> > is a Centos 4 box with F-secure(for linux). Have a look at it.. it > > does centralized management of Anti-virus. > > It also looks like F-Prot (f-prot.com) supports updates to client PCs I was not very happy with the F-* stuff (it's good on the mailserver, it sucks on the clients, there were uncaught viruses some 1-2 yrs ago), but I like "the German umbrella". Formerly known as H+BEDV Datentechnik GmbH, it's now Avira, with solutions for Win, Linux, BSD, Solaris: -- All products: http://www.avira.com/en/products/index.html -- For mailservers: http://www.avira.com/en/products/antivir_for_mailserver.html -- For the desktop: (i) Avira AntiVir PersonalEdition Classic (free for personal usage): http://www.free-av.com/antivirus/allinonen.html (ii) Premium, commercial editions: http://www.avira.com/en/products/personal_premium.html (iii) Even better, AntiVir Workstation: http://www.avira.com/en/products/avira_antivir_workstation.html -- For SMB (SmallBusiness Suite): http://www.avira.com/en/products/smb_suites.html I has no virus problems since I am using them. You can try the free one, http://www.free-av.com/antivirus/allinonen.html -- to me, it's even better than AVG (which also missed some trojans a few years ago). The caveat of the free one is that it can't scan e-mails, but an eventual attached virus will be caught when you'd try to run it. There is also Panda, but it needs Dazuko: http://beranger.org/index.php?page=3k&article=971 Cheers, R-C Be smarter than spam. See how smart SpamGuard is at giving junk email the boot with the All-new Yahoo! Mail at http://mrd.mail.yahoo.com/try_beta?.intl=ca _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos