This window lets you see at all times which scheduled scan tasks have been created for the different configuration profiles, and access the results of these tasks. To access this window, click the Scheduled scans link in the Status window.
The information is structured in four columns:
Name. Displays the name of the scheduled scan task. If you click the task name, you will see a window with the results of the scheduled scan.
Profile. This specifies the configuration profile to which the scheduled scan belongs.
Frequency. This details the type of scan (periodic, immediate, scheduled).
Task status. This column uses a series of icons to indicate the status of the scan task (Waiting, In progress, Finished, Finished with errors, Timeout exceeded). You can access the list of icons by placing the mouse pointer on the Key option.
This window displays a list of computers subject to scan tasks, unless the scan status is Waiting.
If it is a periodic scan, you can choose between the options See result of last scan or See results of previous scans.
The data is displayed in six columns:
Computer. This indicates which computer was subject to the scan. The computer will be listed by its name or IP address, in accordance with your selection in the Preferences window.
Group. The group to which the computer belongs.
Status. In this column there is a series of icons to indicate the status of the computer (Error, Scanning, Finishing, Timeout exceeded). You can access the list of icons by placing the mouse pointer on the Key option.
Detections. Here you can see the number of detections during the scan. Click the number to access a list of detections.
Start date. Indicates the task's start date and time.
End date. Indicates the task's end date and time.
To see the scheduled scan settings for the protection profile applied to the computer, click See settings.
The protection for Linux computers lets you run on-demand and scheduled scans. You can scan the following items:
The whole computer. Scans all local hard disks.
Hard disks. Scans all hard disks.
Email. Doesn’t scan anything as in Linux there is no scanning of email folders
Other items. Lets you specify paths in Linux format.
Example: /root/documents
For more information about scheduled scans, refer to the Advanced scan settings section.