[42747] in North American Network Operators' Group
RE: Trend Micro FIX_NIMDA.EXE - was Re: Virus fix
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Roeland Meyer)
Thu Sep 20 11:56:14 2001
Message-ID: <EA9368A5B1010140ADBF534E4D32C728069EF7@condor.mhsc.com>
From: Roeland Meyer <rmeyer@mhsc.com>
To: "'ekgermann@cctec.com'" <ekgermann@cctec.com>,
Indra PRAMANA <indra@webvisions.com>,
Andras Bellak <Andras.Bellak@wfinet.com>
Cc: Steve Smith <ssmith@freeliant.com>, nanog@nanog.org
Date: Thu, 20 Sep 2001 08:53:18 -0700
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[quoting HTML isn't fun, The attributions are probably wrong.]
-----Original Message-----
From: Eric Germann
Sent: Thursday, September 20, 2001 4:53 AM
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Indra PRAMANA
>Sent: Wednesday, September 19, 2001 11:56 PM
>
>At 07:46 PM 9/19/01 -0700, Andras Bellak wrote:
>
>>I still haven't seen anything that cleans up
>>the htm, html, asp, etc files, but there are a
>>few utilities that work fine for doing that one.>
>
>>What are the utilities? Where can I get them?
>
>Norton Antivirus will clean most of the htm,
>html, asp, etc files. http://www.symantec.com
What's standard practice around here, is to always deploy production
web-content via CVS version control. If the content gets munged, simply
re-deploy from the CVS repository. CVS is little to no cost and
documentation is readily available, even from OReilly. There are Win2K
binaries available, from Borland.