I'm not saying it's wrong to be spoon-fed, I just appreciate people who
are patient enough answering those questions. That includes you on
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ;)
Man, calm down and have a nice day!
Crucificator wrote:
Bert Koelewijn wrote:
Wow, I've been following this list for a week now and I'm amazed how
nice you are to people who want to be spoon-fed.
I am really annoyed. Besides the fact that I have learned by my self all
that I know and I am responding regularly to [EMAIL PROTECTED] to
users that are in linux just like I am in clamav (to wich list by the
way I haven't seen you posting any answers although you sound just like
the good samaritean) I have read the clamdoc.pdf and the documentation
lacks a good overview of the way the engine works.
Second: I am (in fact was) really hurried up by the fact that I want to
buy for my organization a av solution for the M$ side (because I have
all users and 2 servers on Win2k) and the firms that I have contacted
bundled also a linux version of the av. Plus I have 80 stations with all
kind of peripherics that all wait for me to pay a little attention so I
thought that maybe someone could explain me like I have explained for
others - and pay a little attention now - not spoon-feeding them just
putting them on the right track. It's not like I asked what are the
commands that will put my clam online and working.
Third: if you hate my post so much I think the clever thing to do would
have been to just delete it and save your reply time and also saving my
mental sanity and a day that begun with reading your ... little post. Me
for example I couldn't be able to read all posts on the other list so
questions like "My X Server doesn't work" and things like that I simply
delete them and let other people with much more time and much more
experience in X to deal with them.
Fourth: I think you missed the ideea of why mailing lists were invented
in the first place.
Fifth: looking from 1 to 4 I believe I spent too much time showing you
things that are "heavier" in comparison to my first question wich you
didn't even bother to respond. The things I was showing you regarded
humanity and plain-simple courtesy. I will simply delete other postings
from you in the following time.
So to everyone else *but *Bert Koelewijn I am sorry if my novicism in
clam has bothered you but I would like to read something about a
complete solution and I'd like for someone to pinpoint me in the right
direction. I am looking for something like NAV Auto-protect, I need to
know how to make clam automatically scan incoming and outgoing mail and
delete the mail containing infected items. BTW I have installed clam,
libclam and clamd.
To Jeff Smelser: The problem was really with clamuko wich supposably
runs hooked with clamd and scans every file (on the various options)
that is accessed or created in the <clamukoincludepath> but it doesn't.
Maybe here I am right ... :). The way the engine works is a little too
complicated for what a antivirus is intended to do.
>From what I understand from http://qmail-scanner.sourceforge.net I see
that although a clam process is active I need another software for qmail
that will will actually scan the mailboxes. I use postfix for MTA and
imap for pop3 and imap server. On clamav.net page I could read:
* on-access scanning (Linux and FreeBSD) *and
* built-in support for Mbox, Maildir and raw mail files
*according to this I could get ONLY from clam the solution for scanning
and deleting infected mails.
Maybe someone from here could tell me why not?
There are patient people on the planet! ;)
Yeah, right.
Robert Blayzor wrote:
Crucificator wrote:
I have installed clamav 0.67 with no problem.
I have this one though after installing:) :
clamd running
clamscan successfully detects infected file
included path to /var/spool/mail in clamav.conf
If you are running clamd you probably don't want to run clamscan, you
want to run clamdscan.
However if you are looking for the scanner to "delete" the infected
files you have to use clamscan as clamdscan will not do this for
you. Try:
clamscan --remove
For more info see, man clamd, clamdscan and clamscan.
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