 Hello and welcome. Today we're going to be looking at a program called Net Hogs to install it on a Debian-based system. So if you're on Ubuntu, Linux, Mint, Debian, or any other Debian-based system, you're going to use apt or aptitude or aptget and install Net Hogs. And if you're on some other distribution, use whatever package manager you like. But install the package Net Hogs. I've already done that, so I'm not going to do that again. And you'll have to be sudo or root to run this because it needs permissions to basically monitor your network card. You don't want just any application doing that. But once you run that, it's going to start this up. And what it's going to do is give you a breakdown of applications on your computer, what processes are using the network. Currently, I'm connected to one of my servers through SSH and some information must have just been transferred. I also have Chrome open, so you can see that it has processed that there. Let me go ahead and open up another shell here. And I'm just going to do a Wget to test.com. And then I'll just pick that to the dev null. But you'll see when I run it, it shows up there as Wget and gives you the process ID and it tells you what user ran that process and on what network device it's being used. If I run that command again, Wget, same exact command, it's going to show up as a different item in the list because it's a new process. I started a new process. But still, you'll see that the user that's doing it, what the program is that's ran it on what network interface, what's been sent and received. And now, let's go ahead and go down and open up. Chrome here, I'm at my website. I'll just type in Linux. And as you can see, Chrome all of a sudden, the information sent and the information received went up. So you can see real time traffic, the speed of what's being sent by which process. So for some reason, your system's being bogged down. This is one way you can see, I've shown you other ways to look at your network traffic. And you can see how much you're going to use. This program lets you break it down per process. So if some process is in the background for some reason, just eating up your network traffic, you can find it in here pretty easily. It gives you the process IDs so you can kill it. It lets you know what user is running it. And of course, the program name. Now, let's look at some options for this. So Q to kill out of that. Let's go ahead and make this full screen. Of course, you can always go into the Man File Man net hogs. And there's very few options for this. One of the main things you might want to do is set device. So if you have a wireless card and an ethernet card and maybe more than one of each of those, you can specify, specify, specify, specify. You can specify which device you want to monitor. If you leave it blank, I believe it just monitors all of them. I only have an ethernet card on my desktop here. But that way you can narrow it down to device. The only other real options you might really use here is you can set up how often it refreshes and how it sorts the traffic. Very simple tool, but can be very useful for troubleshooting definitely. I do thank you for watching. I hope that you enjoyed this video. If you did, be sure to check out my website as we were just at. And as you can see here at my website, you can search through my videos from all my channels. Arduino. If you want to see Arduino stuff, do have stuff on motors. So motors, Python, and it quickly searches through all my YouTube videos on both my channels. You can also get about section really just doesn't say much. Software will bring you to a link to my GitLab page where you can go through my GitLab projects. Scripts on Pastebin. That's what this brings you to. Oh, no, scripts on my web server. These are just scripts that I have running that you can go and play with. They're mostly HTML and Java script stuff. That's why they're there. Notes is a way to search through my Pastebin account. So you can do that here. You can type in something like bash, wget. It's supposed to be wget. And it will filter out word by word. And then you can click on one of these. And it will bring you to that script on Pastebin. So yeah, check out my website. Shell, of course, is a shell interface. I did a video on that. If you don't like using a web browser, or you like using a tech space web browser, you just want to use wget or curl to search through my videos and my website. This is how you do that and with instructions on how to use it. RSS feed, if you use an RSS reader, support. Support, yeah. You can support me using Patreon. Patreon.com. For instance, Mail.x1000. Link in the description of the video. Or donate through PayPal. And then contact right now. Ain't that great. Been using FreeNode IRC for years. And they've been having spamming issues for the last two months. So it's basically unusable. I've tried changing settings in the channel. But I don't want to block new users. I don't know. So I have to look more into that. And they need to look more into that. And I don't know. I might look for other options. Any recommendations on some sort of way to communicate? Let me know in the comments below. So I've rambled on the tutorials three minutes. And now I've been just talking for about two. So I guess that's about it. Again, I thank you for watching. I hope that you have a great day. Like, share, subscribe, comment. Boo!