Command: fdshield

  The FreeDOS FDSHIELD malware shield monitors DOS sessions and helps
  block dangerous activity typical of trojan horses, viruses, malware,
  and human error. It is not a virus scanner like Clamscanand does not
  check known virus signatures, but only monitors for known risky
  behavior.

Syntax:

  FdShield [/v][/t][/T][/x][/X][/b][/B][/w][/W]

Options:

      Basic protection when called without options. Halts the system if
      a program attempts to disable certain other common anti-virus
      monitors, and blocks certain potentially dangerous FCB-based deletes
      with wildcards in the file name extension. If you use FdShield in a
      DOS box, only the DOS in the box is stopped, not the whole system.
  /v  Makes verbose. Verbose gives additional information on why an action
      was prohibited, and when FdShield halts the system, it will wait 20
      seconds before automatically rebooting or closing the DOS box.
  /t  Prohibits TSR. When this is selected, FdShield will print an system
      halted message and reboot or close the session if a program attempts
      to terminate and stay resident. This may help stop trojans and some
      resident file infectors and multipartite viruses. The DOS extenders
      CWSDPMI and RTM are explicitly allowed to load in this mode. Note
      that viruses tend to go resident without using the DOS functions
      for that, which allows them to bypass FdShield.
      This option makes sense as many programs like DOSFSCK, BZIP2, UPX,
      WGET and others originally come from UNIX and are ported to DOS by
      compilertools like DJGPP and need CWSDPMI.
  /T  Prohibits TSR. When this is selected, FdShield will print an system
      halted message and reboot or close the session if a program attempts
      to terminate and stay resident. This option works pretty much like
      the /t option. The CWSDPMI and RTM DOS extenders are not allowed to
      load in this mode. In OS/2 DOS box and similar, CWSDPMI is not
      needed anyway. Some other DOS extenders are not TSR at all and
      therefore work without problems with FdShield /T.
  /x  Write protects program files with the com, exe, and sys suffix. When
      you select this option, FdShield prevents most attempts to write to
      system files, but does allow creating new program files in ways
      which explicitly avoid overwriting existing files. Many tools like
      compilers or archivers use other, unsafe, ways to create files, so
      they will get blocked by FdShield. You should boot without the
      FdShield /x protection if you plan to install or compile programs.
      If you do have /x protection on, however, many viruses will not be
      able to infect program files.
  /X  Write protects system files with bat, com, exe, and sys suffix.
      This option does not permit creating system files at all. Batch
      files are no common target for viruses, but there are situations
      where you do not want them to be modified anyway. Neither the /x
      nor the /X protection prevent long file name based access to
      program files. This affects only DOS versions which support long
      file names in some way.
  /b  Write protects floppy disk BOOT areas. This can prevent boot sector
      and multipartite viruses from spreading to diskettes in plain DOS.
      However, the protection does not work in OS/2 and Win NT DOS boxes.
      As these sectors are usually only written by tools like FORMAT,
      SYS and FDISK /b and /B should not be used when running
      these tools.
  /B  Write protects hard disk BOOT areas. This may prevent multipartite
      viruses from spreading to the hard drive partitions. It may not
      work in OS/2 and Win NT DOS boxes, but they have built in
      protection against boot sector modifications.
  /w  Write protects floppy (/w) disks. Pipes do not work if the temp
      directory (if none set: current directory) is on a read-only disk.
      This protection does not work in OS/2 or NT DOS boxes.
  /W  Write protects hard disks and all other non-diskette drives with FAT
      filesystem, like RAMDISKs. If DOS tries to write to a "fixed" disk,
      it can get stuck at a prompt which only lets you retry but not abort
      the write attempt. If you use both /w and /W at the same time,
      FdShield will make all files look as if they are readonly, which
      usually prevents DOS from trying to write to disk. The same warning
      about pipes and DOS boxes as for the /w protection holds for the /W
      protection.
  /?  Shows the help.

Comments:

  Load FdShield as early as possible (after TSR programs like keyboard
  and CD-ROM drivers) to get its protection as all actions before
  loading FdShield can damage your system.
  For this reason you should change the boot order in the BIOS to C:
  instead of A: first. Many new machines offer a manual change of the 
  boot order when starting the computer if you need it.
  As FdShield offers no function to unload you have to reboot the
  computer if some programs are blocked by its functions. For this
  reason it is recommended to add a boot menu (see example) for
  different purposes.

Examples:

  In CONFIG.SYS / FDCONFIG.SYS:
    MENU 0. FreeDOS system
    MENU 1. minimal virus protection
    MENU 2. medium protection (1.-TSR +HD bootsector write prtoection)
    MENU 3. medium protection (recommended) (2.+program write protection)
    MENU 4. maximum protection (3.-all TSR+write protection all)
  and in AUTOEXEC.BAT:
    IF "%CONFIG%"=="0" echo The system is not protected by FdShield
    IF "%CONFIG%"=="1" LH FdShield /v
    IF "%CONFIG%"=="2" LH FdShield /v /t /B
    IF "%CONFIG%"=="3" LH FdShield /v /t /B /x
    IF "%CONFIG%"=="4" LH FdShield /v /T /B /b /X /w /W

See also:

  dosfsck
  doslfn
  fcbs
  fdisk
  format
  set
  sys

  Copyright © 2005 Eric Auer, Walt Gregg, updated 2008 by W. Spiegl.

  This file is derived from the FreeDOS Spec Command HOWTO.
  See the file H2Cpying for copying conditions.