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1994-09-12
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Computer Viruses: An Introduction
A very simple definition of computer viruses is:
"A program that modifies other programs by placing a copy of
itself inside them."
This definition is somewhat simplified, and does not cover all virus
types, but is sufficient to show the major difference between viruses and
so-called "Trojan" programs, which is that the virus replicates, but the
Trojan does not. (The definition does not cover the so-called
"companion"-type viruses, however).
A Trojan is a program that pretends to do something useful (or at least
interesting), but when it is run, it may have some harmful effect, like
scrambling your FAT (File Allocation Table) or formatting the hard disk.
Viruses and Trojans may contain a "time-bomb", intended to destroy
programs or data on a specific date or when some condition has been
fulfilled.
A time bomb is often designed to be harmful, maybe doing something like
formatting the hard disk. Sometimes it is relatively harmless, perhaps
slowing the computer down every Friday or making a ball bounce around the
screen. However, there is really no such thing as a harmless virus. Even if
a virus has been intended to cause no damage, it may do so in certain cases,
often due to the incompetence of the virus writer or unexpected hardware
or software revisions.
A virus may be modified, either by the original author or someone else, so
that a more harmful version of it appears. It is also possible that the
modification produces a less harmful virus, but that has only rarely
happened.
The damage caused by a virus may consist of the deletion of data or
programs, maybe even reformatting of the hard disk, but more subtle damage
is also possible. Some viruses may modify data or introduce typing errors
into text. Other viruses may have no intentional effects other than just
replicating.
Two different groups of viruses occur on PCs, boot sector viruses (BSV)
and program viruses, although a few viruses belong to both groups.
A BSV infects the boot sector on a diskette. Normally the boot sector
contains code to load the operating system files. The BSV replaces the
original boot sector with itself and stores the original boot sector
somewhere else on the diskette or simply replaces it totally. When a
computer is then later booted from this diskette, the virus takes control
and hides in RAM. It will then load and execute the original boot sector,
and from then on everything will be as usual. Except, of course, that
every diskette inserted in the computer will be infected with the virus,
unless it is write-protected.
A BSV will usually hide at the top of memory, reducing the amount of
memory that the DOS sees. For example, a computer with 640K might appear
to have only 639K.
Many BSVs are also able to infect hard disks, where the process is similar
to that described above, although they may infect the master boot
record instead of the DOS boot record.
Program viruses, the second type of computer viruses, infect executable
programs, usually .COM and .EXE files, but sometimes also overlay files.
An infected program will contain a copy of the virus, usually at the end,
but in some cases at the beginning of the original program.
When an infected program is run, the virus may stay resident in memory
and infect every program run. Viruses using this method to spread the
infection are called "Resident Viruses".
Other viruses may search for a new file to infect, when an infected
program is executed. The virus then transfers control to the original
program. Viruses using this method to spread the infection are
called "Direct Action Viruses". It is possible for a virus to use both
methods of infection.
Most viruses try to recognize existing infections, so they do not infect
what has already been infected. This makes it possible to inoculate
against specific viruses, by making the "victim" appear to be infected.
However, this method is useless as a general defense, as it is not
possible to inoculate the same program against multiple viruses.
In general, viruses are rather unusual programs, rather simple, but written
just like any other program. It does not take a genius to write one - any
average assembly language programmer can easily do it. Fortunately, few of
them do.
Now - to correct some common misconceptions, here are a few bits of
information about what viruses cannot do.
A virus cannot spread from one type of computer to another.
For example, a virus designed to infect Macintosh computers cannot
infect PCs or vice versa.
A virus cannot appear all by itself, it has to be written, just
like any other program.
Not all viruses are harmful; some may only cause minor damage as
a side effect.
A virus cannot infect a computer unless it is booted from an
infected diskette or an infected program is run on it. Reading
data from an infected diskette cannot cause an infection.
A write-protected diskette cannot become infected.
There is no way a virus can attach itself to data files, so
viruses cannot be distributed with them. However, a BSV can
be distributed on data diskettes.
