Title :
Why Anti-Virus Products Slow Down Your Machine?
Author :
Yan, Wei ; Ansari, Nirwan
Author_Institution :
Trend Micro, Inc., NJ, USA
Abstract :
Customers always complain that anti-virus softwares bog down their computers by consuming much of PC memories and resources. With the popularity and variety of zero- day threats over the Internet, security companies have to keep on inserting new virus signatures into their databases. However, is the increasing size of the signature file the sole reason to drag computers to a crawl during the virus scan? This paper outlines other three reasons for slowing down software-protected computers, which actually are not directly related to the signature file. First, the rising time consumption of de-obfuscating binary payloads by using the emulation technology requires anti-virus softwares take more time to scan a packed file than an unpacked file. Second, new technology file system causes self-similarity in file index searching and data block accessing. Even if file sizes fit the log-normal distribution, there are still many "spikes" of high virus-scanning latency which cannot be ignored. Last but not least, temporal changes in file size, file type, and storage capacity in modern operation systems are slowing down virus scan. The paper also discusses the cloud-based security infrastructure for deploying a light-weight and fast anti-virus products.
Keywords :
Internet; file organisation; operating systems (computers); security of data; storage management; Internet; antivirus software; cloud-based security infrastructure; data block access; deobfuscating binary payload; emulation technology; file index search; log-normal distribution; new technology file system; operation system; security company; software-protected computer; virus scan; virus signature; Application software; Computer viruses; Data security; Databases; Fingerprint recognition; Floods; Internet; Machinery production industries; Operating systems; Search engines;
Conference_Titel :
Computer Communications and Networks, 2009. ICCCN 2009. Proceedings of 18th Internatonal Conference on
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-4581-3
Electronic_ISBN :
1095-2055
DOI :
10.1109/ICCCN.2009.5235239