On 07/12/10 18:39, Les Mikesell wrote:
On 12/7/10 11:19 AM, David Sommerseth wrote:
On 07/12/10 18:01, Les Mikesell wrote:
On 12/7/10 10:20 AM, Adam Tauno Williams wrote:
[...snip...]
"permit outbound client connections from anything connected behind them without much regard to how many devices there are, and block everything else" isn't NAT. That's a router/firewall. Happily IPv6 does that exactly.
You didn't mention the number of devices - how does that play out when you exceed the number initially set up?
How many devices? You mean exceeding the number of available inside a IPv6 subnet? I do hope you're kidding ... as for a /64 subnet we're talking about 4.294.967.296 addresses doubled 32 times.
Is that what people will automatically get in a home ISP connection?
Yes. Either a /64 subnet or more likely a /48 subnet, where a /48 subnet == 65536 /64 subnets.
And the 48 bits ISPs gives customers corresponds to 281.474.976.710.656 /48 subnets. Compare that number to IPv4 32 bits: 4.294.967.296
Kind regards,
David Sommerseth