Grither Virus
Virus Name: Grither
Aliases: Vienna 774
V Status: Rare
Discovered: January, 1991
Symptoms: .COM growth; C: & D: drive corruption
Origin: United States
Eff Length: 774 Bytes
Type Code: PNCK - Parasitic Non-Resident .COM & .EXE Infector
Detection Method: ViruScan, AVTK, F-Prot, NAV, Sweep, IBMAV,
NAVDX, VAlert, PCScan, ChAV,
NShld, LProt, Sweep/N, Innoc, NProt, AVTK/N,
NAV/N, IBMAV/N
Removal Instructions: Delete infected files
General Comments:
The Grither virus was submitted in January, 1991, by Paul Ferguson
of the United States. This virus is a non-resident direct action
infector of .COM files, including COMMAND.COM.
When a program infected with Grither is executed, the virus will
infect one .COM file in the current directory. COMMAND.COM may
become infected if it exists in the current directory.
.COM programs infected with Grither will increase in length by 774
bytes, the virus will be located at the end of the infected file.
The file's date and time in the disk directory will not be altered
by the virus.
The Grither virus can be extremely destructive. With a probability
of approximately one out of every eight times an infected program is
executed, the virus may activate. On activation, Grither will
overwrite the beginning of the C: and D: drives of the system's hard
disk. Effectively, this corrupts the disk's boot sector, file
allocation tables, and directory, as well as the system files.
Grither is roughly based on the Vienna and Violator viruses.