Hi SWINOG members,
we're a LIR, we got a /32 from RIPE and we want to allocate /40s and /48s to customers. Only snag is that the customers will not have their Internet feed from us but from any Service Provider of their choice. The customers will have to convince their SPs (X, Y, Z) to route these "non X,Y,Z" or "foreign" prefixes. We're getting a lot of "raised eyebrows" about this. What's this about prefixes longer that /32 not being propagated? When I look at the IPv6 table I see:
IPv6 Routing Table Summary - 8625 entries
5 local, 2 connected, 3 static, 0 RIP, 8615 BGP 0 IS-IS, 0 OSPF
Number of prefixes:
/0: 1, /8: 1, /10: 1, /12: 1, /16: 1, /19: 2, /20: 5, /21: 3
/22: 5, /23: 5, /24: 7, /25: 4, /26: 9, /27: 10, /28: 31, /29: 19
/30: 15, /31: 13, /32: 4049, /33: 97, /34: 87, /35: 93, /36: 242, /37: 7
/38: 50, /39: 22, /40: 385, /41: 12, /42: 18, /43: 34, /44: 151, /45: 15
/46: 75, /47: 45, /48: 3006, /49: 3, /50: 1, /52: 5, /56: 9, /64: 40
/126: 1, /128: 45
So where did all the /48s come from ... also one or two /40s... ??
What do you think about this? If you're a SP would you route the /48s or /40s from the customers? What about your upstream peers?
Thanks in advance for your answers.
John
John Collins
Eidgenössisches Finanzdepartement EFD
Bundesamt für Informatik und Telekommunikation BIT
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