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I've seen it happen reasonable often: I write an application in Delphi and when I compile it, the virus-scanner tells me that I've created a virus and thus immediately deleted the executable again. It's annoying but reasonable easy to fix by doing a full rebuild, deleting the *.dcu files first and sometimes by simply waiting. It happens with Delphi 6, 7, 2005 and 2007, as far as I know. And Symantec, Kaspersky, McAfee and NOD32 have all been guilty of reporting these false positives. I know it's because Delphi adds timestamps to it's DCU files and these timestamps end up in the final executable and apparently appear to be part of some random virus signature.

I don't want to disable the virus-scanner, not even for a single folder or file. And I'm not really for a solution, but am wondering about the following:

  • Do these false positives also occur with other compilers?
  • Does it also happen with .NET executables?
  • Do others also notice similar problems with Delphi?
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Just want to add that this error is quite rare, but it still happens about once every three months with me or one of my collegues. – Workshop Alex Jun 14 at 20:39
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I actually read somewhere that a lot of malware and viruses are written using Delphi. IMHO it tells something about the versatility and strength of Delphi. Used by the L33T hackers :-) – Tom Jun 15 at 5:40
/Me ponders this in context of that: cm.bell-labs.com/who/ken/trust.html. Nah:) – Oorang Jun 15 at 7:47

15 Answers

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Do these false positives also occur with other compilers?

Yes, this is has been a common problem in the past for AutoIt as addressed in this forum post "Are my AutoIt EXEs really infected?". In most cases including AutoIt it stems from poor heuristic practices. Since AutoIt uses the free and open UPX compressor it is often mistaken for malicious code that also uses UPX.

The best (and possibly only) thing you can do is report these mistakes so they can refine their heuristics or at least white list you app.

Below is a list of contact information for some popular anti-virus companies. They all claim to appreciate submissions as it helps them make their product better.

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Great list of AV creators! – Gamecat Jun 15 at 8:20
Very good link indeed! – Workshop Alex Jun 15 at 11:12
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But they are only interested if you are the author. For years McAfee declared an .OBJ file on my system a potentially unwanted program--yet it had no problem with an .EXE incorporating it. I wasn't the author, though, and since it was an old, no-longer-supported version the author wasn't going to do anything. – Loren Pechtel Jun 15 at 17:50
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@Loren: Interesting, I wasn't aware they made such distinctions. Thanks for the heads up! – Copas Jun 15 at 18:22
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Another for your list (I don't have the rep to edit), VIPRE from Sunbelt Software, www.sunbeltsoftware.com – Argalatyr Jun 19 at 3:48
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Sounds more like a heuristic screw-up to me. Do you have heuristics turned on (some scanners may refer to it as "virus-like code")? The chances that time stamps would equate to "a portion of some virus signature" seems too small to be happening all the time.

When I used to run a virus scanner, I never saw this problem with D6 or D7.

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Yes, heuristics are on. Not that I mind, since the computer should be kept secure so I rather deal with the occasional false positive than to be the source of infection. I'm often working on software for the financial market and thus much of it is sensitive information. – Workshop Alex Jun 14 at 20:38
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This is not that uncommon when using non-standard compilers or when doing fancy low-level stuff: I remember creating false positives when I dabbled in OS-development: AntiVir didn't like some of my flat binaries.

Recently, there's been a post about such a problem at the tinyCC mailing list regading AVG.

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Actually, I know that I only have to call a single windows API function in a DLL project to trigger alarm bells on almost every virusscanner. (The keyhook API is considered suspicious.) But to get around the false positives, I don't have to change the sourcecode. All I need to do is throw away the DCU files (Delphi Compiled Units) so it will rebuild these again, with different timestamps, thus apparently generating a different signature. – Workshop Alex Jun 14 at 20:44
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There is indeed Delphi virus in the wild, see http://www.sophos.com/blogs/sophoslabs/?p=6117

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I've never seen this, having done lots of C++ and .NET development with Visual Studio (from version 1.5 to 2010).

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The first infection by a C# virus is still in progress, so please give it some time. It needs a 250MB framework and administrator rights to install you know. :-) – Wouter van Nifterick Jun 16 at 2:34
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Yes, my team has experienced this maybe half a dozen times in 2-3 years with Sophos in a corporate environment. So, very rarely, but it does happen.

Our IT cretin started off demanding I review all the 1.5M lines of code in our app to "make it go away", but he didn't get too far pursuing that line...

