COMMAND
NAV with Exchange
SYSTEMS AFFECTED
Norton Antivirus Corporate Edition 7.01
PROBLEM
Emmett Keyser found following. His Exchange server has performed
relatively well in the past 6 months. Coinciding with the ILY
outbreak our Exchange's Information Store began to die sometime
during the night - not exactly at the same time each night.
Conversations with Exchange tech support result in this:
Microsoft's unofficial stance regarding AV software is to not run
it on Exchange servers - even if it's Exchange aware. They are
apparently having quite a few problems with AV software
renaming/deleting/setting attributes on transaction log files.
The symptom is that the Information Store is being shutdown
non-gracefully. A IS restart results in all kinds of errors but
boils down to the fact that there is a missing/corrupt log file
to bring the database back to a consistent state. Circular
logging is disabled. Backups are Exchange aware but also don't
occur within the time frame of the IS dying.
SOLUTION
Bad things can happen to MS Exchange when NAV-NT detects
LoveLetter. We have discovered that the Exchange file EDB.LOG
can contain recognizable LoveLetter code, and if deleted,
"repaired" or quarantined will take MSE down hard. All Desktop
NAVs (NAV-NT, NAV-CE/NT, NAV2000) must be configured so that
AutoProtect excludes the Temp directory used by MSE and the
Exchange database directories. This is discussed in
KBdoc#2000050509410706 "Norton AntiVirus for NT detects
VBS.Loveletter.worm on Exchange server".
Be sure to use this KB to track all relevant cases. This is a
direct result of setting AutoProtect to "ScanAllFiles", and was an
unfortunate trade-off of using ScanAllFiles as a recommended or
default setting.
A similar problem exists with Eudora, where IN.MBX (the file
Eudora stores all inbox email in) can be quarantined or deleted
by NAV desktop, specifically when KAK.Worm is detected. This is
a major reason why NAV needs to determine type by header and not
by extension.
So, to protect an Exchange Server itself from getting infected,
don't install a mail client on it, and never try to open mail on
it in any fashion. Same for a SQL server, but it's pretty hard
for a virus to invade a SQL database. If you want to install
software to assure that an infected email doesn't invade your
server, then use an AV product specifically designed for Exchange
Server and DO NOT allow any portion of it to scan files or
memory. If you have to scan files, stop all Exchange Services,
exclude the /exchsrvr directories, run a scan, disable to AV
software and start the server back up.
With the information provided by Emmett, Symantec has performed
extensive testing of NAV Corporate Edition 7.01 for NT Server
running with MS Exchange for NT simulating hundreds of
connections. Symantec recommends configuring NAV CE not to scan
directories containing MSE temp files or the Exchange database.