| NOD32 for Linux File Server |
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| NOD32 Antivirus for Linux File Servers (LFS)
is based on the award winning NOD32 scanning engine. The highest
scanning rate and the unprecedented detection track record of this
product are combined with the lowest system footprint. The latest
generation of the NOD32 Antivirus system includes advanced
heuristics with their unique capability to detect most new viruses
even before a signature update for them is released. Running
seamlessly on all mainstream Linux distributions (RedHat, Mandrake,
SuSE, Debian and others) and FreeBSD, NOD32 is the ideal choice for
real-time resident or on-demand protection of your Linux File System
Servers. If you expect stabilty, speed, detection and scalability,
NOD32 for LFS is your choice. |
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| Key features |
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- The NOD32 Scanning Engine algorithms provide both the
highest detection rate and the fastest scanning times.
- User-friendly installation and simple configuration.
- Does not require external libraries or programs except for
libc.
- Self-consistently unpacks archives.
- Flexible six-level infiltration and activity logging.
- Uses both the on-demand and on-access scanning techniques to
secure and protect the entire file system and running processes.
- Provide file access control over Samba, Nettalk and NFS.
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| System requrements |
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- OS Linux (Kernel 2.2.x, 2.4.x and 2.6.x, glibc
2.2.5 or higher)
- 5MB hard-disk space and 8MB RAM
- Dazuko kernel module 2.0.0 and higher
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| Distribution packages |
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- RPM for RedHat, Mandrake and SuSE distributions
- DEB for GNU/Linux Debian
- TGZ for all other Linux flavors
- TGZ for FreeBSD
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| System architecture |
| NOD32 for LFS consists of on-demand and on-access
scanning modules. The on-demand scanner performs scanning of the
selected file system upon user request via command line. Using
standard Linux operating system schedulers, various periodic
scanning tasks can be pre-defined. The on-access scanner daemon
provides real-time monitoring of the entire file system. File
scanning is triggered by user or system events that result in file
access calls by the Linux kernel. The file infomation is passed on
to the NOD32 scanning engine. Depending on the scanning results a
predefined action on the file is triggered. File access can be
allowed or denied and the appropriate log output is created. |
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| Changelog |
| 2.51.1 |
- Implementation of maximum archives descension level of
scanner.
- Implementation of maximum scanning time (soft limit).
- Implementation of maximum unpacked archive size limit.
- Quarantine functionality implementation.
- Support for logrotate of internal daemon logging output.
- nod32umc: selective download of groups of component modules.
- Samples submission system re-implemented as individual
process automanaged by main daemon.
- License expiration warning mechanism added.
- Better temporary files handling.
- Daemon--agent communication stability fixed.
- Support for scanning of uuencoded messages.
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| 2.06 |
- nod32lfs - selfextracting archives support added
- nod32lfs - adware and unsafe applications scanning support
added
- nod32 - prompt action added into on-demand scanner
- nod32 - fifo pipes scanning bug fixed
- nod32umc - return values problem fixed
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| 2.05 |
- support for Linux Kernel 2.6.x
- support for FreeBSD 5.x
- nod32upd (possibility to create mirror even if base
directory is not defined)
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| 2.04 |
- nod32 (possibility to add exclusions to the scanlist)
- nod32 (simple activity indicator)
- nod32 (logging format changed)
- nod32 (debug log level added - reports all scanned objects)
- nod32 (correct handling of symbolic links)
- nod32 and nod32fac (scanner modules versions info available)
- nod32unc (possibility of obsolete modules removal)
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