what system are you using? if it's red hat based, you can use
chkconfig ntopd on or something like that.



On Wed, Aug 20, 2008 at 11:14 AM, Mukom TAMON <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello all,
>    I successfully configured ntop from sources and up till now I start it
> manually by typing sudo ntop -d.
> I would however love to set it so that it automatically starts at boot. I
> tried inserting /usr/local/bin/ntop -d into /etc/rc.local file. When I
> reboot my machine, ntop seems to start ok[no error message], tells me "Bye
> by: I am becoming a daemon" ... all normal behavior AFAIK. But then I am
> unable to access the web interface. Even running netstat -l on the machine
> doesn't show anything listening on port 3000. What should I do?
>
> --
> ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
> M.A. TAMON
> B.Eng, CCNP, CCNA
>
> "A man owns nothing, not land or money, only his character, the loyalty &
> courage in his heart"
> My BLOGs:
> [ICT Business Integration] - http://ibiztech.wordpress.com
> [Leadership Lessons from Movies] - http://thbs.wordpress.com
> [In Search of Excellence & Perfection] - http://perfexcellence.wordpress.com
> [Technical How Tos & Stuff-at-a-Glance] - http://techowto.wordpress.com
>
>
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>



-- 
with kind regards,
dg


"You can always go back, but you can't go back all the way" -- Bob
Dylan, Mississippi
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