|
|
|
|
|
by flumpcakes
74 days ago
|
|
In IPv6 the smallest 'subnet' is /64 if I recall correctly. It's weird having a subnet size equal to a complete IPv4 Internet worth of IPv6 Internets but I believe the rationale was that you would never in practise run of out IPs in your subnet. A lot of Enterprise IPv4 headaches are managing subnets that are not correctly sized (organic growth, etc.). IPv6 is always routable for the same reason (companies reusing RFC1918 making connecting networks a pain). There are different headaches with IPv6 - such as re-IPing devices if they move subnet - i.e. move physical location, or during a failover etc. I'm not sure what the best practise there is as many enterprises don't use IPv6 internally. In my experience anyway. |
|