[172544] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: Ars Technica on IPv4 exhaustion
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Kalnozols, Andris)
Sun Jun 22 22:28:59 2014
X-Original-To: nanog@nanog.org
Date: Sun, 22 Jun 2014 19:28:46 -0700
From: "Kalnozols, Andris" <andris@hpl.hp.com>
To: nanog@nanog.org
In-Reply-To: <63CB7403-4AC0-4F4C-859F-BF2DB8728F91@delong.com>
Errors-To: nanog-bounces@nanog.org
On 6/22/2014 7:16 PM, Owen DeLong wrote:
>
> On Jun 22, 2014, at 7:07 PM, Darren Pilgrim <nanog@bitfreak.org> wrote:
>
>> On 6/22/2014 6:56 PM, Owen DeLong wrote:
>>> On Jun 22, 2014, at 6:41 PM, Darren Pilgrim <nanog@bitfreak.org>
>>> wrote:
>>>> For Comcast business services, the SMC box on my demarc panel isn't
>>>> IPv6 capable and neither are any of Comcast's other business CPE.
>>>
>>> Not true. The Netgear CCB tried to install here just a couple of days
>>> ago is IPv6 capable. Unfortunately, it breaks IPv4 by not being
>>> capable of bridge mode and insisting on NATing everything inside
>>> unless you subscribe to static IPv4 addresses from Comcast.
>>
>> What's the model number? The Comcast techs here are quite insistent
>> that none of the CPE capable of routed subnets are able to do IPv6.
>>
>>> OTOH, you can supply your own Motorola Surfboard DOCSIS 3 modem and
>>> it works just fine with Comcast Business.
>>
>> Have you tried using that with a routed subnet?
>
> Not sure what you mean by “routed subnet”.
>
> I’ve got a router hooked up to it and everything on my internal network(s)
> is behind that router, so I’m using it with routed subnets by my definition
> of that term. If you have some specific way of setting up your services
> that’s different from that, you’d need to be specific before I could usefully
> comment.
My experience as a Comcast Business customer with a /29 IPv4 subnet was
that swapping out the SMC modem/router for an IPV6-capable Motorola
DOCSIS 3 modem meant that I could no longer have the /29.
Andris