> On Oct 20, 2017, at 2:30 PM, Steve McIntyre <st...@einval.com> wrote: > > On Fri, Oct 20, 2017 at 02:00:46PM -0700, Stan Lubiak wrote: >> Those were the only errors reported. I downloaded 9.2.0 after I got the 9.2.1 >> errors. Vuse+/BitDefender did not report any errors with that download. I >> have >> not yet performed an install, only a download. > > Then I'm stumped as to what on earth it's complaining about. :-/ > >> FYI, The following is from the Vuse+ website: >> >> • Every hour of every day, BitDefender updates its virus database with the >> latest protection against viruses, scams and malware. Then every time you >> download a new file with Vuze Plus, its built-in BitDefender protection >> first checks to make sure it has downloaded new definitions within the last >> four hours. >> • "Unable to scan" - there are a number of reasons that a file may fail to >> scan. Usually it is related to having moved a file from its default >> download location while it is still in your Vuze Library. Vuze can no >> longer locate the file, so it cannot scan it for malware. >> >> I did not do anything differently for the 9.2.0 vs 9.2.1 downloads, & did not >> move, modify, or perform any other actions on the downloaded files. Plus, the >> two .tar files are contained within the .iso. > > What do you mean by that last sentence, exactly? The only places those > files might be showing up are inside the file > python-wstools_0.4.3-3_all.deb. It might be instructive to just scan > that one file, if you can work out how to do that.
Vuse downloaded the entire .iso as a single file, which is a container for all the files in the disk image. My understanding is that BitDefender opened the .iso & then accessed/scanned the individual constituent files. > > Oh, hmmm... Silly question - is the cause something as silly as you > running out of disk space, or filesystem corruption on your machine? > iMac (Retina 5K, 27-inch, Late 2015) 2.1TB (851GB free) Scanned disk - no errors. I’ll look into scanning the files you mentioned. > -- > Steve McIntyre, Cambridge, UK. st...@einval.com > "I've only once written 'SQL is my bitch' in a comment. But that code > is in use on a military site..." -- Simon Booth >