RFC5549 is obsolete. Replacement is RFC8950. The idea is that IPv4 prefixes can be advertised via BGP with an IPv6 next-hop address. So, if fully implemented on *all* IXP customers the IXP would not need an IPv4 prefix for the peering LAN any more. You can check yourself if your router implements this, on Cisco do a "show bgp neighbor", - "Extended Nexthop Encoding: advertised" means that your router supports it - "Extended Nexthop Encoding: advertised and received" means your router and your peer supports it best regards Wolfgang
On 8. Nov 2022, at 14:55, Nick Hilliard <nick@foobar.org> wrote:
this is kinda the problem with RFC 5549, no? I.e. it deals only with signaling rather than transport. So even if it's deployed, the IXP will still need to provide ipv4 addresses for transport purposes
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