Package: tcptrack
Version: 1.1.5-1
Severity: normal

The 'p' key doesn't seem to behave the way the man page suggests:

       When paused (via the p command) no new connections will be displayed,  
however  tcptrack
       will  still  monitor and track all connections it sees as usual. This 
option affects the
       display only, not internals. When you unpause, the display will be 
updated with all cur-
       rent information that tcptrack has been gathering all along.

On my system if 'p' is  pressed the dislplay on the bottom right changes
from "Unpaused" to "Paused", but the action continues.  Speeds change,
new connections appear, the 'sort' function keeps sorting.


Hope this helps...


-- System Information:
Debian Release: testing/unstable
  APT prefers unstable
  APT policy: (500, 'unstable'), (1, 'experimental')
Architecture: i386 (i686)
Shell:  /bin/sh linked to /bin/bash
Kernel: Linux 2.6.14-2-686
Locale: LANG=C, LC_CTYPE=C (charmap=ANSI_X3.4-1968) (ignored: LC_ALL set to C)

Versions of packages tcptrack depends on:
ii  libc6                         2.3.5-8.1  GNU C Library: Shared libraries an
ii  libgcc1                       1:4.0.2-4  GCC support library
ii  libncurses5                   5.5-1      Shared libraries for terminal hand
ii  libpcap0.8                    0.9.4-1    System interface for user-level pa
ii  libstdc++5                    1:3.3.6-10 The GNU Standard C++ Library v3

tcptrack recommends no packages.

-- no debconf information


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