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Comment by tptacek

5 hours ago

No, obviously, I get that (we buy a lot of IPv4 space --- and I'm actually happier with the current regime than I was with the "supplicate to ARIN" regime). I'm just wondering what technologically happened to make universal /24 advertisements fine. I assume it's just that routers got better.

The transition to 7200 VXRs as core routers really hit a tipping point around 2000. They could handle millions of entries in the FiBs and really led to a relief in pressure. Subsequent devices had to match that.

On the IPv6 side; by 2002, nobody was really experimenting with A6 records any more, and EUI64 was needless. Both were parts of IPv6 designed to facilitate "easy" renumbering, so that single prefixes could be replaced with larger ones. But the ISPs weren't complaining any more about table size.

> I'm just wondering what technologically happened to make universal /24 advertisements fine. I assume it's just that routers got better.

Routers had to get better (more tcam capacity) because there wasn't much choice. Nobody wants to run two border routers each with the table for half the /8s or something terrible like that. And you really can't aggregate /24 announcements when consecutive addresses are unrelated.