If you suspect your PC is infected with malware and all other Antivirus scans (including the Boot-time scan) were unable to resolve the issue, you can use Rescue Disk. Rescue Disk enables you to scan your PC when your system is not running. This method significantly increases your chances of detecting and removing malware because the malware is unable to counteract.
Open the Avast Antivirus user interface and select Protection Scans. Click Rescue Disk in the top-right corner. Insert an empty USB drive into your PC's USB port, then select Create USB on the main Rescue Disk screen. Here is the working keys are: c567a0014-3sfp3b8s avast! Antivirus v7.0.11 license key expiry date c20a0912-u52dewk3.
Refer to the following sections for instructions on using Rescue Disk:
Create Rescue Disk
To create Rescue Disk on a blank USB drive or CD you need:
- Another malware-free Windows PC with Avast Antivirus installed. Refer to the relevant article below for installation instructions:
- Latest versions of Avast Antivirus:
- Avast Premium Security (previously Avast Premier) | Avast Free Antivirus | Avast Omni
- Older versions of Avast Antivirus:
- Avast Internet Security | Avast Pro Antivirus
- Latest versions of Avast Antivirus:
- An empty USB drive with a capacity of 500 MB or higher (Preferred method).
OR - A blank recordable CD; CD/DVD-writer; burning software which can write in ISO file format (Alternative method).
To create Rescue Disk on a USB drive, follow these steps:
To create Rescue Disk on a CD, follow these steps:
- Open the Avast Antivirus user interface and select Protection ▸ Virus Scans.
- Click Rescue Disk on the right side of the screen.
- Insert an empty USB drive into your PC's USB port, then select Create USB on the main Rescue Disk screen.
- In the dialog that appears, select your USB drive. A progress screen appears as Rescue Disk is created.
- When Rescue Disk is finished loading onto your USB drive, click OK.
- Select Create CD from the main Rescue Disk menu.
- Select a location to save the Rescue Disk ISO file, then click Save. A progress screen appears as the Rescue Disk ISO file is created.
- When Rescue Disk is finished creating the ISO file, click OK.
- Burn the Rescue Disk file onto a blank, recordable CD using a CD/DVD-writer software.
- On Windows 10, Windows 8/8.1 or Windows 7 you can use the built-in Windows Disc Image Burner.
- On Windows Vista or Windows XP use any third-party burning program capable of writing CD images in ISO file format.
Boot up your PC from Rescue Disk
After creating a Rescue Disk, you can boot up the PC that contains malware using the external USB (Preferred method) or CD (Alternative method) drive. Avast free antivirus for mac scanning bootcamp volume.
To boot from Rescue Disk on a USB drive, follow these steps:
To boot from Rescue Disk on a CD, follow these steps:
- Turn off your PC and insert the USB drive containing Rescue Disk into the USB port.
- Insert the CD containing Rescue Disk into the CD/DVD drive of your PC, then turn your PC off.
- Turn on the PC to be scanned. As your PC starts up, press the appropriate key to enter the Boot Menu.
- Look for text on the computer's BIOS boot splash screen (usually a computer manufacturer's logo and/or hardware initialization details, shown for a few seconds before Windows starts) that tells you how to access the Boot menu.
- Because of the wide variety of PC and BIOS manufacturers, there are numerous ways to access the Boot Menu. The keys that are commonly used are Esc, F12 or F11. Some PC models or manufacturers also use other keys such as F10, F9, F8 or F5.
- Once you determine the proper key to access the Boot Menu, restart the PC again and immediately start tapping that key.
- When the Boot Menu appears, select your USB device containing Rescue Disk. It may be listed as
Removable Devices
,USB Flash Drive
,USB Storage Device
or similar (sometimes listed on a sub-menu with the other storage drives.) - When the Boot Menu appears, select your CD containing Rescue Disk. It may be listed as
CD-ROM Drive
,CDROM
,CD/DVD/CD-RW..
or similar (sometimes listed on a sub-menu with the other storage drives.) - Following the instructions in the message that appears, press any key to start Rescue Disk.
