Hi,

> Let's clarify -- /48 is much preferred by Owen, but most ISPs seem to be
> zeroing in on a /56 for production.  Though some ISPs are using /64 for
> their trials.


IIRC, there's RfC6177 - covering almost exactly what the original poster asked 
for.
Not sure if it was mentioned already.

/48 is what IPv6 was designed for, /48 per customer (or even per customer-site 
some might say) is supported by the RIR policies,
and there are close to zero reasons not to use a /48. It also eases your 
administration
processes and also operational things.

Of course, if you only have John Average residential customers or whatever, use 
a /56 or /60.
It's your choice. You know your customers best. We're not in a classful world 
again :-)
But do your math, there is no address shortage, handing out a /48 to every type 
of customer
as a single assignment size should be the sane choice. 
You waste precious time thinking too much about it.

At least don't make your life miserable by experimenting with too many 
different assignment sizes,
or advocate /64s or something, that's considered a design fault which will come 
back to you some day.
Read the RfCs and RIR policy discussions in the archives some years ago. 

-- 
Mit freundlichen Grüßen / Kind Regards

Sascha Lenz [SLZ-RIPE]
Senior System- & Network Architect






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