[arin-discuss] IPv6 End User Assignments

Divins, David dsd at servervault.com
Thu May 7 10:49:42 EDT 2009


Just to chime in, I am doing /56's with adjacent reservations.

The reality is, until I have more customers willing to do IPv6, I won't
know how good or bad my address plan is/was.

-dsd

David Divins
Principal Engineer
ServerVault Corp.

-----Original Message-----
From: arin-discuss-bounces at arin.net
[mailto:arin-discuss-bounces at arin.net] On Behalf Of Dan White
Sent: Thursday, May 07, 2009 10:34 AM
To: Joe Maimon
Cc: arin-discuss at arin.net
Subject: Re: [arin-discuss] IPv6 End User Assignments

Joe Maimon wrote:
> michael.dillon at bt.com wrote:
>
>   
>> It is not a waste of space. Very large ISPs in Europe and
>> Asia already do assign /48s to each customer. ARIN policy
>> allows it in North America as well.
>>
>>     
>
> Only large ISP's can afford to do so with impunity. A /32 is not
> sufficient for a default allocation of /48 per customer. That makes it
> effectively only 16 times larger than an ipv4 /20, which suggests
> additional prefixes or renumbering pain.
>
> A /24 or /28 would be better if indeed /48 per customer is expected to
> be the norm.
>
> People are trying to carve up their allocated space now, in an
> intelligent manner as much as possible. Getting it right at this point
> could avoid pain later, so this is important.
>   

To me, the conservative approach is to assign a /48 to each customer. To

do so means that they will never need to ask for more addresses again 
(in most cases), regardless of their size... and as their provider, it's

doesn't make sense to me to suggest what their network should look like 
today, or what it likely will look like in 5, 10 or 20 years.

I tend to stay away from the approach of allocating small subnets today,

and then allocate larger ones based on customer need. I prefer to do the

heavy lifting up front - /48 via prefix delegation or routing protocol -

which will save me the work of reconfiguration their allocation down the

road.

 > A /32 is not sufficient for a default allocation of /48 per customer.
 > That makes it effectively only 16 times larger than an ipv4 /20

I have two /20 IPv4 allocations, which gives me 8192 possible customers 
(and I have many less than that). I have a /32 IPv6 allocation which 
gives me 65536 possible customers at /48, which should easily last me 30

years to retirement!

- Dan
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