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Dividing the Indivisible

How to live with a /64, if that's all they gave you?

The “proper” approach would be to call up the provider and ask for more; there is no reason to limit IPv6 assignments to end-users to just a single /64, and in fact the current best practices document (RFC 6177) recommends “giving home sites significantly more than a single /64”.

But what if changing the ways of your provider does not seem to be a feasible option, but you still want to have at least a semi-comfortable experience (i.e. not being forced to bridge everything into one L2 LAN)?

This simple HOWTO explains how you can have one “primary” network with functional SLAAC, and an arbitrary (16 in my example) number of “secondary” networks, where only DHCPv6 will be available. Full two-way routing between all these networks will work without any issues.

Network configuration

Let's assume we have the following.

IPv6 routed subnet from the provider: 2001:db8:abcd:cdef::/64
One primary internal interface, where we want SLAAC to function: eth0
Three (or more) secondary internal interfaces, which also
need IPv6, but they will have to live without SLAAC:
eth1, eth2, eth3

What we do is…

Carve out a /108 out of the /64, and split it into up to sixteen /112 networks.

Let's say this network will be 2001:db8:abcd:cdef:ffff:ffff:fff0::/108.

But if hosts on the main LAN assume they have the /64 directly accessible on-link, how will they know they need to reach some subnets that are technically within the /64, via the router?

The answer is: from a more-specific route in RAs!

On the router

/etc/dibbler/server.conf

For the Dibbler DHCPv6 server (the rest of the config file is omitted).

iface "eth1" {
 class {
   pool 2001:db8:abcd:cdef:ffff:ffff:fff1::/112
 }
}

iface "eth2" {
 class {
   pool 2001:db8:abcd:cdef:ffff:ffff:fff2::/112
 }
}

iface "eth3" {
 class {
   pool 2001:db8:abcd:cdef:ffff:ffff:fff3::/112
 }
}

/etc/radvd.conf

interface eth0 {
    AdvSendAdvert on;
    prefix ::/64 { };
    route 2001:db8:abcd:cdef:ffff:ffff:fff0::/108 { };  # <- the main secret sauce in this whole recipe
};

interface eth1 {
    AdvSendAdvert on;
    AdvManagedFlag on;
    prefix ::/112 { AdvAutonomous off; };
};

interface eth2 {
    AdvSendAdvert on;
    AdvManagedFlag on;
    prefix ::/112 { AdvAutonomous off; };
};

interface eth3 {
    AdvSendAdvert on;
    AdvManagedFlag on;
    prefix ::/112 { AdvAutonomous off; };
};

IPs on the router interfaces

Simple.

  • eth0: 2001:db8:abcd:cdef::1/64
  • eth1: 2001:db8:abcd:cdef:ffff:ffff:fff1::1/112
  • eth2: 2001:db8:abcd:cdef:ffff:ffff:fff2::1/112
  • eth3: 2001:db8:abcd:cdef:ffff:ffff:fff3::1/112

Address collisions?

Hosts from your primary LAN assume that the whole /64 is their own personal playground, and that they can pick any address they want. In theory this can lead to address collisions with some hosts on your secondary networks. But in practice chances of this are astronomically low.

  1. We ruled out possibility of collision with a EUI-64 address by using ff:ff in the middle of our /108 (those will always have ff:fe);
  2. The probability of a “Privacy Extensions” address suddenly having ffff:ffff:fff in it, is… well, calculate yourself, seems pretty low too.

en/dividing-the-indivisible.1364814683.txt.gz · Last modified: 2013-04-01 11:11 UTC by rm
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