HexFiend
Cppcheck
HexFiend | Cppcheck | |
---|---|---|
10 | 11 | |
5,174 | 5,454 | |
0.8% | - | |
9.1 | 9.9 | |
about 1 month ago | 3 days ago | |
Objective-C | C++ | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
HexFiend
- Reverse-engineering an encrypted IoT protocol
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The Hiew Hex Editor
For macOS users, there's also native app Hex Fiend (open source) which also has a pattern language.
https://hexfiend.com
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GNU poke: The extensible editor for structured binary data
* HexFiend - a hex editor, but with "binary templates" feature : https://github.com/HexFiend/HexFiend
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Garbage display fix in FHD screens
First we need to download these three Applications: Hackintool, AWEDIDEditor and HexFiend
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What is the best hex-editor in 2022
For MacOS, I use HexFiend. It has TCL-based binary templates (fairly easy to write) and a CLI launcher (hexf)
https://hexfiend.com
https://github.com/HexFiend/HexFiend
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Patching an Embedded Synthesiser OS from 1996 with Ghidra
Shout out to Hex Fiend! My favorite feature is the template system[0]. It makes it much easier to figure out file formats for which you have no documentation. You write a little tcl code to describe the parts of the format you understand as you go.
[0] https://github.com/HexFiend/HexFiend/tree/master/templates
- Fq: Jq for Binary Formats
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Firefox's Optimized Zip Format: Reading Zip Files Quickly
I recently made a visualization template of ZIP file contents for HexFiend. The format is certainly wonky, and some writers (I’m looking at you, macOS) don’t get it quite right: https://github.com/HexFiend/HexFiend/blob/master/templates/A...
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Awesome Penetration Testing
Hex Fiend - Fast, open source, hex editor for macOS with support for viewing binary diffs.
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Tweak: An Efficient Hex Editor
The topo sort means we'll write [100, 200) first, so its source data is not overwritten.
Here is Hex Fiend's B+tree: https://github.com/HexFiend/HexFiend/blob/master/framework/s...
Cppcheck
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Configuring Cppcheck, Cpplint, and JSON Lint
I dedicated Sunday morning to going over the documentation of the linters we use in the project. The goal was to understand all options and use them in the best way for our project. Seeing their manuals side by side was nice because even very similar things are solved differently. Cppcheck is the most configurable and best documented; JSON Lint lies at the other end.
- Cppcheck/Releasenotes.txt
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Enforcing Memory Safety?
Using infer, someone else exploited null-dereference checks to introduce simple affine types in C++. Cppcheck also checks for null-dereferences. Unfortunately, that approach means that borrow-counting references have a larger sizeof than non-borrow counting references, so optimizing the count away potentially changes the semantics of a program which introduces a whole new way of writing subtly wrong code.
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Check out my tasks.json for C++ of VScode
Also check out (cppcheck)[https://github.com/danmar/cppcheck] if you want more static analysis
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What are the must-have tools for any C++ developer?
My browser refuses to open that link. This is better: https://github.com/danmar/cppcheck
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Awesome Penetration Testing
cppcheck - Extensible C/C++ static analyzer focused on finding bugs.
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C/C++ pre-commit hooks for static analyzers and linters
and five C/C++ static code analyzers: * clang-tidy * oclint * cppcheck * cpplint (recently added!) * include-what-you-use (recently added!)
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Caught signal 11 (SIGSEGV) and signal 6 (SIGABRT)
Start by feeding your codebase to a static analysis tool like cppcheck, to rule out obvious bound-checking mistakes in it.
- How to detect stack corruption in embedded c??
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Why static analysis on C projects is not widespread already?
Cppcheck is free. I've previously used it with a C++ project.
What are some alternatives?
fq - jq for binary formats - tool, language and decoders for working with binary and text formats
cpplint - Static code checker for C++
LOIC - Deprecated - Low Orbit Ion Cannon - An open source network stress tool, written in C#. Based on Praetox's LOIC project. USE ON YOUR OWN RISK. WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES. IF YOU GET V& IT IS YOUR FAULT.
gcc-poison - gcc-poison
Ciphey - ⚡ Automatically decrypt encryptions without knowing the key or cipher, decode encodings, and crack hashes ⚡
stb - stb single-file public domain libraries for C/C++
libdeflate - Heavily optimized library for DEFLATE/zlib/gzip compression and decompression
cmake-lint - Fork of https://github.com/richq/cmake-lint to continue maintenance
Kaitai Struct - Kaitai Struct: declarative language to generate binary data parsers in C++ / C# / Go / Java / JavaScript / Lua / Nim / Perl / PHP / Python / Ruby
American Fuzzy Lop - american fuzzy lop - a security-oriented fuzzer
json-logs - A tool to pretty-print JSON logs, like those from zap or logrus.
c-smart-pointers - Smart pointers for the (GNU) C programming language