Crocodiles Virus
Virus Name: Crocodiles
Aliases: Crocodiles.1592
V Status: New
Discovery: January, 1996
Symptoms: .COM & .EXE growth; frequent system hangs;
unexpected system reboots
Origin: Unknown
Eff Length: 1,592 - 1,606 Bytes
Type Code: PRAK - Parasitic Resident .COM & .EXE Infector
Detection Method: NAV, NAVDX, AVTK, ViruScan, F-Prot, IBMAV, ChAV,
NAV/N, AVTK/N, IBMAV/N, NShld, Innoc 4.0+
Removal Instructions: Delete infected files
General Comments:
The Crocodiles virus was received in January, 1996. Its origin or
point of isolation is unknown. Crocodiles is a memory resident
infector of .COM and .EXE files, including COMMAND.COM.
When the first Crocodiles infected program is executed, this virus
will become memory resident and infect the copy of COMMAND.COM
indicated by the COMSPEC environmental variable. A system hang
will then occur.
Rebooting the system will be successful, and the virus will become
memory resident. When the user executes any program, another
system hang will occur. If this program was previously not infected
by the virus, it will become infected by the virus. If it was
previously infected, the virus will not reinfect it.
Programs infected with the Crocodiles virus will have a file length
increase of 1,592 to 1,606 bytes with the virus being located at
the end of the file. The program's date and time in the DOS disk
directory listing will not be altered. The following text strings
are visible within the viral code:
"SCAN.EXE"
"CROCODILES"
SCAN.EXE will not be infected by the virus when it is executed,
though a system hang will still occur when the virus is memory
resident.