Could be something left behind in the registry, although I would have thought removing the files would be enough. You might try loading regedit and looking for Kerio settings in the following registry keys:
I am evaluating Kerio Personal Firewall v4. In the initial installation, I chose the "Learning" option, but later became convinced that this was a mistake, and I should have chosen instead the simpler and silent default option. Because I did not see a way to edit the configuration (nor did I see where the configuration files resides), I decided to Remove the application and begin again. This too appears now to be a mistake.
Although I had confirmed that the ..\\kerio directory was completely empty, and even removed it, what I thought would be a clean reinstallation did not ask me any of the configuration questions that I had to asnswer the first time around, but simply announced that "Learning" was now the default", while giving me no opportunity to change that. This leaves me in the same position as before. I have again Removed KPF from the system.
I will be grateful if someone will tell me how I can find the previous configuration so I can delete it and install the application from scratch, leaving behind any memory of time gone by. This will also help me to edit the configuration if I wish to make changes in it.
I believe that the config file in Kerio 2.x has an extension of .conf and in Kerio 4.x the extension is .cfg. Since you're using Kerio 4.x, just look for a file with the .cfg extension. That will be it. Should be pretty obvious which one it is.
Just a note... if your .cfg file and the entire Kerio folder was deleted, then it more or less has to be something stored in the registry. I think all of Kerio's stuff is stored in the Program Files folder.
IIRC, uninstalling Kerio will not remove the .conf file which holds your rules/settings, etc. So if you throw it back into the same directory, the new install picks up the old file.
This is sort of supposed to be a feature, not a bug. Just erase the kerio directory or install on a different path.
Well, if it's where you say, then it's gone, because the kerio directory is empty.
I would delete registry references to the program, as you say. But in general, if the configuration is a text tile, then it is presumably editable.
It's interesting, and not especially complimentary to the designers, that the GUI seems to provide no way to revise either configuration or rules. Or am I missing something? It is hard to believe, for example, that there is no way for a user who has chosen the "Learning" configuration, and who feels he should have done otherwise, to check or uncheck a box somewhere, and come out with the simpler basic configuration.
Ok, then you probably need to delete the registry entries..
I don't think the config file is a simple text file. You can't edit it manually with a text editor.
Yes, I think you are right about that (not being able to change your selection once you choose the simple configuration option). It's poor design I guess. You CAN revise rules in the Packet Filter section though. I think that's under the Network tab. I'm not running it now so I can't check for you.
Looks like you'll have to delete the Kerio directory and delete the registry entries, and then reinstall. That should do it..
This turns out not to be as simple as I had imagined it would be.
With KPF "removed" (as Windows so quaintly puts it, which really means only that the files and their directory are gone), neither of the above folder contains any subfolder with a name containing the string "Kerio", or indeed anything beginning with K.
With KPF installed (which means it is remembering from somewhere the earlier configuration, and does not allow me to alter it in any way), there are two lined in the Kerio subfolder in Hkey_Local_Machine/Software, nothing at all in the other. So the configuration is not in the Kerio program folder, not in the registry...... Where is it? And, on the philosophical level: What kind of nutcase designs and releases a program that, once it is configured, stays that way in perpetuity, whether you "remove" it or not? Happily, there are other firewall programs, so that I don't feel a need to spend much more time on this one. I would, however, like to know for future reference where the honchos at Kerio have seen fit to stow their configuration. And, since I already have this one, I'll take one more crack at initializing it and using it. Does someone know where the configuration might be?
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