On Jan 27, 2011, at 5:56 PM, Antonio Querubin wrote:

> On Thu, 27 Jan 2011, Owen DeLong wrote:
> 
>> If they're routing a /64 to your gateway, you're all set. If they're not,
>> then, how are you getting the /64 in the first place?
> 
> Bridged ethernet across the broadband provider network to the ISP router. 
> Each customer gets a single /64 vlan to their residence.  If the customer now 
> wants more than one subnet, the ISP must now route additional prefixes to a 
> customer's gateway.  The customer can't just setup a router to break up the 
> single /64 without the ISP carrying a route entry or the customer doing some 
> kind of IPv6 NAT or proxy ND.  If the ISP wont route additional prefixes, 
> then the customer is forced to do the latter.

If you need more than one prefix, then, they should route you a /48
instead of a /64. If they won't, I strongly encourage you to switch
providers, or, get a free tunnel from http://tunnelbroker.net and
use that.

Owen


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