Doing a little introspection, I found myself realizing that one of the most bothersome aspects of the /64 boundary (for me, just speaking for myself here) is exactly that, the tendency to the hardcoding of boundaries.
C. On Mon, Jan 24, 2011 at 12:26 PM, Phil Regnauld <[email protected]> wrote: > [email protected] (bmanning) writes: >> as a test case, i built a small home network out of /120. works just fine. >> my home network has been native IPv6 for about 5 years now, using a /96 and >> IVI. >> >> some thoughts. disable RD/RA/ND. >> none of the DHCPv6 code works like DHCP, so I re-wrote >> client and server code so that it does. >> static address assignment is a good thing for services like >> DNS/HTTP >> secure dynmaic update is your friend >> >> summary - its not easy, vendors don't want to help. but it can be done. > > Right - /64 is an assumption that's hardcoded many places. > > But it does work. > > >

