Yeah you are (missing something, that is) - man ntop - Guess the eyes just
skipped over it...
-w | --http-server
-W | --https-server
ntop offers an embedded web server to present the information that
has
been so painstakingly gathered. An external HTTP server is
NOT
required NOR supported. The ntop web server is embedded into
the
application. These parameters specify the port (and optionally
the
address (i.e. interface)) of the ntop web server.
For example, if started with -w 3000 (the default port), the URL
to
access ntop is http://hostname:3000/. If started with a full
specifi-
cation, e.g. -w 192.168.1.1:3000, ntop listens on only
that
address/port combination.
One thought - if you don't NEED an IP address on the 2nd interface, don't
assign one. ntop works just fine on an unnumbered interface and there's
less exposure.
Enjoy!
-----Burton
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of twig
> les
> Sent: Wednesday, May 05, 2004 9:43 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: [Ntop] get web interface to listen on specific interface only
>
>
> Hey *, I'm new to ntop but have read the manpage and faq, also
> scoured google and serached the last 6 months of archives. My
> question is thus: I have a dual-homed machine (FBSD - cards are
> rl0 and rl1) and I'd like to have the web server listen on rl1
> only. I have ntop itself listening on only rl1, but the web
> server keeps showing up in netstat -an as *.3000 and *.3001.
>
> Am I missing a simple switch or something? It's possible since
> I've been looking at a monitor for 10+ hours now.
_______________________________________________
Ntop mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://listgateway.unipi.it/mailman/listinfo/ntop