From: "Craig White" <craigwhite@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, 2007, December 23 18:32
On Sun, 2007-12-23 at 16:30 -0800, jdow wrote:
From: "Michael Schwendt" <mschwendt@xxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, 2007, December 23 09:40
> On 23/12/2007, jdow wrote:
>> FC8:
>>
>> LogWatch is whining about ClamAV being out of date.
>>
>> I don't see anything in testing or updates yet. Is anybody working on
>> or
>> even planning to work on an update for ClamAV so that the whines in
>> LogWatch go away?
>
> There's a security update for F8 in the queue for two days with fixes
> for
> CVE-2007-6335 CVE-2007-6336 CVE-2007-6337:
> https://admin.fedoraproject.org/updates/F8/pending/clamav-0.92-3.fc8
I'd seen the one for FC8 which is why my finger slid over one to F8 when
I meant F7.
When will FC7 be updated? Or is it not worth sticking with RedHat? If it
is a security update it should be passed along to FC7 while FC7 is still
alive. Get hopping guys!
----
I don't recall seeing clamav/clamd/et al clam as part of Fedora packages
but only in 3rd party repositories. RPMForge has the new version.
Ah yes - it is part of FC8 and that got me confused that it was an
integral part. But then maybe this message also has me confused:
===8<---
Name : clamav Relocations: (not relocatable)
Version : 0.91.2 Vendor: Fedora Project
Release : 3.fc7 Build Date: Mon 29 Oct 2007
07:50:58 AM PDT
Install Date: Fri 02 Nov 2007 06:56:32 AM PDT Build Host:
xenbuilder4.fedora.phx.redhat.com
Group : Applications/File Source RPM:
clamav-0.91.2-3.fc7.src.rpm
Size : 1104730 License: GPLv2
Signature : DSA/SHA1, Thu 01 Nov 2007 11:37:50 AM PDT, Key ID
b44269d04f2a6fd2
Packager : Fedora Project
URL : http://www.clamav.net
Summary : End-user tools for the Clam Antivirus scanner
Description :
Clam AntiVirus is an anti-virus toolkit for UNIX. The main purpose of this
software is the integration with mail servers (attachment scanning). The
package provides a flexible and scalable multi-threaded daemon, a command
line scanner, and a tool for automatic updating via Internet. The programs
are based on a shared library distributed with the Clam AntiVirus package,
which you can use with your own software. The virus database is based on
the virus database from OpenAntiVirus, but contains additional signatures
(including signatures for popular polymorphic viruses, too) and is KEPT UP
TO DATE.
===8<---
Now that really has me fooled thinking that Fedora packaged it. Who did
and how am I reading it incorrectly?
{^_^}