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by ghshephard
4207 days ago
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The original belief with IPv6 is that End Users would route through their ISPs address space, and the IPv6 made renumbering so easy, that it would be simple for end-users to change providers and renumber. This turns out not to be the case. IPv6 will not reduce the size of the routing tables. Anybody with prefixes, and PIAS right now, will likewise get a /48 of IPv6 space and start advertising it into BGP. If anything the more easily available space may result in bigger routing tables as a result. (Not everyone was able to get a /20 - particularly outside of ARIN space. For example - IPv4 addresses come very dear in places like Dubai.) And NAT doesn't go away with IPv6. That was another belief that did not survive its first encounter with reality. It's simply called "Network Prefix Translation" now (NAT by another name) |
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If it doesn't go away, it will be only because of ISP greed (i.e., charging customers for a larger number of publicly routable addresses). Otherwise, there simply is no reason not to give every customer a /56 or even a /48, given that routers won't be able to route prefixes longer than that anyway.
Fortunately, most ISPs offering native IPv6 so far have turned out not to be that greedy.