![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
A client of ours has one XP workstation that is attempting to open thousands
of internet sessions. This has the affect of flooding the network with unnessary traffic. This was causing the old Netgear router to crash and we have replaced it with a more sophisticated Draytek which has identified this XP machine as the source of the network traffic. We have put a restriction on their router to prevent this machine from opening up too many connections, which helps the other users on their network, but this machine needs to be stopped from doing this. I have used the usual suspects (Process Explorer, Auto Runs, AVG, MalwareBytes), but am unable to find the culprit on the machine that is causing the problem. Can anyone suggest other utilities, procedures to go through that might help. Other than rebuilding the machine? |
Ads |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
If you're not able to discover and remove the malware - and it ain't
easy, these days - you'll have to re-build the workstation. If it was my shop, and a client was opening thousands of connections, I would take the machine offline (from the internet and the network) immediately. --- Leonard Grey Errare humanum est zaz wrote: A client of ours has one XP workstation that is attempting to open thousands of internet sessions. This has the affect of flooding the network with unnessary traffic. This was causing the old Netgear router to crash and we have replaced it with a more sophisticated Draytek which has identified this XP machine as the source of the network traffic. We have put a restriction on their router to prevent this machine from opening up too many connections, which helps the other users on their network, but this machine needs to be stopped from doing this. I have used the usual suspects (Process Explorer, Auto Runs, AVG, MalwareBytes), but am unable to find the culprit on the machine that is causing the problem. Can anyone suggest other utilities, procedures to go through that might help. Other than rebuilding the machine? |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"zaz" wrote in message
... A client of ours has one XP workstation that is attempting to open thousands of internet sessions. This has the affect of flooding the network with unnessary traffic. This was causing the old Netgear router to crash and we have replaced it with a more sophisticated Draytek which has identified this XP machine as the source of the network traffic. We have put a restriction on their router to prevent this machine from opening up too many connections, which helps the other users on their network, but this machine needs to be stopped from doing this. I have used the usual suspects (Process Explorer, Auto Runs, AVG, MalwareBytes), but am unable to find the culprit on the machine that is causing the problem. Can anyone suggest other utilities, procedures to go through that might help. Physically unplug it from the network! Other than rebuilding the machine? Rebuilding *shouldn't* be that difficult. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In ,
zaz typed: A client of ours has one XP workstation that is attempting to open thousands of internet sessions. This has the affect of flooding the network with unnessary traffic. This was causing the old Netgear router to crash and we have replaced it with a more sophisticated Draytek which has identified this XP machine as the source of the network traffic. We have put a restriction on their router to prevent this machine from opening up too many connections, which helps the other users on their network, but this machine needs to be stopped from doing this. I have used the usual suspects (Process Explorer, Auto Runs, AVG, MalwareBytes), but am unable to find the culprit on the machine that is causing the problem. Can anyone suggest other utilities, procedures to go through that might help. Other than rebuilding the machine? Once you have that machine rebuilt, which is probably your only option, you should make backup startegies a priority issue. If that client had a backup in place he could spend probably a half hour instead of 2+ days to get it all back in place. And there WILL BE a next time a backup will be needed, regardless of attitudes and opinions. HTH, Twayne` |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|