On Thu, 21 Jun 2012 16:34:51 -0500, Ryan Kirk <rjk...@gmail.com> wrote:

In my limited experience with ipv6, this has been the case. The
provider has you on a /64 of their own (not part of your /48), so your
WAN interface would have one of their IP's on it, and they should tell
you exactly what it should be. Just as it's done in IPv4. Your own
personal /48 is then routed through that IP. You can assign more IP's
from your /48 to your WAN interface, of course, by dedicating a /64 to
it. But you will always need to have at least the one ISP IP on it.

The provider shouldn't be using a /64 for the link net. That means your router is getting the broadcasts from everyone else on that link net. The provider should be setting aside something like a /64 for link nets and actually be giving you /126s.

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