diff -dur ntop-3.0.orig/packages/RedHat/ntop.conf.sample ntop-3.0/packages/RedHat/ntop.conf.sample --- ntop-3.0.orig/packages/RedHat/ntop.conf.sample 2004-03-18 19:28:25.000000000 +0100 +++ ntop-3.0/packages/RedHat/ntop.conf.sample 2004-09-13 15:11:43.799188870 +0200 @@ -63,9 +63,9 @@ ## -d | --daemon -- sets ntop to run as a daemon (in the background, not ## connected to a specific terminal). -## NOTE: For more than casual use, you probably want this. +## PLD NOTE: This option is added by the init script ---daemon +##--daemon ##-----------------------------------------------------------------------------# @@ -75,7 +75,9 @@ ## the working directory (pwd) will be different when ntop is run ## from the command line, from cron and from initialization. ---db-file-path /usr/share/ntop +## PLD NOTE: Set the path in /etc/sysconfig/ntop + +##--db-file-path /usr/share/ntop #? -P /var/ntop ##-----------------------------------------------------------------------------# @@ -148,7 +150,7 @@ ## It can be either a file or a list. To point ntop to a file specify it's name: -#? -p /usr/share/ntop/protocol.list +#? -p /etc/ntop/protocol.list ## Or to give an explicit list: @@ -205,6 +207,8 @@ ## Thus a typical startup for ntop running as a daemon is: #--daemon --use-syslog +--use-syslog + ## You can also direct the messages to another file. You'll want to ## look at man syslog.conf to setup the configuration file. For example Only in ntop-3.0/packages/RedHat: ntop.conf.sample~