Appendix C. Technical Support |
If you have a problem installing or using Doctor Web products, please try the following before contacting technical support: 1.Download and review the latest manuals and guides at https://download.drweb.com/doc/. 2.See the Frequently Asked Questions section at https://support.drweb.com/show_faq/. 3.Browse the official Doctor Web forum at https://forum.drweb.com/. If you haven't found a solution to your problem, you can request direct assistance from Doctor Web technical support specialists. Please use one of the options below: 1.Fill out a web form in the appropriate section at https://support.drweb.com/. 2.Call +7 (495) 789-45-86 (for customers in Moscow) or 8-800-333-79-32 (a toll-free line for customers within Russia). For information on regional and international offices of Doctor Web, please visit the official website at https://company.drweb.com/contacts/offices/. To facilitate processing of your issue, we recommend that you generate a data set for the installed product, its configuration, and system environment before contacting our technical support. To do that, you can use a special utility included in Dr.Web for UNIX File Servers. To collect data for our technical support, run the following command:
where: •<opt_dir>—directory in which main files of Dr.Web for UNIX File Servers are stored, including executable files and libraries (by default, /opt/drweb.com for GNU/Linux); •<path to file>—path to an archive in the .tgz format to which the debugging information about the product and the system environment will be written, for example, /tmp/report.tgz. Already existing files will not be rewritten. If the path is not specified, the archive will be stored in the directory of the superuser who started the utility (for example, /root) and will be named as follows:
where <timestamp> is a full timestamp of creating the report, down to milliseconds, for example: 20190618151718.23625. For details on conventions used for directories, refer to the section Introduction.
During operation, the utility collects and archives the following information: •information about your OS (name, architecture, output of the uname -a command); •list of packages installed on your system, including Doctor Web packages; •log contents: oDr.Web for UNIX File Servers logs (if configured for separate components); olog of the syslog system daemon (/var/log/syslog, /var/log/messages); olog of a system package manager (apt, yum, etc.); odmesg log; •output of the following commands: df, ip a (ifconfig -a), ldconfig -p, iptables-save, nft export xml. •information about settings and configuration of Dr.Web for UNIX File Servers: olist of downloaded virus databases (drweb-ctl baseinfo -l); olist of files from Dr.Web for UNIX File Servers directories and MD5 hash values of these files; oDr.Web Virus-Finding Engine version and MD5 hash value; oinformation about the user and permissions retrieved from the key file, if Dr.Web for UNIX File Servers is not running in a centralized protection mode. |