at university of washington, we are doing a measurement study of bgp misconfiguration (http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/ratul/bgp/index.html). one of the things we found is that there are a lot of announcements of more-specifics that come and go within a matter of 2-5 minutes. by talking to the operators involved in these incidents, we found that most of these are caused when the router is rebooted (intentionally or not). while some operators were aware of this side effect, most were not, and were taken by surprise that they just injected anywhere from 1-1000 routes into BGP only to withdraw them a couple of minutes later. i would like to understand this behavior better. is this behavior vendor-specific (cisco?) or pervasive? is there a configuration style that causes or avoids this "spill-over"? my understanding is limited to this happens when the bgp session comes up too soon, before the filters have taken effect. could someone familiar with router internals shed some light on it? the problem is limited to route origination only, or also propagation? in other words, can a router propagate a route it should not while starting up because export filters are not yet in place? never ever gotten my hands dirty into router configuration; your input would be invaluable. thanks, -- ratul