On Wed, Feb 22, 2017 at 12:12 PM, Christopher Morrow <
christopher(_dot_)morrow(_at_)gmail(_dot_)com> wrote:
But the configuration cost and management overhead is not proportional to
the hosts that are served by those interconnections, it is proportional to
the number of interconnections. A 10x100G peering interconnection that
serves X million hosts is one interface that has to be managed.
isn't the dicsussion here really:
"If you want to use /64 go ahead, if you want to use /121 go for it, if
you want to use SLAAC you'll get a /64 and like it"
Not sure. I for one wouldn't agree with that position, because I don't see
that /121 has enough advantages over /127 and /64 - and few enough
downsides for general-purpose hosts - to make it a good idea in general.