On 06/27/2012 02:49 PM, Magnus Hagander wrote:

There are some easy api to get whether the box is on a domain or not, and it's easily accessible from wsh as well. And it ought to be trivial in power shell...

Good to know. Since it's a troubleshooting tool there's no real problem with saying "First, go install powershell" - but it'd be better not to need to if it's available via wsh.

Ick ick ick. I've kept away from this stuff and been happy about it, why do I keep volunteering myself for horrid Windows guts stuff?

As for the av, I'm less sure. Maybe it's better to just dump a list of installed programs? I'd expect all av to be installed by installers that register them.

There's no guarantee they won't try to hide, though. AV software vendors may think it's a good idea to make it hard for software on the machine to tell what AV is running. I'm hoping not, but it's quite possible.

The other idea would be to find out if there is an api corresponding to the "your computer is at risk" is warning bubble, and just use it backwards. I have non idea if there is though, I've never done any work in that area at all.


That's what I'm hoping is possible, but like you haven't dug into it yet.

--
Craig Ringer

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