bddisasm
mishegos
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bddisasm | mishegos | |
---|---|---|
3 | 6 | |
834 | 218 | |
1.6% | 5.0% | |
7.4 | 8.2 | |
24 days ago | 10 days ago | |
C | C++ | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
bddisasm
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Just released v0.2.0 of bddisasm - a no_std x86/x86_64 instruction decoder which aims to provide as much information as possible about an instruction
The Bitdefender disassembler is a C library that is able to decode and extract a wide range of information from all x86 and x86_64 instructions. The main goal is to provide an easy way of emulating and analyzing instructions.
You're probably right. The library was first developed for our in-house hypervisor and memory introspection engine, which needed a way to analyze and emulate instructions, so one of the main goals is to make this as easy as possible. There's a really really small [emulator](https://github.com/bitdefender/bddisasm/blob/master/bindings/rsbddisasm/bddisasm/examples/emulator.rs) example in the repo that showcases this.
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bddisasm - Rust bindings for the Bitdefender x86/x86_64 instruction decoder
The code is available on GitHub (bddisasm-sys contains the FFI bindings, generated with bindgen, while bddisasm holds the higher-level API bindings).
mishegos
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Differ: Tool for testing and validating transformed programs
Differential fuzzing is woefully underutilized -- our experience is that it consistently[1] finds[2] bugs that "traditional" fuzzing techniques struggle to discover, and that the primary obstacles to its adoption are harness and orchestration complexity. DIFFER goes a long way towards overcoming those obstacles!
(FD: My company.)
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Just released v0.2.0 of bddisasm - a no_std x86/x86_64 instruction decoder which aims to provide as much information as possible about an instruction
You may also want to check mishegos for another way of comparing different decoders.
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Capstone Disassembler Framework
It sounds like what you want is Mishegos [1], described here [2].
What are some alternatives?
iced - Blazing fast and correct x86/x64 disassembler, assembler, decoder, encoder for Rust, .NET, Java, Python, Lua
x64dbg - An open-source user mode debugger for Windows. Optimized for reverse engineering and malware analysis.
gifdec - small C GIF decoder
disas-bench - X86 disassembler benchmark
fadec - A fast and lightweight decoder for x86 and x86-64 and encoder for x86-64.
sandsifter - The x86 processor fuzzer
capstone - Capstone disassembly/disassembler framework: Core (Arm, Arm64, BPF, EVM, M68K, M680X, MOS65xx, Mips, PPC, RISCV, Sparc, SystemZ, TMS320C64x, Web Assembly, X86, X86_64, XCore) + bindings. [Moved to: https://github.com/capstone-engine/capstone]
xng-rs - A Rust wrapper for the Xtratum Next Generation API
bufferoverflow - This repo educates developers about BOF vulnerabilities and provides practical solutions to prevent these risks. It equips developers with knowledge and tools to counter one of the most common security vulnerabilities.