On 06/24/2018 07:52 AM, Lee Howard wrote:
> Randy said "at business 1g fiber going into an Arris"
> As fiber, it'll be PON. If it were a traditional cable company, I'd
> guess DPOE (DOCSIS Provisioning Over Ethernet).
AT fiber goes into a PON, and then into an Arris BGW210.
(Yes, I have
On 06/21/2018 12:07 PM, Nick Hilliard wrote:
Randy Bush wrote on 21/06/2018 16:35:
Static addresses don't fit into this paradigm because you if you
configure your static customers from a single broadcast domain, then
they are glued to a particular CMTS and can't be moved from that CMTS
On 6/21/18 09:59, McBride, Mack wrote:
I will speak more generally as I don't have insight into that provider.
Last mile providers are working on ipv6 everywhere because ipv4 is expensive
and so is CGN and MAP-T.
IPv6 can reduce the need for ipv4 addresses and translation technology.
In all
Bush
Sent: Thursday, June 21, 2018 10:20 AM
To: Nick Hilliard
Cc: North American Network Operators' Group
Subject: Re: at business ipv6
> Yes, one particular plotline which can explain why docsis systems do
> this is that standard residential customers are provisioned using
> giant
> Yes, one particular plotline which can explain why docsis systems do
> this is that standard residential customers are provisioned using
> giant broadcast domains directly on the cable, with DHCP config.
> Obviously it's more complicated because it's docsis, but lemme
> handwave and say that
Randy Bush wrote on 21/06/2018 16:35:
anyone been to this movie and care to divulge the plot?
Yes, one particular plotline which can explain why docsis systems do
this is that standard residential customers are provisioned using giant
broadcast domains directly on the cable, with DHCP
That's true - I had one of the SMC routers for many years when I had static
Business HSI service, and switched earlier this year to using a off the
shelf Arris (ex Motorola) Surfboard modems and dynamic IP on my BHSI
service... my IPv6 service has never been better. :)
Unless you have a static IP
To clarify, you cannot rent AND have static IP's.
You can rent your own modem ofr business service when using dynamic IP's.
Robert Webb
On Tue, 29 Nov 2016 15:07:52 -0500
Jared Mauch wrote:
Can't do that with the business service. Oh well, to have choices.
Jared
Can't do that with the business service. Oh well, to have choices.
Jared Mauch
> On Nov 29, 2016, at 2:40 PM, Randy Bush wrote:
>
> i am running my own (why rent at silly costs) dpc3008 and wfm.
>
> randy
hich arise as a result of
e-mail transmission. .
-Original Message-
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Randy Bush
Sent: Tuesday, November 29, 2016 1:41 PM
To: Rik van Riel
Cc: North American Network Operators' Group
Subject: Re: Comcast business IPv6 vs rbldnsd &a
[mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Randy Bush
Sent: Tuesday, November 29, 2016 1:41 PM
To: Rik van Riel
Cc: North American Network Operators' Group
Subject: Re: Comcast business IPv6 vs rbldnsd & PSBL
i am running my own (why rent at silly costs) dpc3008 and wfm.
randy
On Tue, 29 Nov 2016, Rik van Riel wrote:
Not a symptom I ever expected to see...
It's pretty obvious that the CPEs being sold for this "business service"
isn't meant for the kind of service you run.
They're probably doing connection tracking for ACK optimization, this
should not be done
i am running my own (why rent at silly costs) dpc3008 and wfm.
randy
On Tue, 2016-11-29 at 13:34 -0500, Jared Mauch wrote:
> Folks at Comcast have told me to ask for the SMC gateway to be
> replaced with either the netgear or Cisco to solve that issue.
Over the past year and a bit, I have had all three
of the Comcast business routers in my network.
The Netgear
Folks at Comcast have told me to ask for the SMC gateway to be replaced with
either the netgear or Cisco to solve that issue.
Jared Mauch
> On Nov 29, 2016, at 1:28 PM, Bryan Holloway wrote:
>
> I concur with the kudos bit, but I'll also concur that the CPE support
>
I concur with the kudos bit, but I'll also concur that the CPE support
appears to be limited. Another example: IPv6 prefix delegation is broken
on the SMCD3G-CCR, and according to the following threads:
http://www.gossamer-threads.com/lists/nsp/ipv6/54761 (scroll down to the
IPv6 OPERATIONS -
I can send it along to folks here at Comcast.
- Jason
On 11/28/16, 1:46 PM, "NANOG on behalf of Rik van Riel"
wrote:
First of all, kudos to Comcast for trying to roll out IPv6 across
their entire network. Static IPv6 netblocks
I don’t think they have a clear policy for V6. I can tell everytime my Comcast
cable modem is updated because I lose all ipv6 connectivity. Right now I am in
one of those periods. I can’t get ipv6 to pass the modem. Customer support
tells me it’s not an issue and must be on my end. My
18 matches
Mail list logo