Hi William, On 09 Nov 2014, at 12:47, William Waites <wwaites@tardis.ed.ac.uk> wrote:
I've started writing here:
https://pad.okfn.org/p/bcop-small-ipv6
Today, a couple of paragraphs about the intended audience before getting into the meat of it.
-w
Thanks, a good start. Just one comment: "they also need ipv4 addresses to use as router-id (need not be global, but need to be unique).” is not true. It needs to be a 32-bit number, but it doesn’t have to be an IPv4 address. This should be made clear, as I notice in our training courses, a lot of engineers seem to think that the router ID MUST be an IPv4 address, while it normally is, it is not mandatory. 0.0.0.1 is a valid router-ID, I believe. In an IPv6-only network, for example, when you have no IPv4 addresses, you can just make something 32-bitty up and use that as the router ID. On the address assignment: What we see and hear in practice in our courses, is assign something on 4-bit boundary, big enough to cater for the next 10 years. So: a /64 only if you are absolutely sure that the customer will never come back for one more subnet (not likely). a /60 (if you are conservative) a /56 (most common for residential users) a /52 (we see this in some cases for both residential customers and business customers) a /48 (for business customers, or for residential customers if you are generous, and have a one-size-fits-all-approach) I hope this helps, Cheers, Nathalie