My parents are non-technical. Other than a little help connecting her airport to the cable modem, I had nothing to do with the design and implementation of their networks. They have at least 7 distinct subnets in their house that I know of. Some of them are routed together. Some of them are isolated. I suspect my parents don’t even realize what a subnet is or how a router connects them. It is unlikely, IMHO, that said topology will likely get flattened in the future. I expect, rather, that it will grow both vertical and horizontal. I think that’s about as common person as it gets. So I’m not talking about the 15-30 subnets in my house, depending on the day, nor the subnets outside of my house used to support the networking in my house (point to point circuits and the like). I’m well aware that the common person does not have an ASN for their home and the average home thinks BGP is probably an airport code. Owen
On Jul 9, 2015, at 06:11 , Mike Hammett <nanog@ics-il.net> wrote:
I think you're confusing very common for a tech guy and very common for the common man. I have a dozen or two v4 subnets in my house. Then again, I also run my ISP out of my house, so I have a ton of stuff going on. I can't even think of a handful of other people that would have more than one.
----- Mike Hammett Intelligent Computing Solutions http://www.ics-il.com
Midwest Internet Exchange http://www.midwest-ix.com
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tony Finch" <dot@dotat.at> To: "Ricky Beam" <jfbeam@gmail.com> Cc: nanog@nanog.org Sent: Thursday, July 9, 2015 6:17:17 AM Subject: Re: Dual stack IPv6 for IPv4 depletion
Ricky Beam <jfbeam@gmail.com> wrote:
Talking about IPv6, we aren't carving a limit in granite. 99.99999% of home networks currently have no need for multiple networks, and thus, don't ask for anything more; they get a single /64 prefix.
Personal-area networks already exist. Phone/watch/laptop etc.
Virtual machines are common, e.g. for running multiple different operating systems on your computer.
And automotive networks need connectivity.
There are often separate VLANs for VOIP and IP TV and smart meters.
Separate wifi networks tuned for low-latency synchronized audio.
So it's very common to have multiple networks in a home with multiple layers of routing.
Tony. -- f.anthony.n.finch <dot@dotat.at> http://dotat.at/ Shannon, Rockall: South or southeast 5 or 6, increasing 6 or 7 later. Moderate, occasionally rough. Rain, fog patches. Moderate, occasionally very poor.