Will DocFetcher be affected by Oracle's move to require license fees for use of Java? See https://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/12/16/oracle_targets_java_users_non_compliance/
Tran, Thank you for your prompt response! The testing below shows you've resolved any outstanding issue I'd noticed regarding the build for v. 1.1.20, and have contributed an excellent search utility that works across a number of platforms. Again, thanks for continued development of this tool! Bart Testing: After downloading the Windows installer at 23:13 GMT, 81.06.2018, I checked the full install, /docfetcher_1.1.20_win32_setup.exe/, at VirusTotal and it showed no issue was detected by any of 65...
VirusTotal has 4 malware alerts
Scanning docfetcher_1.1.20_win32_setup.exe in VirusTotal shows malware alerts from Antiy-AVL, Babable, Bkav, Jiangmin & Adware/Agent.eda. Unpacking the executlable and testing the source files show an issue with the uninstaller -- so it appears these false alerts are due to the uninstaller, and perhaps installer, files, rather than any issue with the execellent DocFetcher, itself.
DocFetcher can index Thunderbird mail, if the Thunderbird setting allows it: Tools | Options | Advanced tab, check "Allow Windows to Search messages". Then add C:\Users\user\AppData\Roaming\Thunderbird\Profiles\ to the DocFetcher Search Scope, and declare wdseml files as plain text. Downside: by setting mail as searchable in Thunderbird, it is stored unencrypted.
Actually, DocFetcher can index Thunderbird mail, if the Thunderbird setting allows it: Tools | Options | Advanced tab, check "Allow Windows to Search messages". Then add C:\Users\user\AppData\Roaming\Thunderbird\Profiles\ to the DocFetcher Search Scope, and declare wdseml files as plain text. Downside: by setting mail as searchable in Thunderbird, it is stored unencrypted.
Ext2Srv cannot be stopped
Avast! did not find the malware in the installer, but upon running the installed...