Thank you. Your communication makes sense.

The challenge I have at the moment is that when I try to run the scan I get a 
prompt saying that the following prompt : No supported database files found in 
/var/opt/csw/clamav/db.



Also note that my server environment is disconnected from the internet.

Another question I have is how do I update my .cvd database while not being 
able to access the internet?



[cid:image001.png@01D6973A.AA3C6370]







Victor Miriti

ICT Security Operation Centre

VOIP 12066

Tel: 2854600 |  0711013066|

Co-op Trust Plaza, Lower Hill Rd



***Soli Deo Gloria

 Whoever speaks, let him speak, as it were, the utterances of God; whoever 
serves, let him do so as by the strength which God supplies; so that in all 
things God may be glorified through Jesus Christ, to whom belongs the glory and 
dominion forever and ever.***

1st Peter 4:11







-----Original Message-----
From: clamav-users <clamav-users-boun...@lists.clamav.net> On Behalf Of G.W. 
Haywood via clamav-users
Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2020 2:44 PM
To: ClamAV users ML <clamav-users@lists.clamav.net>
Cc: G.W. Haywood <cla...@jubileegroup.co.uk>
Subject: Re: [clamav-users] CONFIGURATION OF CLAMAV IN SOLARIS 11



ICT SECURITY CAUTION: This external mail may be risky. Unless you recognise the 
sender, please do not open any attachments or click on any links.



Hello again,



In what I have written below I have tried to be clear, but if my use of English 
is difficult for you to understand please say so and I will try harder.  I am 
sorry if some of the things I have written seem too obvious, but I do not know 
what is obvious to you and what is not.



On Wed, 30 Sep 2020, Victor Miriti [ICT Security] wrote:



> I would like to scan the files in my solaris 11 box.



If you have installed ClamAV properly I would expect that you now have 
available to you a command-line utility called 'clamscan'.  At the simplest 
level you should, at a "shell" prompt, be able to give this

command:



$ clamscan /path/to/file



and clamscan will scan the file.  It might take a while - we can talk about 
that later.  The '$' symbol on the line is a substitute for the prompt which 
your shell will give you before you type the command; you do not type it 
yourself.  I do not know what shell you have installed so I can't tell you what 
it will look like on your screen.  If you normally use a "graphical user 
interface" or 'GUI' to do most things on the box then you will need to 'open a 
terminal' or something like that to get a shell prompt so you can issue 
command-line commands.



After you give a command you generally get some output on the screen.

Again we can talk about that later but for now just expect to see some kind of 
response to the command followed by another prompt.  You have to wait; you 
can't give another command until you get the next prompt.

(Well you can't normally, there are ways, but we won't go into that.)



The shell prompt normally changes from something with a '$' symbol in it to 
something with a '#' symbol when you change from a normal user to the 'root' 
user, which has elevated permissions.  These permissions are generally 
dangerous, and the 'root' user should not be used unless there is a good reason 
for it.  Installing system utilities will need elevated permissions for example.



You should also have a utility called 'clamdscan'.  Note that there is an extra 
letter 'd' in that command that was not in the first command.

You can also give the command



$ clamdscan /path/to/file



and this time clamdscan will scan the file - in a way.  In fact it merely 
passes the data to clamd and clamd does the actual scanning.

So clamd needs to be running if you are to use clamdscan.  It should give the 
result a lot quicker than 'clamscan' did.  But it might not work, because you 
might have some configuration to do.  It might be that clamd is not running and 
it might be that clamdscan doesn't know how to talk to it.  That's where 
configuration probably starts but it is definitely not where it ends.



What is the box used for?



Is it normally connected to the Internet?  How?  Is there a firewall (or 
something similar) between it and the Internet?



To what risks do you think the box is exposed?



Which files do you want to scan, and why?



What do you want the scan to look for?



What will you do if ClamAV says it has found something?



> I installed clamd



How did you install it?  You can install from source, or from some 'package' 
which was produced by someone else.  Please tell us which.

Either way, please tell where you got it from.  You can install for just 
yourself or for the entire system.  Again, please tell us which.

Normally you would install for the entire system but you need to have 
permission to do that.  If you are at a bank I wonder if you have the necessary 
permissions.  If you have installed ClamAV properly, there should be much more 
than just clamd installed.  Amongst other things you should now have a set of 
what we call 'man' pages which form the bulk of the documentation which you may 
need for day-to-day use.  If for example you type



$ man clamd



at a shell prompt you should see (displayed by your system-configured pager, 
which you will need to know how to use) the terse information typically 
provided by a 'man' page about clamd.  It assumes that you are familiar with 
the way that a 'man' page is laid out, and that you already know quite a bit 
about the tool.  It gives you the essential information that you need to be 
able to use it and very little more.



You should also have a manual in HTML format, which is also available on the 
ClamAV Website, but I do not know where your local copy will be without more 
information from you and apparently in any case you have had some difficulty 
with it.  If you tell us more about the difficulty we can try to help, but 
there is a lot for you to read and understand and we cannot do that for you.



Do you know very roughly how a scan works?



Do you know what clamd is and what it does?



Are you familiar with the tools on your system which are used to start and stop 
system services, and to enquire about their status?



Do you know if clamd is running on your system?  If so, how?



If it is not running, do you know why not?



Do you know how to control (stop and start) clamd?



Have you, or has your system, created a ClamAV database directory?



Are there some signature files in it?  Are they up to date?



Do you know about freshclam?  Do you know what it does?



Do you know if freshclam is running?  Again, how, and if not, why not?



Read the following 'man' pages by typing these commands at a prompt:



man clamscan

man clamdscan

man clamd

man clamd.conf

man freshclam

man freshclam.conf



After reading these, please let us know if anything is any clearer to you, and 
if you have any specific questions about what you have read.



--



73,

Ged.



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