Yes! What happened with cflowd, I don't know. Does "which cflowd" return an answer? Do you see it with "ps -elf | grep cflow"?
It seems that flow-tools replaced cflowd: http://cert.uni-stuttgart.de/archive/debian/security/2004/02/msg00085.html But I have no clue. Good work and thanks for letting us know that it works. Can you get some screen shots and put them up some place? Another nice thing about dselect is that the dependency resolution also shows suggested but not required packages like http://packages.debian.org/unstable/net/fprobe so you can decide if you need it or not. On 2004.03.04 17:38 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > ......damn > I did a apt-get install flowscan > ...and the suggested and recommended stuff > and it works > well....I am able to use the flow-capture utility from the flow-tools package > that gets automatically installed with flowscan. > The funny thing is that every single reference, installation manual, etc that > I can find on google that pertains to flowscan and flow-tools states that > cflowd is used to collect the NetFlow data....however I am collecting data > and it is wonderful data too but for the life of me I can't find a cflowd* > anywhere except as a gzipped example file of how its supposed to be > configured. > I am making an assumption that cflowd is no longer developed and that the > code or similar code has been infused into the flow-tools package. The thing > that sucks is that I can't find any reference to this being the case. > I basically have a system that is collecting data and the software claims to > need the cflowd but it ain't there. > That being said I am on cloud nine because I am actually collecting NetFlow > v5 data and its beautful. > Just thought I would update those of you who responded to my rants. > Thanks, > cleve >
