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minimum IPv6 announcement size
- Subject: minimum IPv6 announcement size
- From: nccariaga at stluke.com.ph (Nathanael C. Cariaga)
- Date: Wed, 25 Sep 2013 10:03:52 +0800
- In-reply-to: <CAP-guGUBBW-o-oQs5Fdo2e+5F_PyVWm=Z_vHK3LgY3RvdB8s5Q@mail.gmail.com>
- References: <[email protected]> <CAP-guGUBBW-o-oQs5Fdo2e+5F_PyVWm=Z_vHK3LgY3RvdB8s5Q@mail.gmail.com>
Hi All,
Thank you for these insights. We'll look into all of these and review
again our options on how we can further proceed in our IPv6 deployment.
Regards,
-nathan
On 9/25/2013 2:33 AM, William Herrin wrote:
> On Tue, Sep 24, 2013 at 9:49 AM, Nathanael C. Cariaga
> <nccariaga at stluke.com.ph> wrote:
>> I've been Google-ing about if there is such a standard that sets the minimum
>> IPv6 advertisement on BGP. My concern is that I am running a network that
>> is operating on multiple sites and currently rolling out our IPv6 on the
>> perimeter level. Having to get our /48 allocation from our RIR, I figured
>> out I would it would be best for us to break down the /48 into smaller
>> chunks (i.e /56s) and farm it out to our sites since a single /48 will be
>> very big for our single site.
> Hi Nathanael,
>
> Many if not most networks set a limit at /48. Verizon was the last
> player of consequence to filter at /32, and they moved to /48 a couple
> years ago. A few also try to limit advertisements within ISP space
> nearer to /32. Usually not at /32, but a /48 announcement within space
> allocated to an ISP won't necessarily be honored.
>
> If you have distinct networks with distinct routing policies (or can
> make a reasonable claim to such) and your RIR is ARIN, you can request
> a block size large enough to provide a /48 to each distinct network. A
> /44 or whatever. Search through the ARIN NRPM for details. I don't
> know about the other RIRs; someone in your region (Asia Pacific?) will
> know.
>
> Regards,
> Bill Herrin
>
>
>