On Thu, 2003-06-26 at 18:21, Ed Wilts wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 26, 2003 at 06:02:33PM -0500, Bret Hughes wrote:
> > Ah well. Life sure would be easy if there weren't all these pesky
> > customers complicating things.
>
> Yeah, but they do pay the bills...
>
> > Do these files stay in the upload dir
On Thu, 2003-06-26 at 18:21, Ed Wilts wrote:
> It's an ugly problem which is why I posted for more ideas. It would be
> nice if there was a hook right into wu-ftpd that did the scan during the
> upload so it only gets scanned once and can't be missed either.
>
here is a stab in the dark for you
On Thu, Jun 26, 2003 at 06:02:33PM -0500, Bret Hughes wrote:
> Ah well. Life sure would be easy if there weren't all these pesky
> customers complicating things.
Yeah, but they do pay the bills...
> Do these files stay in the upload dir indefinitely or are they moved
> pretty quick?
It varies
On Thu, 2003-06-26 at 16:58, Ed Wilts wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 26, 2003 at 04:52:06PM -0500, Bret Hughes wrote:
> > can u force the uploads into an incoming dir in each directory and let
> > the scanning process mv then into the regular dir?
>
> Nope - that would require changes on the user end and
On Thu, Jun 26, 2003 at 04:52:06PM -0500, Bret Hughes wrote:
> can u force the uploads into an incoming dir in each directory and let
> the scanning process mv then into the regular dir?
Nope - that would require changes on the user end and the end users are
our customers who have already develo
Bret Hughes wrote:
On Thu, 2003-06-26 at 16:33, Joseph A Nagy Jr wrote:
You can't get around regularly scanning.
well I am not sure. I guess it depends on the definition of regular.
You could probably use fam and let it trigger a scan as soon as an
upload is complete.
You could, but if the FT
On Thu, 2003-06-26 at 16:33, Joseph A Nagy Jr wrote:
> Frank Bax wrote:
> > At 04:12 PM 6/26/03, Gerry Doris wrote:
> >
> >> > Ed Wilts wrote:
> >> >> On Thu, Jun 26, 2003 at 03:40:43PM -0400, Gerry Doris wrote:
>
> >> >> Part of the problem is that all my ftp uploads are authenticated
> >> and
On Thu, 2003-06-26 at 14:48, Ed Wilts wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 26, 2003 at 03:40:43PM -0400, Gerry Doris wrote:
> > Off the top of my head I would suggest you create a script running in cron
> > that checks for new files in the upload directly, if there are any, runs a
> > virus scan on them, and moves
Frank Bax wrote:
At 04:12 PM 6/26/03, Gerry Doris wrote:
> Ed Wilts wrote:
>> On Thu, Jun 26, 2003 at 03:40:43PM -0400, Gerry Doris wrote:
>> Part of the problem is that all my ftp uploads are authenticated
and in
>> separate directories - in excess of 500 unique directories. This does
>> make
At 04:12 PM 6/26/03, Gerry Doris wrote:
> Ed Wilts wrote:
>> On Thu, Jun 26, 2003 at 03:40:43PM -0400, Gerry Doris wrote:
>>
>>>Off the top of my head I would suggest you create a script running in
>>> cron
>>>that checks for new files in the upload directly, if there are any, runs
>>> a
>>>virus
Gerry Doris wrote:
Not really. Scan the whole system once an hour.
You could probably use permissions to hide the files until they were
scanned. Change their permissions after they pass the scan so your users
can see them.
Gerry
Could do that too.
--
Wielder of the mighty +1 LARTsaber of Un
> Ed Wilts wrote:
>> On Thu, Jun 26, 2003 at 03:40:43PM -0400, Gerry Doris wrote:
>>
>>>Off the top of my head I would suggest you create a script running in
>>> cron
>>>that checks for new files in the upload directly, if there are any, runs
>>> a
>>>virus scan on them, and moves the finished file
Ed Wilts wrote:
On Thu, Jun 26, 2003 at 03:40:43PM -0400, Gerry Doris wrote:
Off the top of my head I would suggest you create a script running in cron
that checks for new files in the upload directly, if there are any, runs a
virus scan on them, and moves the finished files to either a quarantine
On Thu, Jun 26, 2003 at 03:40:43PM -0400, Gerry Doris wrote:
> Off the top of my head I would suggest you create a script running in cron
> that checks for new files in the upload directly, if there are any, runs a
> virus scan on them, and moves the finished files to either a quarantine
> director
> I know that Linux doesn't really have a virus problem, but my Linux FTP
> server is one of the key ways that Windows files make it into my
> company. I'm looking to integrated some sort of Wintel virus-scanning
> into wu-ftpd. Ideally, the incoming files would be virus-scanned right
> after the
Ed Wilts wrote:
I know that Linux doesn't really have a virus problem, but my Linux FTP
server is one of the key ways that Windows files make it into my
company. I'm looking to integrated some sort of Wintel virus-scanning
into wu-ftpd. Ideally, the incoming files would be virus-scanned right
aft
> I know that Linux doesn't really have a virus problem, but my Linux FTP
> server is one of the key ways that Windows files make it into my
> company. I'm looking to integrated some sort of Wintel virus-scanning
> into wu-ftpd. Ideally, the incoming files would be virus-scanned right
> after the
I know that Linux doesn't really have a virus problem, but my Linux FTP
server is one of the key ways that Windows files make it into my
company. I'm looking to integrated some sort of Wintel virus-scanning
into wu-ftpd. Ideally, the incoming files would be virus-scanned right
after they're dropp
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