On Sat, Dec 27, 2008 at 06:55:50PM +0100, Jeroen Massar wrote: > > > = You know will most likely have at least a /64 for connecting to > your ISP and if requested a /48 or /56 from them too.
Since my ISP ( as such ) doesn't seem to know anything about IPv6, I suspect that that assignment will be from HE or SixXS or somebody like that, correct? > * Draw a little map of your network > - In that map everything on the same switch (L2, unrouted L3) > lives in the same /64, thus out of your /48 assign one /64 > to that part. I tend to think of my switches as hubs, since there is no way that I have to control them. In that case, do I just assign a flat network, or split it up as you have suggested, giving every switch a prefix and address as you recommend? What I mean is that there is no external access to these devices, and therefore no method for assigning addresses internally. > * Now start configuring stuff > - Setup the native connectivity or tunnel > - Route the blocks where they need to go > - Install radvd on router boxes so that they announce the > respective routes et voila The only thing that I would consider a router is my OpenBSD firewall, between the internal network and the big, bad world. Thank you, Jeroen. Brian -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-ipv6-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org