Christopher,

A residential customer would be getting their /56 from the providers pool via 
RA or DHCPv6. With a /32 aggregate, it can handle 1.6 million /56 delegations, 
which can cover a few regions. It all depends on the planning going into 
splitting up the aggregate.

A rule of thumb I go by in the datacenter is, a /48 per customer per site, and 
further splitting it into /64s per VLAN, all of which can be plugged into a 
spreadsheet formula to produce a valid complete subnet.

Either way, keeping track of IPAM via spreadsheet is a recipe for disaster. 
NetBox and Nautobot are my choices, and is worth deploying on a server or VPS, 
even for home labs.

Ryan

________________________________
From: NANOG <nanog-bounces+ryan=rkhtech....@nanog.org> on behalf of Christopher 
Hawker <ch...@thesysadmin.au>
Sent: Thursday, November 16, 2023 3:52:59 PM
To: Aaron Gould <aar...@gvtc.com>; Owen DeLong <o...@delong.com>
Cc: nanog@nanog.org <nanog@nanog.org>
Subject: Re: ipv6 address management - documentation

Caution: This is an external email and may be malicious. Please take care when 
clicking links or opening attachments.

One of the first things that comes to mind, is that if you were to breakout a 
/64 v6 subnet (a standard-issue subnet to a residential customer) in an Excel 
spreadsheet, the number of columns you would need is 14 digits long. You could 
breakout the equivalent of a /12 v4 in just one column. Understandably in the 
real world no one (in their right mind) would do this, this is just for 
comparison.

Regards,
Christopher H.
________________________________
From: NANOG <nanog-bounces+chris=thesysadmin...@nanog.org> on behalf of Owen 
DeLong via NANOG <nanog@nanog.org>
Sent: Friday, November 17, 2023 10:39 AM
To: Aaron Gould <aar...@gvtc.com>
Cc: nanog@nanog.org <nanog@nanog.org>
Subject: Re: ipv6 address management - documentation

Spreadsheets are terrible for IPAM regardless of address length, but I am 
curious to know why you think IPv6 would be particularly worse than IPv4 in 
such a scenario?

Owen


> On Nov 16, 2023, at 10:02, Aaron Gould <aar...@gvtc.com> wrote:
>
> For years I've used an MS Excel spreadsheet to manage my IPv4 addresses.  
> IPv6 is going to be maddening to manage in a spreadsheet.  What does everyone 
> use for their IPv6 address prefix management and documentation?  Are there 
> open source tools/apps for this?
>
> --
> -Aaron


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