I was scanning my machine with clamtk and it detected hundreds of PUA’s in /usr/lib/wine/fakedlls/
I didn’t install Wine but maybe I got installed because I installed everything on “programming” stuff (sorry if this isn’t the name, but there are ‘gnome develop’, ‘kde develop’ etc)
If so, which package I installed that installed Wine?
I didn’t install it, in fact I NEVER installed it. Today I installed opensuse and selected basically all options on “software”. Which one installed WIne?
I scanned because on LinuxMint there was a trojan on usr/lib/linuxmint/drivers/i386/ etc etc
I also never had any problems with clamtk on Ubuntu. I’m sure it’s this Wine installation that’s causing me problems. I just need to know which option not to choose from the install menu
Perhaps I should explain why I referenced the entry for false positive. I am almost entirely convinced anything you actually find is just being incorrectly reported. There are no trojans in Linux Mint.
On 01/18/2013 10:56 AM, amarildojr wrote:
>
> BTW I selected each one in this list. Just need to know which one
> install Wine =P
>
> http://tinyurl.com/adzcg86
are you saying that you placed a check mark next to “each one in this
list”, all the way from the bottom Tcl/Tk Development (at the bottom) to
“Office Software” at the top and beyond (to the very top, not seen in
the image you posted)??
really?? how big is your disk?
to answer your question: WINE is a package included in the “X Windows
System” sub-section of the Graphical Environments major section, at the
very top of that long list you showed part of…
WINE is in that subsection, but is not installed unless so elected…
On 01/18/2013 10:56 AM, amarildojr wrote:
>
> I scanned because on LinuxMint there was a trojan on
> usr/lib/linuxmint/drivers/i386/ etc etc
>
> I also never had any problems with clamtk on Ubuntu.
do you have openSUSE installed on the same machine as Mint and/or
Ubuntu? if so, how might you know on which system’s partition(s) the
clam scan is reporting?
Selecting “32-bit Runtime Environment” on the Software section of the DVD (right before installing the system) automatically selects “wine32” for installation.
On 2013-01-18 11:06, amarildojr wrote:
>
> Thanks.
>
> The thing is I don’t need Wine anyway, so can you tell me which of
> those installation options installs Wine?
Remove it and see if another package complains.
> And could you tell me if it is safe to install avast!? (which I think
> is better than clamtk)
Safe, as is avast going to corrupt my system? I suppose it is. However,
if you install an antivirus and tell it to scan and remove files it
consider dangerous without double checking, then YOU are in danger. Of
losing your install.
–
Cheers / Saludos,
Carlos E. R.
(from 11.4, with Evergreen, x86_64 “Celadon” (Minas Tirith))
On 2013-01-18 11:06, amarildojr wrote:
> The thing is I don’t need Wine anyway, so can you tell me which of
> those installation options installs Wine?
If you install one of the kde or gnome desktop profiles, it is possible
they include wine. Why not?
–
Cheers / Saludos,
Carlos E. R.
(from 11.4, with Evergreen, x86_64 “Celadon” (Minas Tirith))
I sahre files between my machine and my friends, if somehow I download an infected file I don’t want to infect their machines, as well as all my family’s mobiles that are connected in my PC a couple of times a week.
On 2013-01-19 01:56, amarildojr wrote:
>
> farcusnz;2519509 Wrote:
>> why do you feel the need to install antivirus software?
>
> I sahre files between my machine and my friends, if somehow I download
> an infected file I don’t want to infect their machines, as well as all
> my family’s mobiles that are connected in my PC a couple of times a
> week.
Well, you need something to scan shared folders when something is
written there. Samba should do that, but I don’t know if it does.
–
Cheers / Saludos,
Carlos E. R.
(from 11.4, with Evergreen, x86_64 “Celadon” (Minas Tirith))