On 1/5/2011 11:31 PM, Owen DeLong wrote:
Why shouldn't I use /64 for links if I want to? I can see why you can say you want /126s, and that's fine, as long as you are willing to deal with the fall-out, your network, your problem, but, why tell me that my RFC-compliant network is somehow wrong?
You can. My problem with that is primarily that using an ACL for the predictable addresses gets messy. Filtering based on <prefix><multiple assignments>::<1-2> isn't possible in most routers, and an acl to filter every /64 used for a link address is one heck of a long list.
SLAAC cannot function with longer than /64 because SLAAC depends on prefix + EUI-64 = address.
It depends on supporting it. EUI-64 address is not required for the globally routed prefixes, and many servers static the token as ::0xxx. Jack