Yes it’s possible. You can delete the directory and start over: you will loose
some history but everything will be clean
Luca
> On 21 Nov 2017, at 14:05, Marat Khalili wrote:
>
> On 21/11/17 15:37, Luca Deri wrote:
>> Marat
>> please note that in ntop 3.1 the number of files has been greatly
>
Hi Matěj,
please change
D=0
--syslog=cento
-b *<=== REMOVE*
--if-networks=68:05:CA:34:89:C0@5,68:05:CA:34:89:C1@6
(remove -b)
and it will work
Regards Luca
On 11/20/2017 05:21 PM, Matěj Grégr wrote:
> Hello Luca,
> I tried to use the following cento.conf:
>
> # cat /etc/cento/cento.conf
>
On 21/11/17 15:37, Luca Deri wrote:
Marat
please note that in ntop 3.1 the number of files has been greatly
reduced and that we are working to reduce them up. If you are still
using v3 you can use 3.1 to preview this
In fact I'm on a v.3.1.171102 right now. Can it be that many of the
files are
Marat
please note that in ntop 3.1 the number of files has been greatly
reduced and that we are working to reduce them up. If you are still
using v3 you can use 3.1 to preview this
Thanks Luca
On 11/21/2017 08:07 AM, Marat Khalili wrote:
> Dear ntopng experts,
>
> Directory /var/tmp/ntopng/ cont
Hi Chris
I have made some checks and the Internet speed from various locations I
have access to, it is ~100 Mbit that is the nominal speed of the
Internet connection we have.
So I think the problem is due to inefficient routing. Can you please do
a traceroute towards packages.ntop.org and a new do
Hello Marat,
> On 21 Nov 2017, at 08:07, Marat Khalili wrote:
>
> Dear ntopng experts,
>
> Directory /var/tmp/ntopng/ contains 443K inodes (files and directories) on my
> system, significant number of which (~20K) changes daily. This number of
> small files slows down daily backup noticeably.