It may also help to point out to them that under ARIN policy, if you need more
than a single /48, you will get at least a /44. ARIN does not issue
non-nibble-aligned blocks any more.
You can get /12, /16, /20, /24, /28, /32, /36, /40, /44, /48, but you can't get
a /45, /46, or /47.
IMHO this
In message , John York writes:
> Hoping to not start a war...
>
> We (a multi-homed end-user site) are finally getting IPv6-enabled Internet
> connectivity from one of our ISPs. In conversations regarding our BGP
> config, the ISP has balked at allowing us to advertise our ARIN-assigned
> /44, sa
John
-Original Message-
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Justin M.
Streiner
Sent: Thursday, August 07, 2014 1:56 PM
To: North American Network Operators' Group
Subject: Re: IPv6 route annoucement
On Thu, 7 Aug 2014, John York wrote:
> Hoping to not start a
On Thu, 7 Aug 2014, John York wrote:
Hoping to not start a war...
We (a multi-homed end-user site) are finally getting IPv6-enabled Internet
connectivity from one of our ISPs. In conversations regarding our BGP
config, the ISP has balked at allowing us to advertise our ARIN-assigned
/44, saying
Pretty strong reaction for a single prefix.
Now if you said you wanted to advertise all your /64¹s that would be a
different conversation.
On 8/7/14, 2:58 PM, "John York" wrote:
>Hoping to not start a war...
>
>We (a multi-homed end-user site) are finally getting IPv6-enabled Internet
>connec
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
No, it's not mis-sized. And no, you should advertise it all.
I would advertise the /44 without reservation.
Stuart Sheldon
ACT USA
AS22937
On 08/07/2014 01:58 PM, John York wrote:
> Hoping to not start a war...
>
> We (a multi-homed end-user sit
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