Yes.

The libpcap library doesn't differentiate which IP address the packet is
received 'on' - it operates at the lower, frame, level.

The reporting of this during startup was fixed up in November, so ntop now
shows you what it's doing.

-----Burton


> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf
> Of Russell Jones
> Sent: Friday, February 27, 2004 5:15 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: [Ntop-dev] quick question about ntop
>
>
> Great product! I love it!
>
> However I have a question.
>
> I have 1 main IP binded to my redhat 9 box, and 2 more binded as "virtual
> devices". ntop appears to be grouping all of the traffic it
> recieved under
> the main IP and not seeing that incoming traffic on the other 2 ip's that
> are binded as "virtual devices" are being sent to those IP's and not the
> main one.
>
> I was hoping to be able to use ntop to monitor traffic incoming
> on each IP
> and see what comes in on each IP.
>
>
> Any idea on how to do this?
>
> Thanks for your help!
>
> Russell Jones
>
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