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Another v6 question
- Subject: Another v6 question
- From: streiner at cluebyfour.org (Justin M. Streiner)
- Date: Tue, 25 Jan 2011 10:59:21 -0500 (EST)
- In-reply-to: <[email protected]>
- References: <[email protected]>
On Tue, 25 Jan 2011, Max Pierson wrote:
>> From the provider perspective, what is the prefix-length that most are
> accepting to be injected into your tables?? 2 or so years ago, I read where
> someone stated that they were told by ATT that they weren't planning on
> accepting anything smaller than a /32. So what if I get my shiny new /48
> from ARIN and am already multi-homed??? Does ATT not want my business (which
> they wouldn't get if the first place, but for argument sake, yes, I chose to
> pick on ATT, sorry if I offended anyone :) I already see /40's /48's ,etc
> in the v6 table, so some folks are allowing /48 and smaller, so what is the
> new /24 in v6?
>From what I've seen, both in terms of policy and practice is that most
people are considering /48 to be 'the new /24'. A number of providers
haven't published their v6 policies yet (at least in any place that's easy
to find), but it looks like based on policy alone, NTT and Verizon will
accept /48s.
Also, I don't know that the number of v6 prefixes will get completely out
of control for a while. Many of the bigger consumers of v4 space are
getting (or have gotten) initial v6 assignments that are large enough to
satisfy their space needs for some time, so the number of v6 prefixes
being announced to provide connectivity to a given number of ISP
customers should actually go down somewhat. For example, Comcast has
several /8s of v4 space, and they are announcing a /29 into the global v6
table at the moment. That could certainly change as they ramp up their
deployment of v6, but I still think the number of v6 prefixes compared to
v4 will be net-negative for a long time.
jms