> To be honest, I can't work out the point of preferring a /64 in the
> first place if
> you're not using SLAAC and I'm not sure why SLAAC wanted more than 48
> bits.
> 
> If you use broad ACLs to lock down to a /126 or /112 equivalent, why
> bother with
> the /64 in the first place?
> 
> However, I'm new to the IPv6 business, so I'm sure I'll work it out
> eventually.

Or you might do what a lot of us have done: get sick of arguing with the 
evangelists about how /64's don't make sense for everyone in every scenario.  
Get sick of trying to argue that every home's CPE doesn't need a /48 delegated 
to it so that it can automatically subdelegate longer networks to devices which 
will in turn subdelegate even longer prefixes to devices which "something that 
hasn't been invented yet will use, and if you don't set it up this way, history 
will prove that you're an unimaginative fool".  Get sick of hearing "It's a 
huge address space, so don't worry about being conservative - sitting 'on the 
shelf' or sitting unused in a network are the same thing" (I guess we'll 
migrate to an even bigger address space if we someday have other stellar bodies 
in our local star system to send packets to, despite the average home network 
utilizing far, far less than .00[...]01% of their address space... - add a lot 
more 0's if the /48 guys win out...)

This new IPv6 world is full of lazy evangelists, who are so excited about 
same-sized subnets, stateless address configuration and globally unique and 
routable addresses for purposes that no one can quite imagine yet, that they 
cannot engage in a logical and rational discussion with the rest of us.  
Instead, we go back and forth over the same concerns, until the patience of the 
list has been utterly worn out - at which point, these individuals always throw 
their hands in the air, and exclaim: "You're wrong, and your customers will 
tell you that with their feet", and presume that they have then proven you 
wrong.

As has been pointed out, there is a lot of human nature at work here: these 
individuals have made low-level emotional investments in their arguments, and 
divided the IPv6-think world into two categories: Us (right), and Not Us 
(wrong).  When someone does this, it can take a significant amount of 
psychology to get the conversation to a rational place, and unless you have a 
real need to see eye to eye with them, it's often easier to move on.  In any 
case, do the research and testing, and make sure that at least your own 
deployments have rational addressing policies (whatever you determine that 
might be).

Nathan Eisenberg

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