IPv6 internet broken, Verizon route prefix length policy

Seth Mattinen sethm at rollernet.us
Tue Oct 13 01:22:10 UTC 2009


Owen DeLong wrote:
> From where I sit, it looks like:
> 
> a.root-servers.net has IPv6 address 2001:503:ba3e::2:30
> BGP routing table entry for 2001:503:ba3e::/48
> 
> f.root-servers.net has IPv6 address 2001:500:2f::f
> BGP routing table entry for 2001:500:2f::/48
> 
> h.root-servers.net has IPv6 address 2001:500:1::803f:235
> BGP routing table entry for 2001:500:1::/48
> 
> j.root-servers.net has IPv6 address 2001:503:c27::2:30
> BGP routing table entry for 2001:503:c27::/48
> 
> k.root-servers.net has IPv6 address 2001:7fd::1
> BGP routing table entry for 2001:7fd::/32
> 
> l.root-servers.net has IPv6 address 2001:500:3::42
> BGP routing table entry for 2001:500:3::/48
> 
> m.root-servers.net has IPv6 address 2001:dc3::35
> BGP routing table entry for 2001:dc3::/32
> 
> 
> b.root-servers.net has no AAAA record
> c.root-servers.net has no AAAA record
> d.root-servers.net has no AAAA record
> e.root-servers.net has no AAAA record
> g.root-servers.net has no AAAA record
> i.root-servers.net has no AAAA record
> 
> 
> So... Likely, Verizon customers can reach k and m root servers via IPv6
> and not the others.
> 

I can see the /48's out of 2001 in Verizon's table.

~Seth




More information about the NANOG mailing list