Hi JR.
Thanks for your response. To clarify, I wasn’t referring to clamd, the daemon,
I was referring to clamd, the package, which shows up here (I only have the
EPEL and base repos installed):
sudo yum install clamav-server
…
Dependencies Resolved
Hi there,
On Wed, 28 Aug 2019, Scott A. Wozny via clamav-users wrote:
I’m looking at installing Clam on my CentOS 7 servers ...
Sorry, but I have to ask :)
Why?
sites offering install tutorials recommend installing
H. Sites with tutorials. I guess I avoid them.
clamav-server
Scott,
First - "clamd" is the daemon. It starts up and parses / loads all the
virus definitions into memory, then clamdscan (or other programs)
interact with it (via local unix socket) to scan files.
I checked my CentOS 7 server and I'm not seeing all those packages you
mentioned. Do you have
Sorry Brian. ClamAV is probably not what you’re looking for.
As Harald stated, ClamAV is not a security suite.
ClamAV is just the file scanning engine that parses files and identifies
malware hidden within.
ClamAV does not have rootkit detection, exploit detection, or other runtime
Am 29.11.2017 um 18:08 schrieb Brian Turner:
A few more questions about ClamAV.
Thank you in advance!
1. Does ClamAV have VPN access?
2. Does it have SafeBrowsing?
3. Spyware?
4. Worms?
5. Rootkits?
6. Auto Scanning?
7. Scheduled Scan?
8. Firewall Protection?
9. File Manager?
10. System
A few more questions about ClamAV.
Thank you in advance!
1. Does ClamAV have VPN access?
2. Does it have SafeBrowsing?
3. Spyware?
4. Worms?
5. Rootkits?
6. Auto Scanning?
7. Scheduled Scan?
8. Firewall Protection?
9. File Manager?
10. System Booster?
11. Offers Tech Support by Phone?
12. Email
Thank you Micah!
On Mon, Nov 20, 2017 at 11:48 PM, Micah Snyder (micasnyd) <
micas...@cisco.com> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> 1. Can it scan all files/data from a dirty S3 bucket, and place the files
> into a clean bucket?
> I don’t have experience working with S3 buckets. ClamAV works with files
> on a
My experience is that ClamAV is limited by to 4 GB for the size of a
file. Apparently it still uses 32-bit numbers (as opposed to addresses)
even on 64-bit machines.
On Mon, 20 Nov 2017 18:42:22 -0800
Al Varnell wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 20, 2017 at 03:48 PM, Micah Snyder
On Mon, Nov 20, 2017 at 03:48 PM, Micah Snyder (micasnyd) wrote:
> 2. Does it have the ability to scan large files (2 GBs+)?
> ClamAV currently has max file size limits around 2GB.
I believe the default MaxFileSize is only 25MB, at least that's what it is for
the clamd daemon. It can be
> On Nov 20, 2017, at 6:48 PM, Micah Snyder (micasnyd)
> wrote:
>
> 3. Is it compatible with both Linux and Windows?
> Yes, however certain features (e.g. on access scanning) are limited to Linux.
I’ve found fswatch to overcome on-access scanning on OSX, and it supposed to
Hello,
1. Can it scan all files/data from a dirty S3 bucket, and place the files
into a clean bucket?
I don’t have experience working with S3 buckets. ClamAV works with files on a
filesystem. ClamAV’s ability to move files during scanning is limited to
moving dirty files, not moving clean
Dear all,
1) I am going to use the anti-virus in a closed network, and
connection to
the Internet is not possible. How can ClamAV be updated
manully without
accessing the Internet? Can freshclam be deactivated? And
will there be
any effect on the signature update if freshclam is
Dear Cheng,
Hope following information helps you:
1) I am going to use the anti-virus in a closed network, and connection to
the Internet is not possible. How can ClamAV be updated manully without
accessing the Internet? Can freshclam be deactivated? And will there be
any effect on the
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