There's no need to create a CVD if all you want is to use official
clamav signatures and non-official signatures.
Use "sigtool -u" with a clamav cvd to unpack it and choose the
signatures you want.
You can then point clamscan or clamdscan to the directory that
contains your signatures, official
On Fri, December 16, 2016 2:39 am, filipecalderon66...@yahoo.com wrote:
> Hello all - first time post and new clamav user.
> I have installed clamav on a box that has very specific exposures, and has
> very limited memory and disk space. The existing signatures when all the
> other optional ones a
On Fri, December 16, 2016 2:39 am, filipecalderon66...@yahoo.com wrote:
> Hello all - first time post and new clamav user.
> I have installed clamav on a box that has very specific exposures, and has
> very limited memory and disk space. The existing signatures when all the
> other optional ones a
Hi there,
On Fri, 16 Dec 2016, FC wrote:
I have installed clamav on a box that has very specific exposures,
and has very limited memory and disk space. ...
We could help you a lot better if you were more forthcoming with
information about your use case.
--
73,
Ged.
_
Not a basic question, but one that has been asked several times before, so you
should search the archives for possible answers.
There aren't any easy solutions with regard to the official signatures, so if I
were you I would focus on the unofficially ones you use first. Most of them are
designe
Hello all - first time post and new clamav user.
I have installed clamav on a box that has very specific exposures, and has very
limited memory and disk space. The existing signatures when all the other
optional ones are loaded like unofficial-sigs creates a ginormous file and eats
all my memory