On Thu, 4 Jan 2018, Paul B. wrote:
>Hi,
>I just installed ClamAv on a desktop Linux machine. I would like to
>set it up using aliases in the bashrc file, so I can do various kinds
>of file and directory scans from the command line. Rather than an
>unwieldy string of exclusions in the alias' comman
Thanks, Micah. I just tried to set up clamdscan, but not having much
luck with it. Will look at clamav again.
On Thu, Jan 4, 2018 at 2:03 PM, Micah Snyder (micasnyd)
wrote:
> Presently, the only way to do exclusions is through the options for clamd in
> clamd.conf. We have a ticket for a featur
I’d like to amend my statement and say that you can exclude things, in a way,
by using the --max-filesize option and similar options but it’s probably not
what you’re looking for.
Clamd isn’t too tough to start up, and then you can run scans with clamdscan.
The only downside is it will use a c
Presently, the only way to do exclusions is through the options for clamd in
clamd.conf. We have a ticket for a feature request to add a --exclude option
to clamscan, but we unfortunately don’t have the time to address it anywhere in
the near future.
Micah Snyder
Software Engineer
Talos
Cisco
Hi,
I just installed ClamAv on a desktop Linux machine. I would like to
set it up using aliases in the bashrc file, so I can do various kinds
of file and directory scans from the command line. Rather than an
unwieldy string of exclusions in the alias' command line, I would like
to have a file that