thank you very much I did not think of the -r option and this will help me.
Cordialement. Unus Ex Altera Philippe Valarcher valaqua...@gmail.com Le jeu. 12 nov. 2020 à 18:25, G.W. Haywood via clamav-users < clamav-users@lists.clamav.net> a écrit : > Hi there, > > On Thu, 12 Nov 2020, valaquarus via clamav-users wrote: > > > how to get the full path of a file moved by clamscan --move = DIRECTORY > > to restore it to its place if it is a false positive? > > Because false positives are so common I feel that the --move option is > dangerous and I would never use it. > > Normally (i.e. unless you tell it otherwise) clamscan prints the full > path of files which it scans to stdout. If you need to record what's > been scanned you can e.g. redirect stdout to a file: > > clamscan -r /path/to/scanned/directory > /tmp/scan_output > > This will show you both those files which are found to be 'OK' and > those which are not. You can suppress printing of the 'OK' files with > the '-o' option on the command line, see 'man clamscan'. > > -- > > 73, > Ged. > > _______________________________________________ > > clamav-users mailing list > clamav-users@lists.clamav.net > https://lists.clamav.net/mailman/listinfo/clamav-users > > > Help us build a comprehensive ClamAV guide: > https://github.com/vrtadmin/clamav-faq > > http://www.clamav.net/contact.html#ml >
_______________________________________________ clamav-users mailing list clamav-users@lists.clamav.net https://lists.clamav.net/mailman/listinfo/clamav-users Help us build a comprehensive ClamAV guide: https://github.com/vrtadmin/clamav-faq http://www.clamav.net/contact.html#ml