Using "[ 192.168.60.0/24+ ]” works, however from the documentation I read the following regarding the `include` operator:
Special operators include (~, !~) for "is (not) element of a set" operation - it can be used on […] on prefix and prefix (returning true if first prefix is more specific than second one) In my case I have "import where net ~ [ 192.168.60.0/24 ] ;”, which should be true because prefix 192.168.60.10/32 is more specific than 192.168.60.0/24. That statement, in fact, is true on Bird 1.6.x. and, without the array ("import where net ~ 192.168.60.0/24 ;”), on Bird 2.0.x. Why do my networks get filtered out then? Thanks, Carlo > On 27 Jun 2018, at 16:20, Ondrej Zajicek <santi...@crfreenet.org> wrote: > > On Wed, Jun 27, 2018 at 04:11:17PM +0200, Carlo Rengo wrote: >> My bad, I’ve posted the log outputs in the opposite order. The first output >> is referred to the second configuration (the one that makes us of the array). > > Hi, it works like it worked in 1.6.x branch. Prefix set [ 192.168.60.0/24 ] > matches only the 192.168.60.0/24 prefix. You have to use prefix set > [ 192.168.60.0/24+ ] to match 192.168.60.0/24 and longer prefixes. > > -- > Elen sila lumenn' omentielvo > > Ondrej 'Santiago' Zajicek (email: santi...@crfreenet.org) > OpenPGP encrypted e-mails preferred (KeyID 0x11DEADC3, wwwkeys.pgp.net) > "To err is human -- to blame it on a computer is even more so."