On 31/03/2022 23:15, Bill Woodcock wrote:
…in a run-of-the-mill web hoster?
This is really a question specifically for folks with web-site-hosting
businesses.
If you had, say, ten million web site customers, each with their own unique
domain name, how many IPv4 addresses would you think was
> On Mar 31, 2022, at 16:47 , Bill Woodcock wrote:
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>> On Apr 1, 2022, at 12:15 AM, Bill Woodcock wrote:
>> …in a run-of-the-mill web hoster?
>> I’m happy to take private replies and summarize/anonymize back to the list,
>> if people prefer.
>
> I asked the same question on Twitter,
> On Apr 1, 2022, at 12:15 AM, Bill Woodcock wrote:
> …in a run-of-the-mill web hoster?
> I’m happy to take private replies and summarize/anonymize back to the list,
> if people prefer.
I asked the same question on Twitter, and got quite a lot of answers in both
places pretty quickly. Thus
I don't know that there is a normal as it likely depends heavily on the revenue
per customer and the service's tolerance for giving out IP addresses. It also
depends heavily on the back end infrastructhre and what kind of service is
being provided. There's probably massive scale behind
…in a run-of-the-mill web hoster?
This is really a question specifically for folks with web-site-hosting
businesses.
If you had, say, ten million web site customers, each with their own unique
domain name, how many IPv4 addresses would you think was a reasonable number to
host those on? HTTP
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