If you won't take our suggestions to help you help
yourself, there isn't anything else I can do. Sorry...
-----Burton
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of kapi rajesh
Sent: Monday, April 03, 2006 10:37 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [Ntop] not able to start ntop
regards,
kapilesh
This is ntop.conf file which I am using,
### You should copy this file to it's normal location, /etc/etc/ntop.conf
### and edit it to fit your needs.
###
### ntop is easily launched with options by referencing this file from
### a command line like this:
###
### ntop @/etc/ntop.conf
###
### Remember, options may also be listed directly on the command line, both
### before and after the @/etc/ntop.conf.
###
### For switches that provide values, e.g. -i, the last one matters.
### For switches just say 'do things', e..g -M, if it's ANYWHERE in the
### commands, it will be set. There's no unset option.
###
### You can use this to your advantage, for example:
### ntop @/etc/ntop.conf -i none
### Overrides the -i in the file.
# -M option
-M
### Sets the user that ntop runs as.
### NOTE: This should not be root unless you really understand the security risks.
--user ntop
### Sets the directory that ntop runs from.
--db-file-path /var/ntop
### Interface(s) that ntop will capture on (default: eth0)
#--interface eth0
--interface eth0,eth1
### Configures ntop not to trust MAC addrs. This is used when port mirroring or SPAN
#--no-mac
### Logging messages to syslog (instead of the console):
### NOTE: To log to a specific facility, use --use-syslog=local3
### NOTE: The = is REQUIRED and no spaces are permitted.
--use-syslog
### Tells ntop to track only local hosts as specified by the --local-subnets option
#--track-local-hosts
### Sets the port that the HTTP webserver listens on
### NOTE: --http-server 3000 is the default
#--http-server 3000
### Sets the port that the optional HTTPS webserver listens on
#--https-server 3001
### Sets the networks that ntop should consider as local.
### NOTE: Uses dotted decimal and CIDR notation. Example: 192.168.0.0/24
### The addresses of the interfaces are always local and don't need to be specified.
#--local-subnets xx.xx.xx.xx/yy
### Sets the domain. ntop should be able to determine this automatically.
#--domain mydomain.com
### Sets program to run as a daemon
### NOTE: For more than casual use, you probably want this.
#--daemon
Burton Strauss <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Nope ... you've given us just about zero info...This is the script from the .rpm right?What message(s) show up when you start ntop?You might need to temporarily add the -x parameter on the 1st line (#!/bin/sh -x) to see the commands as they execute. That often will tell you what the precise failure is.-----Burton
Hi friends,
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of kapi rajesh
Sent: Monday, April 03, 2006 1:53 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Ntop] not able to start ntop
I am a new member of this group. I have installed ntop using ntop-3.1-1.1.fc3.rf.i386.rpm and I am not able to start ntop services. I checked it using /etc/init.d/ntop status. Can any one help me to start ntop.
I am able to run ntop in text mode and see the webpage and data.
regards
kapilesh
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