To be fair, he was initially concerned that our clients might also receive such a warning, but we've only ever seen it triggered when building an exe from the IDE on a developer's PC, never on a release build exe on a test box or elsewhere.

Personally, it happens so rarely we don't worry about it.

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I'm not worried about this too. It's just annoying since it means some additional delay when building a new executable. It's a bit worse on our automatic build server, though. The compilation goes okay but since the executable is deleted immediately, it just chokes to death on such occasions. But again, it's extremely rare. (And on the build server, a new build run just fixes it again.) – Workshop Alex Jun 15 at 11:03
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I've had it happen to me with deployed code. The next update to the scanner solved the problem. Some cretin wrote a virus using the same compiler and the signature was part of the runtime library, not actually in the hostile code.

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This is similar to the problem AutoIt often has. I feel your pain, with deployed code it is very difficult to (fully) convince the customer that it is a false positive. – Copas Jun 15 at 0:50
It's in-house for me, I'm known to the people running it. – Loren Pechtel Jun 15 at 4:07
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In some apps, if I use RtlVclOptimize.pas, the Avira antivirus tell that I have created a virus.

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That's interesting, because Avira doesn't warn me about a virus in all our applications. Maybe it is the combination with other units. – Andreas Jun 15 at 10:28
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It happened to me too. Hooking keyboard will trigger almost any heuristic scanning AV software to report a key logger. There are probably many other system calls which will trigger it too. Solution - try to redesign your code or contact the AV manufacturer to include your software into exception list.

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Had that problem too. Had a Delphi unit that was used in an executable, and it implemented a keyhook. Then the unit was used in a DLL to run under Outlook and it appeared to be working. But it set off quite a few virusscanners except the Kaspersky scanner that I used back then! Then again, it was even worse, since the DLL installed the keyhook in every process. That's not possible when the API is called from an executable. – Workshop Alex Jun 16 at 21:19
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I remember another weird one:

A file was being flagged as suspect. The only thing is the file was an .OBJ! An .EXE that contained the code the .OBJ contained wasn't considered a problem.

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I've only seen this happen with assemblers. For example, MASM32 actually warns people that it might trigger virus scanners since the EXEs are so small (and/or some viruses are written in assembly). My McAfee scanner flagged some of the example programs as viruses.

This should only happen for virus scanners that have a "looks suspicious" analysis mode.

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plus to what others'v said, modern anti-virus programs rise virus-alert if your programs uses some "suspicious" APIs too ( like URLdownloadFile or other API hooking related ones). if you google "delphi RAT FUD API undetectable" you'll find many interesting topics .

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Some antivirus programs even flag a batch file as a virus and can't be convinced that it isn't. Quite annoying, if that file is part of a third party library and the virus warning is triggered every time TortoiseSVN checks it out. I ended up disabling the virus scanner, deleting the file and doing a commit. (Without disabling the scanner, I could not even do that :-( )

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A couple of years back, everytime we updated the GNU Linker from mingw sources and started distributing it with our compiler, we got some reports that virusscanners classified ld.exe as virus. (.exes writing .exes ...)

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I would not call it a "false positive", because, strictly speaking, it is not false and the antivirus software is not "guilty" of anything in any way.

I am 99% sure, that this is the heuristic analysis acting up (I bet it detects your executable as something along the lines of win32.virus.generic - note the generic, this is a sign, that this is not in its signature db, but rather was detected by the heuristics) and, with being heuristic and all, it does not give you any kind of guarantee, that whatever it finds is malicious, it just kind of makes it known to you, that the executable is suspicious from its point of view.

The easiest solution to this would be just adding an exception for your file by name (it is always the same name, correct?). If you are uncomfortable with this, you should, probably, make your antivirus software prompt you before taking action so you can make it skip your file manually.

In general, I've found coding in windows with antivirus software somewhat irritating (don't do it much nowadays, but still), especially if the said software is in "paranoid mode". Irritating as it is, though, it is unavoidable (IMO).

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Actually, the problem can occur with ANY source that gets compiled in Delphi so the filename varies. Making an exception for the executable would increase the risk in a very small amount, but I'd need to do that to get around a very rare problem. Especially since there's a simple work-around, it's not a real problem. Just annoying when it happens. And as I said, our systems work on financial applications so we're paranoid all the time. ;-) Annoying, but required. – Workshop Alex Jun 15 at 11:11
How can it not be a false positive? The AV software falsely identifies it as malware. The meaning of "false positive" depends on the result, not whether the process is reasonable or not. Lots of reasonable processes yield false positives. – David Thornley Jun 19 at 14:39

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