installation of etrust antivirus under Linux 7.1

  • Thread starter Thread starter Guido Over
  • Start date Start date
G

Guido Over

hello everybody,
got a problem with installing etrust antivirus under Linux 7.1
on the cd I found a tar.gz-file named Linux.tar.gz
I extracted this file, finding another tar-file in the folder
/eavgw/linux-inst/bin/inoculate. This file is named AVE.linux.opt.tar.
When I extracted this file, I found a folder called ino, in this
folder you can find the script AVEngineInstall. I started this script
(after I set the installation variable like described in the manual)
and received the message that everything is correctly installed.
But how do I start it ?
The file named in the manual (InoStart) doesn't exist !!!
 
hello everybody,
got a problem with installing etrust antivirus under Linux 7.1
on the cd I found a tar.gz-file named Linux.tar.gz
I extracted this file, finding another tar-file in the folder
/eavgw/linux-inst/bin/inoculate. This file is named AVE.linux.opt.tar.
When I extracted this file, I found a folder called ino, in this
folder you can find the script AVEngineInstall. I started this script
(after I set the installation variable like described in the manual)
and received the message that everything is correctly installed.
But how do I start it ?
The file named in the manual (InoStart) doesn't exist !!!

Did it place a script in the init.d directories to start it on bootup?
If so, just run the script there with a "start" option. I'd assume if
the developers had any brains, they'd set it up to start on boot and
then start it as the last thing in their install script. If so, run a
ps command and see if it is already running.
 
Try looking in the \usr\bin directory that is typically where tarballs
(.tar.gz) install scripts place the binary executable. You can do a ls
-al |more to list the contents or just try typing ./InoStart and see
if that works. You can also try running a ps command to list the
current processes to see if the program is loading on boot. Lastly
you can do a file search by typing find / -name "InoStart" to give you
the location of the file. If all else fails retry the install
program. These commands should all be ran from a terminal and not
from a GUI like KDE, x windows ect
(e-mail address removed) (Guido Over) wrote in message
Mike Potter
 
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