On Fri, 14 Sep 2018 15:27:30 +0200
Remi Locherer <remi.loche...@relo.ch> wrote:

> Did you save the console output and daemon log from the restart?
> Can you share it?

I restarted ospfd again with rcctl, console output gives just usual:

ospfd(ok)
ospfd(ok)

The second one waiting a bit more than I remember it used to.

Here's ospfd-related stuff from daemon log:

Sep 14 15:40:58 nat1 ospfd[34802]: route decision engine exiting
Sep 14 15:40:58 nat1 ospfd[73845]: ospf engine exiting
Sep 14 15:40:58 nat1 ospfd[2242]: kernel routing table decoupled
Sep 14 15:40:58 nat1 ospfd[2242]: terminating
Sep 14 15:40:58 nat1 ospfd[55815]: startup
Sep 14 15:40:58 nat1 ospfd[55815]: alien OSPF route 10.30.1.45/32
Sep 14 15:40:58 nat1 ospfd[55815]: alien OSPF route 10.30.1.56/32
Sep 14 15:40:58 nat1 ospfd[55815]: alien OSPF route 10.30.6.81/32
Sep 14 15:40:58 nat1 ospfd[55815]: alien OSPF route 10.30.19.42/32

First three alien routes are on openbsd router two hops away, the last
one is my laptop which is one hop away.

Could it be these are routes installed when someone connects through
ssh? I am connected through ssh, and it is possible that my colleague
also connected through ssh from 10.30.1.X and 10.30.6.X addresses.

> Would I be in charge of running this network I would want to know
> where these alien routes come from. But I think it did not affect
> your network badly since you did not mention an outage. ;-)

My point exactly :) If you have any idea where to start looking I'd be
grateful for any tips.

Thank you for helping me with this.
-- 
Before enlightenment - chop wood, draw water.
After  enlightenment - chop wood, draw water.

Marko Cupać
https://www.mimar.rs/

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