Hi, On Fri, May 02, 2014 at 11:28:29AM -0700, Owen Kirby wrote: > A /64 prefix and SLAAC can only really be applied to a single link in > your network, so if you wanted to separate your network into multiple > links (ie: not bridging) then you would use a shorter prefix to get the > routing right between each of those links. > > For example, the IPv6 prefix generated by your router might be > fd83:af19:9ef::/60, but your your ethernet devices would see > fd83:af19:9ef:1::/64 for SLAAC, and your WiFi devices might see > fd83:af19:9ef:2::/64 for SLAAC. Because they are both subnets of the > broader /60 prefix, your router can advertise itself as the router for > all of the links in your home network.
I do understand *that*, and I can see that if you do multi-level DHCPv6-PD, the first router might want to give the second router a /60, so that this one has 16 /64s for all of its LANs (and so on). But you'd then normally not configure the /60 onto a LAN segment in between, but have a /64 between router A and router B, and the /60 routed across that... gert -- USENET is *not* the non-clickable part of WWW! //www.muc.de/~gert/ Gert Doering - Munich, Germany g...@greenie.muc.de fax: +49-89-35655025 g...@net.informatik.tu-muenchen.de
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