The FEED address can be used by the router to configure itself with an IPv6 address, the routed block is then meant to be delegated by the router to end clients. Other routers will just take the 1st address from the routed /48 instead.
The routed block refers to the /48 (not FEED) from which the router is supposed to assign to LAN hosts.
What the second sentence above means that it is a valid option for the router itself to only use a link-local on the WAN interface to configure as the default route to Internet and then choose an address from the routed /48 as its own primary management GUA IP.
By design this can still work for connecting to the router UI from both internal and external connections though it depends on the specifics of the firewall policy.
The reply is not saying it is meant for LAN clients to end up alongside the router on the WAN interface IP subnet.
For work we have multiple sites on IDNet circuits and I manage the configuration for our routers.
We have circuits from various ISPs (including some Starlink) so there's some static assignment and some using SLAAC and/or DHCPv6-PD in the mix and even some scenarios where our v4 option is only CGNAT.
As per sig though I have vanilla FTTC Zen at home it works the same way with regards to the /64 WAN and then routed /48 for LAN.
prlzx on Zen: FTTC (VDSL) at ~40Mbps / 10Mbps
with IP4/6 (no v6? - not true Internet)
Edited by prlzx (Thu 24-Oct-24 01:36:09)



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