NOT RECOMENDED!! to what i know... it isnt recomended to edit any NTFS file system.... but if you want to risk it... i would sugggest
f-prot or Av-clam (it could be called av-clan)...
those two are good linux virus scanners....
With Knoppix, I understand that I can run a virus
scan on a (potentially infected) Windows NTFS PC.
How should I do this?
Which application does this?
How will it get the latest virus definitions?
NOT RECOMENDED!! to what i know... it isnt recomended to edit any NTFS file system.... but if you want to risk it... i would sugggest
f-prot or Av-clam (it could be called av-clan)...
those two are good linux virus scanners....
Chris, it was a valid question. No one said anything about editing files on a NTFS partitiion (which is a bad idea™), but scanning a Windows system with something other than that copy of Windows itself can be important. Once a nasty virus gets into a system (and this is true for any OS, not just Windows) it can gain enough control to hide itself from virus scanners. All virus scanners that run under Windows make API or System Calls to the operating system to request things like the disk sectors they want to scan. If a virus is clever enough (and this ain't rocket science), it can watch these calls and when the call that would return it's location on the disk and reveal it is made, it can just return emptry blocks or some other part of the disk. The scanner never knows it is being lied to. There are, of course, plenty of other ways to fool a scanning program once you have control of the system. Even most experienced users would never detect them. So scanning with software completely independent of the infected system is important. If you get a clean scan you have no need to write to the NTFS partition. If you detect a virus that conceals itself with a "root kit", this may be the only reasonable way that you could detect it. Only then do you need to decide what to do about it, which may well be salvage all of your data with Knoppix, reformat the disk, and completely reinstall.
oh ok... me mistake...
thanks.. i cant wait until we would be able to edit NTFS... then we can all be evil (especially me)
LSI 9305-16i SATA SAS 12Gbs RAID Controller PCIe 3.0 x8 IT-Mode 4* 8643 SATA
$229.99
HPE 727263-003 BL460c G9 Raid BBWC Smartstorage Battery
$24.99
Dell R740XD2 26LFF 3.6Ghz 8-C 384GB H730P MINI RAID 2x10G SFP+ NIC 2x1100W Rails
$2998.08
Dell R740XD2 26LFF 3.6Ghz 8-C 768GB H730P MINI RAID 2x10G SFP+ NIC 2x1100W Rails
$3562.08
LSI MegaRAID 9361-8i 12Gb PCIe 8-Port SAS/SATA RAID 1Gb w/BBU/CacheVault/License
$39.95
LSI MegaRaid 9361-8i 12Gbps SAS / SATA Raid Controller PCIe x8 3.0 Tested
$29.00
Oracle Sun 8-Port 6 Gbps SAS/SATA Raid Controller PCIe w/Cables 7055240 7047503
$13.49
LSI 9271-8i MegaRAID 8-Port 6Gbps PCIe RAID Controller w/ 1Gb CacheVault & BBU
$30.99
4 Bay RAID External Hard Drive Enclosure for 2.5/3.5" SATA HDD/SSD
$79.99
G TECHNOLOGY G RAID 0G04228 2-Bay Thunderbolt 2 RAID Array W/Power Supply
$99.99