Thanks for the replies everyone - Debian is Woody, Clamav is 0.80. I am
using Surgemail. In Surgemail I am calling clamdscan and now notice that it
is set to remove files. I didn't realise I needed any "glue" though, so that
may be the problem! I didn't compile with clamav-milter because I'm not
us
- Original Message -
From: Simon Crowther
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, December 08, 2004 11:16 AM
Subject: [Clamav-users] testing clamav not detecting viruses in mail
> I have just installed clamav on Debian, updated and tested it at
virustest.org. It didn't detect an
Simon Crowther schrieb:
I have just installed clamav on Debian, updated and tested it at
virustest.org. It didn't detect any of the test viruses, even those in
the message body. I ran clamscan and clamdscan from the command line.
Clamscan found nothing, clamdscan found them all and also the
myd
On Wed, 8 Dec 2004 16:16:55 -
"Simon Crowther" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have just installed clamav on Debian, updated and tested it at
> virustest.org. It didn't detect any of the test viruses, even those in
> the message body. I ran clamscan and clamdscan from the command line.
> Clamsc
I have just installed clamav on Debian,
updated and tested it at virustest.org. It didn't detect any of the
test viruses, even those in the message body. I ran clamscan and clamdscan from
the command line. Clamscan found nothing, clamdscan found them all and also
the mydoom.gen-1 worm. Can
On Wed, 8 Dec 2004 16:16:55 -
"Simon Crowther" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have just installed clamav on Debian, updated and tested it at
> virustest.org. It didn't detect any of the test viruses, even those in
> the message body. I ran clamscan and clamdscan from the command line.
> Clamsc