mvraidsvc.exe wants internet access

Black Metal

Black Metal

Desert Nomad

Join Date: Jan 2009

N/

Running Windows 7, I got a McAfee message asking if I should allow C:\Program Files (x86)\Marvell\raid\svc\mvraidsvc.exe internet access

I did an internet search and I don't think this is a problematic situation. It's just that I've had this comp almost 6 months and never had this message appear.

Anyone know what this file is and if I should allow it to have internet access?

Thanks.

Kumu Honua

Kumu Honua

Jungle Guide

Join Date: Feb 2008

If in doubt, deny access. You can always change your mind later.

First thing I would check is to see if you have "Automatic updates" set for the raid controller in options. That would be my non-expert suggestion.

Quaker

Quaker

Hell's Protector

Join Date: Aug 2005

Canada

Brothers Disgruntled

It seems like your Raid drivers may be checking for updates. There should be no problem with allowing it, but not much problem if you don't either. (Provided you are not having problems with your RAID.)

Black Metal

Black Metal

Desert Nomad

Join Date: Jan 2009

N/

aren't raid drivers for when you link 2 vid cards on your mobo? Or am I way off?

If so I just have the 1 vid card, but it's good to know this isn't malicious. I wish there was a better way to know when AV or firewalls flag something, whether it's ok or not. Instead you panic and can't do anything on that comp until you research and resolve things.

Kumu Honua

Kumu Honua

Jungle Guide

Join Date: Feb 2008

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAID

Raid is your disk drive solution.

Panic? No. However if you don't have a RAID setup, then you might want to investigate further.

Quaker

Quaker

Hell's Protector

Join Date: Aug 2005

Canada

Brothers Disgruntled

RAID is a hard drive thing and you would know if you have one. It would appear that your computer has a Marvell SATA (hard drive) controller, and you either installed the drivers off the driver CD for the motherboard, or Win7 detected the chip and installed them automatically. However, the app could be checking for basic non-raid SATA drivers as well.

Since you probably don't actually have a RAID set up, and if everything hard drive-wise is working well, you can just ignore it and either let it access the internet or not.