Scan your PC for viruses
When Rescue Disk starts on your PC, you can begin to scan for malware.
- Select an option:
- All hard discs: scans the entire PC.
- Selected folders/discs: scans only specific folders or discs on the PC. Click Change to select the folders or discs to scan, then click OK.
Tick Scan all archives to scan compressed files (RAR, ZIP, etc). - Click Start scan.
- When the scan is finished, review the scan report and results screen for any found threats.
Repair or delete infected files
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After scanning your PC, Rescue Disk notifies you of the results. If any threats are found, you can select Fix automatically (Preferred method) or Do it manually (Alternative method).
Fix automatically- Click Fix automatically on the results screen. Rescue Disk attempts to remove the malicious code from all infected files, while keeping the rest of each file intact. If it fails to repair any files, the files are automatically deleted from the infected PC.
- Click Quit and restart computer to exit Rescue Disk.
- Click Do it manually on the results screen.
- Tick the box next to the files you want to apply an action to, then select an action:
- Fix automatically: removes only the malicious code from the selected files, while keeping the rest of each file intact. Threats that cannot be repaired are automatically deleted.
- Repair selected: removes only the malicious code from the selected files, while keeping the rest of each file intact. Threats that cannot be repaired should be manually deleted.
- Delete selected: permanently deletes selected files from the PC.
- When you are finished selecting files, click Continue, ..and select Quit and restart computer to exit Avast Rescue Disk.
When your PC restarts you can remove the external USB drive/CD containing Rescue Disk.
- Avast Premium Security 19.x
- Avast Free Antivirus 19.x
- Avast Omni 1.x
- Avast Premier 19.x
- Avast Internet Security 19.x
- Avast Pro Antivirus 19.x
- Microsoft Windows 10 Home / Pro / Enterprise / Education - 32 / 64-bit
- Microsoft Windows 8.1 / Pro / Enterprise - 32 / 64-bit
- Microsoft Windows 8 / Pro / Enterprise - 32 / 64-bit
- Microsoft Windows 7 Home Basic / Home Premium / Professional / Enterprise / Ultimate - Service Pack 1, 32 / 64-bit
- Microsoft Windows Vista Home Basic / Home Premium / Business / Enterprise / Ultimate - Service Pack 2, 32 / 64-bit
- Microsoft Windows XP Home / Professional / Media Center Edition - Service Pack 3, 32-bit
On a MacbookPro, OSX 10.4.11, Fusion 1.1 62573 dual core enabled, Bootcamp with clean XP Pro/ZoneAlarm/Avast:
Have been using Fusion since Beta. All virtual machines on XP and Linux run fine. The problem emerges when loading the Bootcamp partition via Fusion.
First issue: when upgraded to 62573, it now asks two times for password beforehand only once:
First call is by VMware Fusion requiring system.privilege.admin and second is by Vmx requiring system.volume.unmount.
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Having completed this, XP loads and the welcome screen appears, CPU starts climbing. As soon as the desktop emerges, even without the taskbar, CPU is at 100%.
The processes on the XP responsible for this are:
winlogon.exe uses 1080K and 50%CPU static.
Logonui.exe uses 1568K and wuauclt.exe uses 7136K - these two use the remaining CPU, variably.
other processes appearing to use some CPU are Vmwareuser.exe and system, plus Avast scan. But after a while it is just the top three, and you're stuck with a slow-responding mac.
Trying to shut down / restart the virtual machine, results some times in a message saying the scripts didnt run properly. With some patience, the machine either powers down or restarts and all over again. There are days like yesterday when the whole thing can take an hour to boot properly. A restart from within XP has more frequently than all the other solution led to a successful boot next-time. If passed the initial stages, machine works fine.
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The XP installation is clean from new, used for one specific program only, Avast and Spybot report nothing and have switched off Automatic Updates which seemed to do the trick then. Not anymore.
Bootcamp seems to load fine but have only used it very few times anyway.
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Would really appreciate suggestions, is it an XP installation problem? Fusion problem / workaround??