The F-PROT package will provide protection against viruses, but there are
other methods that also should be used. Before I list them, I want to
warn you against three methods that are of very limited use.
One anti-virus measure consists of making every executable file read-only,
by issuing commands like
ATTRIB +R *.EXE
This is actually not a bad idea, but it will not provide much protection
against viruses. Most program viruses will remove this protection before
they infect files, and restore it afterwards. Making files read-only will
of course have no effect on BSVs. The main purpose of this method is actually
to protect the user from his own mistakes, because this makes it harder to
delete programs by mistake. However, some viruses are stopped by this
method, "Lehigh" and "South African" in particular.
Another method is to hide the COMMAND.COM file, by giving the following
sequence of instructions:
MKDIR C:\HIDDEN
COPY COMMAND.COM C:\HIDDEN
DEL COMMAND.COM
add SHELL=C:\HIDDEN\COMMAND.COM /P to CONFIG.SYS
add SET COMSPEC=C:\HIDDEN\COMMAND.COM to AUTOEXEC.BAT
This method is quite useless, to say the least. Few viruses infect
COMMAND.COM, and some of them are able to do it, even if it has been
hidden, using this method.
A third useless method is to change the name of COMMAND.COM and patch other
programs so they use the new name. Somebody who had only heard of the "Lehigh"
virus got this "bright" idea. Apparently he thought that all other viruses
operated like it, so he wrote and distributed a program to do this
automatically. He thought it was a general cure for the virus problem, but
he was wrong.
On the other hand, there are a number of ways to provide useful protection.
Rule #1 is: MAKE BACKUPS!!! Keep good backups (more than one) of
everything you do not want to lose. This will not only protect you
from serious damage caused by viruses, but is also necessary in the
case of a serious hardware failure.
Never boot a computer with a hard disk from a diskette because that
is the only way the hard disk could become infected with a BSV.
(well, strictly speaking, it can happen if you run a "dropper"
program too, but that happens extremely rarely).
Should you, by accident, have left a non-bootable diskette in
drive A: when you turn the computer on, the message
Not a system disk.
may appear. If the diskette was infected with a virus, it will now
be active, but may not have infected the hard disk yet. if this
happens, turn the computer off, or press the reset button. It is
important to note that pressing Ctrl-Alt-Del will not be sufficient,
as a few viruses can survive that.
If the computer has no hard disk, but is booted from a diskette,
you should always use the same diskette, and keep it write-protected.
Keep all diskettes write-protected unless you need to write to them.
When you obtain new software on a diskette, write-protect the
diskette before you make a backup copy of it. If it is not possible
to make a backup of the diskette, because of some idiotic
copy-protection, I do not recommend using the software.
Be really careful regarding your sources of software. In general,
shrink-wrapped commercial software should be "clean", but there
have been a few documented cases of infected commercial software.
Public-Domain, Freeware and Shareware packages do not have to be
any more dangerous - it all depends on the source. If you obtain
software from a BBS, check what precautions the SysOp takes against
viruses. If he does not screen the software made available for
downloading, you should find another source.
Check all new software for infection before you run it for the
first time. It is even advisable to use a couple of scanners from
different manufacturers, as no single scanner is able to detect
all viruses.
Obtain Shareware, Freeware and Public-Domain software from the
original author, if at all possible.
Look out for any "unusual" behavior on your computer, like:
Does it take longer than usually to load programs ?
Do unusual error messages appear ?
Does the memory size seem to have decreased ?
Do the disk lights stay on longer than they used to ?
Do files just disappear ?
Anything like this might indicate a virus infection.
If your computer is infected with a virus - DON'T PANIC! Sometimes a
badly thought out attempt to remove a virus will do much more damage
than the virus could have done. If you are not sure what to do, leave
your computer turned off until you find someone to remove the virus for
you.
Finally, remember that some viruses may interfere with the disinfection
operation if they are active in memory at that time, so before attempting
to disinfect you MUST boot the computer from a CLEAN system diskette.
It is also a good idea to boot from a clean system diskette before
scanning for viruses, as several "stealth" viruses are very difficult do
detect if they are active in memory during virus scanning.