* Al Sparks <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> When I first start clamd and then,
>> sudo clamd PING
> I don't get a PONG back.
>
> In fact the documented commands don't seem to work at all. What am I
> doing wrong?
Talk to the socket:
perl -MIO::Socket::UNIX -we \
'my $s = IO::Socket::UNIX->new(shift
On Sun, 20 Mar 2005, Al Sparks wrote:
> According to the clamd man page (and its html docs that come with the
> source distribution) clamd should be able to "recognize" the following
> commands:
>PING Check the server's state. It should reply with
> "PONG".
[...]
>
According to the clamd man page (and its html docs that come with the
source distribution) clamd should be able to "recognize" the following
commands:
clamd recognizes the following commands:
PING Check the server's state. It should reply with
"PONG".
VE
On Sun, 20 Mar 2005, John Nemeth wrote:
copies). BTW, 1 MB may not be that large of a file by today's
standards, but relatively speaking it is huge for /etc/hosts. A far
more common problem that I see is extremely large /etc/passwds (another
file that is linearly searched many times).
Far more co
On Jul 2, 5:02am, "James Ebright" wrote:
}
} Not to get into the basic Linux vs the world debate here (Otherwise known as
} my OS is better), but:
I don't generally get into that debate either. I run several
different versions of UNIX depending on my needs. I do my preference,
but I try
On May 26, 1:19am, "David F. Skoll" wrote:
}
} I'm pleased to announce the release of MIMEDefang 2.51. (There was
} no public 2.50 release; that version was only available with CanIt.)
}
} Changes relative to 2.49 follow.
}
} 2005-02-08 David F. Skoll <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
}
} [snip]
}
}
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