On 2014-06-17 21:46, David Conrad wrote:
No, 8 individual IPv6 addresses.
Wow. Harsh. I burn more than that just in my living room.
I don't think that is too harsh as all 8 are assigned to a single server. So if
I have three VPS's, I have 24 total addresses.
In the case of my 3 VPS's, I've received /64s from both RootBSD.net and Arp
Networks or 55,340,232,221,128,654,848 addresses. I'm not sure I see a
rationale for assigning 8 addresses. That is, I could understand assigning a
single address or a /64 but 8 addresses? I'd think that'd be more
complicated/error prone than either the /128 or /64 options. A bit odd.
There are still applications that break with subnet smaller than /64, so
all VPS providers probably have to use /64 addressing.
/64 for one customer seems to be too much, on the other side 8 IP's can
be not enough in some cases. I think 65536 out of shared /64 for one
server can be enough. You can easily automate provisioning and reverse
DNS assuming you assign /112 for each server.
If you block SLAAC and provide connectivity to only the static IP's,
your abuse folks should appreciate it (yes, I know you can spoof v6).
--
Grzegorz Janoszka