- Apr 11, 2010
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Hello all,
I work at a computer help desk that serves the student population of the University I attend. We see a huge number of machines that have become almost inoperable due to viruses; and we regularly have a queue of 20+ machines just waiting for virus scans.
Depending on the computer, the virus scans we run (spybot, combofix, malwarebytes, sophos AV, AVG) can take from a few minutes to hours to (in the worst cases) over a day to run.
My question to you: Does a virus scan bottle neck based on system resources (cpu speed, RAM, etc) or is the HDD the only real bottleneck (speed/total size/used space).
I'm posting here as I begin my research for a report to my supervisors about the possibility of a powerful dedicated machine to plug infected hard drives into to run scans from.
Thanks in advance, I'll post any additional information I find.
I work at a computer help desk that serves the student population of the University I attend. We see a huge number of machines that have become almost inoperable due to viruses; and we regularly have a queue of 20+ machines just waiting for virus scans.
Depending on the computer, the virus scans we run (spybot, combofix, malwarebytes, sophos AV, AVG) can take from a few minutes to hours to (in the worst cases) over a day to run.
My question to you: Does a virus scan bottle neck based on system resources (cpu speed, RAM, etc) or is the HDD the only real bottleneck (speed/total size/used space).
I'm posting here as I begin my research for a report to my supervisors about the possibility of a powerful dedicated machine to plug infected hard drives into to run scans from.
Thanks in advance, I'll post any additional information I find.
