About the Trend Micro Scan Engine Parent topic

At the heart of all Trend Micro antivirus products lies a proprietary scan engine. Originally developed in response to the first computer viruses the world had seen, the scan engine today is exceptionally sophisticated. It is capable of detecting Internet worms, mass-mailers, Trojan horse threats, and network exploits, as well as viruses. The scan engine detects threats known to be:
  • IN THE WILD or actively circulating
  • IN THE ZOO or controlled viruses that are not in circulation
In addition to having a long history in the industry, the Trend Micro scan engine has also proven in test after test to be one of the fastest—whether checking a single file, scanning 100,000 files on a desktop machine, or scanning email traffic at the Internet gateway.
Rather than scan every byte of every file, the engine and pattern file work together to identify not only telltale characteristics of the virus code, but the precise location within a file where the virus would hide. When it detects a virus, the virus can be removed and the integrity of the file restored.
The scan engine includes an automatic clean-up routine for old virus pattern files (to help manage disk space), as well as incremental pattern updates (to help minimize bandwidth).
In addition, the scan engine is able to decrypt all major encryption formats (including MIME and BinHex). The scan engine recognizes and scans common compression formats including .Zip, .Arj, and .Cab. Most Trend Micro products also allow the product administrator to determine how many layers of compression to scan (up to a maximum of 20), for compressed files contained within a compressed file.
It is important that the scan engine remain current. Trend Micro ensures this in two ways:
  • Frequent updates to the scan engine’s data-file, called the virus pattern file, can be downloaded and read by the engine without the need for any changes to the engine code itself.
  • Technological upgrades in the engine software prompted by a change in the nature of virus threats, such as the rise in mixed-threats like SQL Slammer. In both cases, updates can be automatically scheduled, or the security administrator can handle them manually. International computer security organizations, including the International Computer Security Association (ICSA) annually certify the Trend Micro scan engine.