if you want to do things like dynamic plug-and-play hierarchical topology. Just following Robin Johansson's example in another email:
Which is why "homenet" routers don't do that. They just get the prefixes they need now and route them within the site. If they need a additional prefix they ask for it when they needed it. 65000 routes is not a lot of routes for even the smallest of routers to handle. Mark
On 10/02/2015 07:08 PM, Robin Johansson wrote:
If a /48 is assigned to each customer, then the first wireless router gets a /52, second router a /56 and there is room to connect one more level of devices. All works out of the box, everyone is happy, no support calls.
We only have up to 3 levels, and each level only supports 16 branches. May be fine for mom and dad now, but certainly not for other complex cases. And when you start factoring the whole "soup cans with IPv6" thing...
I still think IPv6 should've been at least 192 bits long.
Israel G. Lugo -- Mark Andrews, ISC 1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742 INTERNET: marka@isc.org