Virus Scan Shares
ClamAV is an open source (GPL) antivirus engine designed for detecting Trojans, viruses, malware and other malicious threats on Linux. In this article, we will only be configuring ClamAV to run scheduled/on-demand scans; not resident scans.
Install
- Install required ClamAV packages
yum install clamav clamav-update
- Edit /etc/freshclam.conf and make the following changes:
- Comment out “Example”
- Uncomment lines
- “DNSDatabaseInfo current.cvd.clamav.net”
- “DatabaseMirror db.XY.clamav.net” (replace XY with your country code)
- Ensure line “DatabaseMirror database.clamav.net” is uncommented
- Update ClamAV’s signatures
/usr/bin/freshclam
NOTE: ClamAV will update automatically, as part of /etc/cron.daily/freshclam.
Configure Daily Scan
In this example, we will configure a cronjob to scan the Docs share every day:
- Create /etc/cron.daily/manual_clamscan and add the text from "a" or "b":
- a. Scan - Change SCAN_DIR to the directory that you want to scan.
#!/bin/bash SCAN_DIR="/var/hda/files/docs" LOG_FILE="/var/log/clamav/manual_clamscan.log" /usr/bin/clamscan -i -r $SCAN_DIR >> $LOG_FILE
- b. Scan with email notifications - Change SCAN_DIR to the directory that you want to scan, EMAIL and EMAIL_FROM to your email addresses.
#!/bin/bash # Email alert cron job script for ClamAV # Original, unmodified script by: Deven Hillard #(http://www.digitalsanctuary.com/tech-blog/debian/automated-clamav-virus-scanning.html) # Modified to show infected and/or removed files # Directories to scan SCAN_DIR="/var/hda/files/docs" # Location of log file LOG_FILE="/var/log/clamav/manual_clamscan.log" # Uncomment to have scan remove files #AGGRESSIVE=1 # Uncomment to have scan not remove files AGGRESSIVE=0 # Email Subject SUBJECT="Infections detected on `hostname`" # Email To EMAIL="your.email@your.domain.com" # Email From EMAIL_FROM="clamav@server.hostname.com" check_scan () { # If there were infected files detected, send email alert if [ `tail -n 12 ${LOG_FILE} | grep Infected | grep -v 0 | wc -l` != 0 ] then # Count number of infections SCAN_RESULTS=$(tail -n 10 $LOG_FILE | grep 'Infected files') INFECTIONS=${SCAN_RESULTS##* } EMAILMESSAGE=`mktemp /tmp/virus-alert.XXXXX` echo "To: ${EMAIL}" >> ${EMAILMESSAGE} echo "From: ${EMAIL_FROM}" >> ${EMAILMESSAGE} echo "Subject: ${SUBJECT}" >> ${EMAILMESSAGE} echo "Importance: High" >> ${EMAILMESSAGE} echo "X-Priority: 1" >> ${EMAILMESSAGE} if [ $AGGRESSIVE = 1 ] then echo -e "\n`tail -n $((10 + ($INFECTIONS*2))) $LOG_FILE`" >> ${EMAILMESSAGE} else echo -e "\n`tail -n $((10 + $INFECTIONS)) $LOG_FILE`" >> ${EMAILMESSAGE} fi sendmail -t < ${EMAILMESSAGE} fi } if [ $AGGRESSIVE = 1 ] then /usr/bin/clamscan -ri --remove $SCAN_DIR >> $LOG_FILE else /usr/bin/clamscan -ri $SCAN_DIR >> $LOG_FILE fi check_scan
- Give our cron script executable permissions:
chmod +x /etc/cron.daily/manual_clamscan
- Create empty log file
mkdir -p /var/log/clamav touch /var/log/clamav/manual_clamscan.log
- (OPTIONAL) Run the script
/etc/cron.daily/manual_clamscan
And you’re done! That should be the minimum required to install ClamAV and Perform a daily scan of a specific directory.
NOTE: You will need to enable email on your HDA to use option "b". See Community Tutorials for guidance.
Configure Virus Definitions Update
touch /var/log/clamav/freshclam.log chmod 600 /var/log/clamav/freshclam.log chown clamupdate /var/log/clamav/freshclam.log
- Set up cron job
N * * * * /bin/freshclam --quiet
NOTE: Change N to any value between 3 and 57 for minutes. This will help prevent conflicts with other cron jobs that typically run at 0.
Incremental Daily and Full Weekly Scans
You can expand on the above by making a daily cronjob script that only scans files changed in the last 24 hours, and a weekly cronjob script that does a full filesystem scan. You may choose to do this for reasons of efficiency, as scanning only the files changed in the last 24 hours is an order of magnitude faster. Your daily cron file would look something more like this:
#!/usr/bin/env bash # Variables DATE=$(date +%Y%m%d) DIR="/var/log/clamav" LIST="${DIR}/scan.$DATE" RESULTS="${DIR}/scanresults.${DATE}" # A list of partitions and/or directories to scan, in this example /, /boot and /home are on separate partitions SCANDIRS="/ /boot /home" # Number of days to keep files generated by this script. Default is 7. LOGROTATION=7 # Remove files older than the number of days set with the $LOGROTATION variable. # One might choose to comment this out and keep the files for trend-tracing, breakfix etc), find ${DIR} -name "scan*" -mtime +${LOGROTATION} -exec rm -f {} \; # Generate a list of files created in the last 24 hours, this list is fed into clamscan # Because we're using -mount to prevent unwanted filesystem traversal, # you'll need to specify per partition or directory with the SCANDIRS variable. for S in ${SCANDIRS}; do find "${S}" -mount -mtime 0 >> "${LIST}" done # Run clamscan against the list of files and pipe the results out to the results file # -i prints only infected files, -f is the list of files to scan, and -l is the output log clamscan -i -f "${LIST}" -l "${RESULTS}"
Using Greyhole
You will need to do some additional setup to scan files when using Greyhole.
- Set up mount shares locally
- Ensure the SCAN_DIR=
/mnt/samba/share
and not/var/hda/files/share
Now when the daily scan runs, it will scan the Greyhole enabled share correctly.