For debian, it's in the netdiag package, which includes trafshow, which is fairly
close to netwatch, but even more simple, and strobe, which is close to nmap but
shows a little bit more explanation of what the port is used for.

Other programs included-
tcpspray--measures throughput on a connection by spraying bits.
tcpblast--same as tcpspray but not quite as subtle
statnet--gives usage on a network based on traffic type (tcp/udp, www/arp/?)

Ralph Zeller wrote:

> I use "netwatch."
>
> At 11:54 AM 12/22/00 -0800, "Garl R. Grigsby" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >Has anybody out there in Linux land had any luck getting ntop to work? I
> >have been trying to setup a network monitoring station and no matter
> >what I do, ntop never sees any traffic. The documentation is rather
> >lacking, so I was hoping for somebody with first had experience. Any
> >ideas?
> >
> >Garl
> >
> >--
> >=============================================================================
> >
> >Garl R. Grigsby
> >Senior Customer Applications Engineering - Analysis Team
> >-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> >
> >Structural Dynamics Research Corporation      Phone: (800)242-7372
> >TAO Americas Support Center                   FAX: (541)342-8277
> >1750 Willow Creek Circle                      Email:
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> >Eugene, OR 97402                              Internet:
> >http://www.sdrc.com
> >=============================================================================
> >
> >-FEA makes a good engineer great, and a poor engineer dangerous-
> >=============================================================================
> >
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> >
> >

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Organizing Linux users is like herding cats,
only harder.


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