This morning, I discovered ntop had crashed. So I updated.

Previously, ntop classified local traffic as local, and remote traffic
as local, based on my ntop.localAddresses setting.

After the update, everything gets classified as local. If I go to
IP->Local->Hosts Characterization, I see a list mostly consisting of
remote machines. If I go to IP->Local->HostsFingerprint, I again see a
list of mostly remote machines. (And it tells me it's scanned 253
hosts...there's no *way* I have that many hosts on my local subnets.)

Reporting this here because that's what the description of the ntop-dev
list says I should do.

Version details:

Report created on Mon Apr 29 08:04:58 2013 [ntop uptime: 5:04]
Generated by ntop v.5.0.2 (64 bit)
[x86_64-2.6.32-358.2.1.el6.x86_64-linux-gnu]
© 1998-2012 by Luca Deri, built: Apr 23 2013 03:08:07.
Version: the current DEVELOPMENT version - Expect the unexpected!
Listening on [eth0,eth1] for all packets (i.e. without a filtering
expression)
Web reports include all interfaces (merged)

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