Open the vault and empty it. Read the HELP file that came with the program.
I had this same problem with a computer at work. AVG 7.0 wouldn't heal the infected files automatically or move them to the Virus Vault. I moved the infected files into the Virus Vault myself. You can do this in AVG. Once in the Vault, you can delete them. Don't delete if they are critical or actual system files. The infected files were simply temporary Internet files, but because they were in Windows\Temporary Internet Files\IE content (Windows98), they read as system files and AVG wouldn't touch them. I ran another couple of scans after doing this and the machine was clear. Hope this helps.
The purpose of the vault is to quarantine files that have been infected. In most cases, these are new files created by the virus or the actual virus itself, but certain viruses infect files that may be important to you. The vault allows you to quarantine the files so that they can be healed when a solution is found or submitted for analysis. In most cases you can simply delete vault files.
Heal function tries to remove the virus from the infected file. If the file is really infected so it may work or not (because it is difficult or it is not really infected), but if it is not then it will not work. If AVG manages to remove the virus, the file is free and not infected anymore, if not then you should move it to the vault or delete it.
no is there a software to delete it
When you moved the file to the AVG Virus Vault it was deleted from its original location, coded, and then saved in a non-executable file in a hidden folder. Your PC is no longer infected.If you are not missing any data file and your applications are running, then you can delete these vaulted files from the AVG Virus Vault. You can do it selectively: from AVG Virus Vault program-> select files -> right click on the selection -> Delete file(s).Or you can delete all AVG Virus Vault contents in one go: Open the AVG Control Center program -> right click on AVG Virus Vault component -> choose"Empty vault".
You should not be using the defaultcachefolder for the file repository. You should have an external file vault and folders for storing the files. If you don't have an external file repository, then your files are being stored in Oracle BLOBs, which is slower than external files. You may be out of disk space, which will cause your vault to become read-only and nothing will save.
Vault - revision control system - was created in 2003.
no
Some antivirus programs have a folder which may be named something like "virus vault", "virus chest", "quarantine", etc. These folders are special folders that the program sets so files inside them cannot run or access other files. The point behind these folders is that by moving viruses and other malicious files into them, they can't run and can't harm your system. Usually, it's a good idea to delete the files in this folder using your antivirus if they can't be disinfected.
The last update of AVG (Virus Database: 404 - Release date: 17/03/2004) works on Trojan horse downloader.Small.GS. BEFORE YOU MUST STOP THE PROCESS "TASKMAN.EXE" in Task Manager Windows (you can open this with Ctrl+Alt+Canc buttons). I have had horrendous problems with downloader.small.4. AVG free edition identifies the virus and a scan says the infected files are healed, but they're not - the system simply crashes repeatedly. I have binned AVG completely and have had no further problems. I'm sure it's still on the system but I think I'll install McAfee or Norton to do the job with an update. I tried stopping TASKMAN.EXE but AVG still couldn't remove the infected file so I had a look in Windows task manager "Ctrl+Alt+Del" for this too found it and stopped it as well then run AVG again. This time AVG was able to move the infected files to the vault.
NO u cant
It may not be the best option to do. You need to contact a professional to have them tell you if the infected file is important.