This section of the homenet architecture draft has the following paragraph:

  The home network needs to be adaptable to ISP prefix allocation
   policies, and thus make no assumptions about the stability of the
   prefix received from an ISP, or the length of the prefix that may be
   offered.  However, if only a /64 is offered by the ISP, the homenet
   may be severely constrained or even unable to function.  As stated
   above, attempting to use internal subnet prefixes longer than /64
   would break SLAAC, and is thus not recommended.  Using ULA prefixes
   internally with NPTv6 at the boundary is not recommended for reasons
   given elsewhere.  Reverting to bridging would destroy subnetting,
   breaks multicast if bridged onto 802.11 wireless networks and has
   serious limitations with regard to heterogeneous link layer
   technologies and LLNs.  For those reasons it is recommended that
   DHCP-PD or OSPFv3 capable routers have the ability to issue a warning
   upon receipt of a /64 if required to assign further prefixes within
   the home network.  Though some consideration needs to be given to how
   that should be presented to a typical home user.

<hat = "consumer"> I agree with the first 3 sentences. However, I disagree with 
the recommendation for the case where the delegated subnet is insufficient to 
meet the needs of the home network. This paragraph recommends that a DHCP-PD or 
OSPFv3 capable router issue a warning and recommends against doing anything 
else. As a home user who currently gets a /64 (via 6rd) from my ISP, I find 
this recommendation insufficient. I would prefer if a (internal) router that is 
not given a /64 provided me with a "warning" that offered options for alternate 
ways to configure the router. These options might include bridging, NPTv6, or 
even NAT66, and I would be told what I would be giving up (what would break) if 
I went with any of these choices. But I want choices from that router. Choices 
of "move to a different house where you can get service from a different ISP", 
"give up", or "complain" are not real choices. "Switch ISPs" is also not a 
choice, because there is no other ISP offering se
 rvice to my home that can provide the bandwidth my family wants. And whatever 
someone else's reasons are for not wanting to use one of these configurations, 
those reasons may not apply to me. For example, I take great pleasure in 
breaking end-to-end connectivity to certain devices inside my home network. I 
don't mind if I don't have subnetting. I've seen multicast with Wi-Fi links 
work great where snooping is implemented on the link. I want the choice to be 
mine.

Barbara
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