HI

There are a couple of scenarios to consider..

1) Simple bridging from the home, hence a number of NIC address will appear at 
the edge router...

2) Retail model for RGs, which is how I bought mine... My modem came from my 
DSL provider, but as it had no wireless, so I turned off all higher layer 
functions and front ended it with a Belkin box bought over the counter... 

Hope this helps
D

-----Original Message-----
From: ipv6-boun...@ietf.org [mailto:ipv6-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of 
Manfredi, Albert E
Sent: Tuesday, November 10, 2009 2:10 AM
To: Mikael Abrahamsson
Cc: ipv6@ietf.org
Subject: RE: Liaison from BBF

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Mikael Abrahamsson [mailto:swm...@swm.pp.se]

Here is the crux of my not understanding the problem:

> And no, I haven't seen any residential rollout plan where
> IPv6 would be provisioned in the static way you describe, DHCPv6-PD 
> seems to be the most popular method seen in discussion.

Does not the ISP control, own, and distribute the "residential gateway"? If 
yes, then the DHCP conducted within the broadcast domain part of the network, 
i.e. the "last mile" part *outside* customer premises, should be able to ensure 
uniqueness of the EUI and consequently the IPv6 address of each residential 
gateway WAN side, no? So that DHCP or whatever method of assigning IPv6 WAN 
side addresses should be safe.

For that matter, one could use the client identifier option, and the ISP could 
hard-code the client ID in each of their residential gateways, before 
distributing these to customer premises.

Why would ISP not own and control the residential gateway?

We received our ADSL "modem" in the mail, from Verizon. It is a NAT, and the 
WAN side is under their control entirely. Is this not standard practice among 
ISPs?

Bert
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