On Thu, 9 May 2019, Doug Barton wrote:

It's been a while since I was configuring subnets, and last time I did the guidance was always no more than 1,000 hosts per subnet/vlan. A lot of that was IPv4 thinking regarding broadcast domains, but generally speaking we kept to it for dual stacked networks, equating an IPv4 /22 with an IPv6 /64. (This was commonly in office environments where we used a subnet per floor to accommodate all of the desktops, printers, phones, tablets, etc.)

Is this still how people roll nowadays? Have switches and/or other network gear advanced to the point where subnets larger than 1k hosts are workable? In IPv4 or IPv6? I've done quite a bit of web searching, and can't find anything newer than 2014 that has any kind of intelligent discussion of this topic.

It's a good topic to bring up. There has been some work on this in the IETF, for instance https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8273

This means there is single broadcast domain and single /64 per customer, which if properly implemented helps with a lot of the problem space people like to solve in this area. It however includes moving away from quite a lot of what you call "IPv4 thinking".

I however do not operate wifi networks so I have no idea how widely this is implemented in gear available today. If someone else knows, I would appreciate if they would share.

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Mikael Abrahamsson    email: [email protected]

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