Introduction

Thank you for purchasing Anti-virus Dr.Web for UNIX File Servers. It offers reliable protection from various types of computer threats using the most advanced virus detection and neutralization technologies.

This manual is intended to help users of computers running under OS GNU/Linux family and other UNIX-like OSes, such as Solaris and FreeBSD, install and use Anti-virus Dr.Web for UNIX File Servers 10.1.0 (Dr.Web for UNIX File Servers hereinafter).

If Dr.Web for UNIX File Servers 6.0.2 is already installed on your computer and you wish to upgrade the solution to version 10.1.0, do the steps of the upgrade procedure.

Convention for paths to product files

The product described in the present document is designed for operation in different UNIX-based operating system. Real paths to product files depend on the operating system installed on the user's computer. For notational convenience, the following conventions are used:

<opt_dir> — directory where main product files reside (including executable files and libraries).

<etc_dir> — directory where the configuration file and a key file reside.

<var_dir> — directory where supporting and temporary product files reside.

Real paths corresponding to the conventions in different operating systems are given in the table below.

Operating system

Convention

Real path

GNU/Linux

<opt_dir>

/opt/drweb.com

<etc_dir>

/etc/opt/drweb.com

<var_dir>

/var/opt/drweb.com

 

 

 

FreeBSD

<opt_dir>

/usr/local/libexec/drweb.com

<etc_dir>

/usr/local/etc/drweb.com

<var_dir>

/var/drweb.com

 

 

 

Solaris

<opt_dir>

The paths are the same as for GNU/Linux.

<etc_dir>

<var_dir>

For space considerations, examples given in the present document use paths for GNU/Linux OS. In some places of the document, where it is possible, examples contain real paths for all of the OSes.