> Date: Fri, 02 Oct 2009 16:29:25 -0700 > From: Seth Mattinen <se...@rollernet.us> > > Since we're on the topic of what's commonly accepted in IPv4 land (a > /24), what's the story in IPv6 land? It seems to me that a /32 is a fur > sure thing, but others will accept down to a /48, too.
Depends on the address space it is assigned from. Most specify a maximum prefix length of 32, but the micro-allocations and the allocations for PI dual-homing are /48. We consider the following to be "legal": /* global unicast allocations */ route-filter 2001::/16 prefix-length-range /19-/35; /* 6to4 prefix */ route-filter 2002::/16 prefix-length-range /16-/16; /* RIPE allocations */ route-filter 2003::/18 prefix-length-range /19-/32; /* APNIC allocations */ route-filter 2400::/12 prefix-length-range /13-/32; /* ARIN allocations */ route-filter 2600::/12 prefix-length-range /13-/32; /* ARIN allocations */ route-filter 2610::/23 prefix-length-range /24-/32; /* LACNIC allocations */ route-filter 2800::/12 prefix-length-range /13-/32; /* RIPE allocations */ route-filter 2A00::/12 prefix-length-range /13-/32; /* AfriNIC allocations */ route-filter 2C00::/12 prefix-length-range /13-/32; /* APNIC PI allocations */ route-filter 2001:0DF0::/29 prefix-length-range /40-/48; /* AFRINIC PI allocations */ route-filter 2001:43F8::/29 prefix-length-range /40-/48; /* ARIN PI allocations */ route-filter 2620::/23 prefix-length-range /40-/48; /* ARIN Micro-allocations */ route-filter 2001:0500::/24 prefix-length-range /44-/48; This means accepting prefixes ARIN says we should not, but ARIN does not set our routing policy and I will be on a panel on that issue at NANOG in Dearborn later this month. -- R. Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer Energy Sciences Network (ESnet) Ernest O. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) E-mail: ober...@es.net Phone: +1 510 486-8634 Key fingerprint:059B 2DDF 031C 9BA3 14A4 EADA 927D EBB3 987B 3751