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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by Scoopta@programming.dev to c/ipv6@lemmy.world

I'm curious about something so I'm going to throw this thought experiment out here. For some background I run a pure IPv6 network and dove into v6 ignoring any v4 baggage so this is more of a devils advocate question than anything I genuinely believe.

Onto the question, why should I run a /64 subnet and waste all those addresses as opposed to running a /96 or even a /112?

  1. It breaks SLAAC and Android

let's assume I don't care for whatever reason and I'm content with DHCP, maybe android actually supports DHCP in this alternate universe

  1. It breaks RFC3306 aka Unicast-prefix-based multicast groups

No applications I care about are impacted by this breakage

  1. It violates the purity of the spec

I don't care

What advantages does running a /64 provide over smaller subnets? Especially subnets like a /96 where address count still far exceeds usage so filling subnets remains impossible.

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[-] Scoopta@programming.dev 2 points 10 months ago

All ISPs should do PD unless you've got some very special setup and they give you something that must be manually configured. Honestly too many ISPs still lack IPv6 and it's baffling. I have a friend with Verizon FiOS and after years of not having it he finally got it earlier this year I think...only to have it get taken away a little while ago. Like what?

this post was submitted on 25 Sep 2023
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