Rene: [snip] > > I've tried to install Klamav, as I thought there'd be less chance of > > overlooking problems. However, the installation requires a > > compiler! This message: > > > > ***** Dazuko > > ***** Running configure (./configure)... > > checking host system type... Linux > > checking for make utility... ok (make) > > checking for C compiler... none found > > error: no C compiler found on this system > > ***** Return value 1 > > There's a binary package you can use, just follow the link trail from > Klamav's site: > > http://klamav.sourceforge.net/ > http://klamav.sourceforge.net/klamavwiki/index.php/Packages > http://linux01.gwdg.de/~pbleser/rpm-navigation?cat=System%2Fklamav/ > > It says "Unofficial SUSE" in the middle link, but the distribution is well > known.
I've downloaded the Version: 0.32-1.guru.suse100 package (not debuginfo rpm). However, YaST remarks a dependency conflict. This is despite Klamav FAQ: "The RPM for SUSE 10.0 adds a dependency for km_dazuko, so it's added automatically when installing from YaST Package Manager (a.k.a. Software Management), but you'll still have to load it: modprobe dazuko lsmod | grep dazuko modprobe capability lsmod | grep capability depmod -ae " Before installing, I tried [modprobe dazuko]: FATAL: Error inserting dazuko (/lib/modules/2.6.13-15-default/extra/dazuko.ko): Invalid argument It is actually listed there, in the extra directory. But it's not loadable, it's not listed with #cat /proc/modules and YaST search didn't find dazuko. I did install it in a previous installation, when I tried AntiVir, but that happened as part of a package. http://www.dazuko.org/howto-install.shtml recommends compiling dazuko, and firstly compiling a kernel. I'd prefer learning to do this later on, if it's possible! > > GCC tools at: > > ftp://ftp.suse.com/pub/suse/i386/9.1/suse/i586/ > > > > Suggestion from Logan at that website: > > > > "My system (2.6 P4 HT, SuSE 9.1 Personal), here's what I downloaded and > > installed: > > > > gcc-3.3.3-41.i586.rpm > > gcc-c++-3.3.3-41.i586.rpm > > gcc-g77-3.3.3-41.i586.rpm > > gcc-info-3.3.3-41.rpm > > gcc-java-3.3.3-41.i586.rpm > > gcc-locale-3.3.3-41.i586.rpm > > gcc-objc-3.3.3-41.i586.rpm > > glibc-devel-2.3.3-98.i586.rpm > > libobjc-3.3.3-41.i586.rpm > > libstdc++-devel-3.3.3-41.i586.rpm > > make-3.80-184.i586.rpm > > > > For each of these files I did the double-click thing and YaST took over. > > YaST will automatically identify any dependencies for the packages you > > are attempting to install (which is why my list became so long)." > > > > -- -- > > > > Do you know if this information is appropriate for SuSE10.0? > > Could work, I'm not sure, you could try it and if doesn't work then > uninstall it. I wouldn't install the whole thing, the dependencies are an > exageration, for a non-developer system I only need C and C++, no java, > ObjectiveC or fortran... > > Regards. _______________________________________________ http://lurker.clamav.net/list/clamav-users.html
