DOS Command Msav
Type: External (6.0 and later
			 
			 Syntax:
			 
			 MSAV [d:] [/S|/C][/R][/A][/L][/N][/P][/F][/video][/mouse]
			 MSAV /video
			 
			 Purpose: Scans your computer for known viruses. 
			 
			 Discussion
			 
			 MSAV will scan the specified drive for known viruses. If no drive 
			is specified, the current drive will be scanned.
			 
			 MSAV creates a CHKLIST.MS file in each directory that is scanned 
			for viruses. The first time you scan a directory checksums are 
			recorded for each program in the CHKLIST.MS file. With subsequent 
			scans, new checksums are compared to the originals to see if the 
			program files have changed. If there is a change, it may indicate a 
			virus infection.
			 
			 Options
			 
			 /S - Scans the specified drive without removing the viruses that 
			are found.
			 
			 /C - Scans the specified drive removing any viruses that are found.
			 
			 /R - Creates a file, named MSAV.RPT, that lists the number of files 
			that were scanned, the number of viruses found, and the number of 
			viruses removed. If you do not specify this option, a report will 
			not be created. If created, the MSAV.RPT file will be placed in the 
			root directory.
			 
			 /A - Scans all drives except A and B.
			 
			 /L - Scans all local drives except network drives.
			 
			 /N - Used to display the contents of an MSAV.TXT file, if it exists 
			and if it is located in the directory that contains the MSAV.EXE 
			file. MSAV then scans the specified drive. MSAV does not use the 
			graphical interface. If a virus is detected, MSAV returns exit code 
			86 instead of displaying a message on your screen. This error code 
			means that more than one or more viruses were found.
			 
			 /P - Displays a command-line interface instead of the graphical 
			interface.
			 
			 /F - Turns off the display of filenames that have been scanned. 
			This option should be used only with the /N or /P options .
			 
			 /video - Displays a list of switches that can be used to affect how 
			MSAV is displayed. The following switches are included in this list:
			 
			 /25 - Sets the screen display to 25 lines. This is the default 
			setting.
			 
			 /28 - Sets the screen display to 28 lines (for VGA display adapters 
			only).
			 
			 /43 - Sets the screen display to 43 lines (for EGA and VGA display 
			adapters).
			 
			 /50 - Sets the screen display to 50 lines (for VGA display adapters 
			only).
			 
			 /60 - Sets the screen display to 60 lines (for Video 7 display 
			adapters only).
			 
			 /IN - Runs MSAV using a color scheme, even is a color display 
			adapter is not detected.
			 
			 /BW - Runs MSAV using a black-and-white color scheme.
			 
			 /MONO - Runs MSAV using a monochromatic color scheme.
			 
			 /LCD - Runs MSAV using an LCD color scheme.
			 
			 /FF - Uses the fastest screen updating on computers with CGA 
			display adapters (this may decrease video quality).
			 
			 /BF - Uses the computer`s BIOS to display video.
			 
			 /NF - Disables the use of alternate fonts.
			 
			 /BT - Allows use of a graphics mouse in Windows
			 
			 /NGM - Runs MSAV using the default mouse character instead of the 
			graphics character.
			 
			 /LE - Exchanges left and right mouse buttons.
			 
			 /PS2 - Resets the mouse if the mouse cursor disappears or locks up.
			 
			 /mouse - There are three mouse related options :
			 
			 NGM - No graphics mouse. The default mouse character is used rather 
			than a graphics cursor in full-screen display. 
			 
			 LE - Switches the left and right mouse buttons.
			 
			 PS2 - Resets the mouse if the cursor disappears or freezes.
			 
			 /video - If you specify this option alone on the command line, 
			MSAVE will display a list of the available video and mouse options .
			 
			 Example
			 
			 To scan the current directory, removing any found viruses, enter 
			the following:
			 
			 msav /s 
			 
			 This page is from
			http://www.easydos.com. I 
			pasted it on my website to avoid possible broken links. For further 
			help with DOS commands, Check easydos.com out.
