1 - they undoubtedly sell a specific license for an email server
2 - they probably send it off to ingres (that is their db and they evidently have open sourced it now - postgreSQL was a fork of the same db I think)
Craig
On Fri, 2005-08-26 at 01:29 +0100, Wayne wrote:
Hi Andreas,
Sounds like it might do the trick, Ill check it out will probably have to wait for the next release for a roll out so it supports centos 4, just a quick question.. On your last point, I can run a single license @ $40 to scan emails? Its usually per user when you do that isnt it with most products..
Thanks, Wayne
On 25/08/2005 22:33, "Andreas Rogge" arogge@gmx.de wrote:
Hello Wayne,
I don't think it is exactly what you are looking for, but I'm currently evaluating Computer Associates eTrust Antivirus for use in a quite mixed environment. It works quite good and has something they call "Alert Manager". I haven't had the chance to review all data sinks they provide, but I think they will at least support a user-defined script (which could then insert data into your RDBMs).
They also provide a great Report-Engine which probably already provides most of the reporst you could genereate through your RDBMS.
The only problem - at least for me - is that they currently don't support RHEL 4 (which will change in the next release).
Oh... and just to mention it: it only costs about $ 40 per license, no matter what system it shall run on (Windows 95-2003, Linux/i386, Linux/390, HP-UX, MacOS X, Netware) and what options (i.e. MS-Exchange and/or Novell Groupwise Scanner) you need.
Regards, Andreas
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