> On Aug 11, 2015, at 19:47 , Tom Samplonius <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
>> On Aug 11, 2015, at 7:36 PM, Paul <[email protected] 
>> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>> 
>> Hello
>> 
>> We are getting ready to lose a /22 and /23 and 2 /24's when we switch from 
>> microwave data center providers
>> to fiber for our ISP that the data centers have been providing for us since 
>> the dial-up days .
>> /22 and /23 are no longer available. Will we have to pay the $100 annual fee 
>> on each /24 block allocated
>> even though nothing larger is available? Can we get an IPv6 allocation large 
>> enough when we file for AS number
>> for a several month cross over from microwave to fiber?
> 
> 
>   Keep in mind that a IPv6 /32 or /36 are very large blocks in comparison to 
> a /21 worth of IPv4.
> 
>   A /32 allows you to assign a /64 each to about 4 billion customers.

That’s really not a good idea in most cases.

For the most part, you should be assigning /48s to each customer end site. Some 
customers may have
multiple end sites (more than one building, for example).

Still, a /36 is enough to assign 4096 /48s and a /32 is 65,536 /48s, so they 
are still significantly larger
than a /21 of IPv4.

Owen


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