On 12/04/06, Claudio Jeker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On Wed, Apr 12, 2006 at 01:36:46PM +0200, Sylvain Coutant wrote: > > > What was the state of the parent interface and what kind of interface > is > > > it? > > > > Bge driver. It was up and running : BGP sessions were established > > through the vlans reported as invalid by OpenBGP. > > > > I bet Henning's diff will fix this. > > > > > > ifconfig down should not crash the box. Panic message and trace would > be > > > interesting. > > > > It was remote and we did a hard reboot without console access. Log files > > were empty. > > > > Bummer. > > > > > > No, the session and the nexthop are two different things. > > > > I agree. My point is : how to prevent routing loops in such cases ? > > How should routing loops happen if you do not announce those invalid > routes? Prefixes with an invalid netxhop are not used and are not > redistributed. > > > Whatever triggered the case (a link down for any reason or a bug) is not > > so important. Announcing routes over the Internet and creating a routing > > loop for those routes is important. > > > > It could be one more setting that, if set to yes, would drop the session > > if it receives an unreachable nexthop ... just an idea. It could default > > to yes for eBGP session and no for iBGP sessions. Would that fit most of > > "usual" cases ? > > > > No way. This is not how BGP works and will break in many cases. > > -- > :wq Claudio > > But speaking of routing loops, I suspect that there is something wrong with the route-reflector part. I can introduce routing loops into my test network by flapping prefixes. Before I wrote this I flapped 13.0.0.0/8 just once in my test network:
View from the route-server which peers with all routers: quagga-bgpd# sh ip bgp 13.0.0.0 BGP routing table entry for 13.0.0.0/8 Paths: (7 available, best #7, table Default-IP-Routing-Table) Not advertised to any peer Local 10.1.1.22 from 10.0.0.5 (10.0.0.2) Origin IGP, metric 900, localpref 100, valid, internal Originator: 10.0.0.2, Cluster list: 10.0.0.5 10.0.0.6 10.0.0.8 172.16.0.3 10.0.0.7 10.0.0.4 172.16.0.2 10.0.0.3 10.0.0.1 Last update: Wed Apr 12 14:11:25 2006 Local 10.1.1.26 from 10.0.0.4 (10.0.0.2) Origin IGP, metric 700, localpref 100, valid, internal Originator: 10.0.0.2, Cluster list: 10.0.0.4 10.0.0.7 10.0.0.8 10.0.0.6 10.0.0.5 10.0.0.3 10.0.0.1 Last update: Wed Apr 12 14:11:25 2006 Local 172.16.1.13 from 172.16.0.2 (10.0.0.2) Origin IGP, metric 800, localpref 100, valid, internal Originator: 10.0.0.2, Cluster list: 172.16.0.2 10.0.0.4 10.0.0.7 10.0.0.8 10.0.0.6 10.0.0.5 10.0.0.3 10.0.0.1 Last update: Wed Apr 12 14:11:25 2006 Local 10.1.1.34 from 10.0.0.6 (10.0.0.2) Origin IGP, metric 800, localpref 100, valid, internal Originator: 10.0.0.2, Cluster list: 10.0.0.6 10.0.0.8 172.16.0.3 10.0.0.7 10.0.0.4 172.16.0.2 10.0.0.3 10.0.0.1 Last update: Wed Apr 12 14:11:25 2006 Local 172.16.1.21 from 10.0.0.8 (10.0.0.2) Origin IGP, metric 700, localpref 100, valid, internal Originator: 10.0.0.2, Cluster list: 10.0.0.8 172.16.0.3 10.0.0.7 10.0.0.4 172.16.0.2 10.0.0.3 10.0.0.1 Last update: Wed Apr 12 14:11:25 2006 Local 172.16.1.18 from 172.16.0.3 (10.0.0.2) Origin IGP, metric 700, localpref 100, valid, internal Originator: 10.0.0.2, Cluster list: 172.16.0.3 10.0.0.7 10.0.0.8 10.0.0.6 10.0.0.5 10.0.0.3 10.0.0.1 Last update: Wed Apr 12 14:11:25 2006 Local 10.1.1.30 from 10.0.0.7 (10.0.0.2) Origin IGP, metric 600, localpref 100, valid, internal, best Originator: 10.0.0.2, Cluster list: 10.0.0.7 10.0.0.8 10.0.0.6 10.0.0.5 10.0.0.3 10.0.0.1 Last update: Wed Apr 12 14:11:25 2006 quagga-bgpd# The loop does not occur at the same place everytime. Do you have a setup with route-reflectors ? Claudio, could my problem have to do with the problem in rde_reflector() which you mentioned in another thread ? The cluster-list seems a bit screwed up when I trace the prefix from the router with the lowest metric. -- Tony Sarendal - [EMAIL PROTECTED] IP/Unix -= The scorpion replied, "I couldn't help it, it's my nature" =-