Is there a list on the web of the viruses in the current clamav db by OS?
I have searched the archives and FAQ and can not find a list of the
current viruses. This silly question arises from a push or management
requirement to install clamav on Solaris boxes for the purpose of
virus scanning to
A few days ago, I saw that the wrong f level was published in a cvd.
http://lurker.clamav.net/message/20061103.221240.b49f234b.en.html
However, I am still getting that message. Does anyone know if it is still safe
to ignore?
I don't want to be a pain - but can anyone confirm or deny that
Hello Little,
http://lurker.clamav.net/message/20061103.221240.b49f234b.en.html
However, I am still getting that message. Does anyone know if it is still
safe to ignore?
I don't want to be a pain - but can anyone confirm or deny that they are
also seeing these messages? I have gone
I can't seem to find any best practices on scanning file systems. I am
running a test scan on a 4 gig file system with mostly Oracle database files
and it's been runnning for several hours. Is there any doc out there that
may help me speed this up or help me exclude file types? CPU is at 100%.
On Friday 17 November 2006 14:40, Stephen Anderson wrote:
Is there a list on the web of the viruses in the current clamav db by OS?
I have searched the archives and FAQ and can not find a list of the
current viruses. This silly question arises from a push or management
requirement to install
I am running RHEL 3 and have clamav version 0.88.4 installed (via
binaries). I cannot update to the latest 0.88.6 version successfully.
(Both sets of packages were downloaded from the dag.wieers.com website).
When attempting the rpm -Uvh command using both rpm packages together
(i.e. clamav
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Fri, Nov 17, 2006 at 04:04:46PM -0600, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
When attempting the rpm -Uvh command using both rpm packages together
(i.e. clamav and clamav-db) I get dependencies back to the previous
packages.
You have to upgrade all three
John Gibbons wrote:
I can't seem to find any best practices on scanning file systems. I am
running a test scan on a 4 gig file system with mostly Oracle database
files
I'm not sure what you're trying to accomplish here.
From http://clamav.net/abstract.html#pagestart
Clam AntiVirus is a GPL
Fajar A. Nugraha wrote:
John Gibbons wrote:
I can't seem to find any best practices on scanning file systems. I am
running a test scan on a 4 gig file system with mostly Oracle database
files
I'm not sure what you're trying to accomplish here.
From http://clamav.net/abstract.html#pagestart
Dennis Peterson wrote:
Fajar A. Nugraha wrote:
Database objects can include blobs (binary large objects). These can
be files including executables, documents, other databases. They can
have viruses. In some instances the blob in an internal representation
and can be difficult to get to
Fajar A. Nugraha wrote:
Dennis Peterson wrote:
Fajar A. Nugraha wrote:
Database objects can include blobs (binary large objects). These can
be files including executables, documents, other databases. They can
have viruses. In some instances the blob in an internal representation
and can be
On 11/18/06, Tomasz Papszun [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Thu, 16 Nov 2006 at 14:59:24 +0800, zamri wrote:
On 11/16/06, Tomasz Papszun [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 14 Nov 2006 at 11:33:23 +0800, zamri wrote:
That file was detected as worm for clamav 0.88.5. I think this is
sufficient
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