bytecode-viewer
opal | bytecode-viewer | |
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1 | 9 | |
41 | 14,351 | |
- | - | |
9.6 | 7.2 | |
9 days ago | 13 days ago | |
Scala | Java | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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opal
bytecode-viewer
- Java 泛型程式設計的注意事項
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Reverse Engineering Tools in 2022
I think they forgot to google translate the disadvantages of JEB Decompiler
I haven't used JEB to comment, but I've gotten a lot of mileage out of https://github.com/pxb1988/dex2jar#readme and then feed the normal Java jars it produces into https://github.com/mstrobel/procyon#readme and (of course) one shouldn't overlook picking your favorite tool for dealing with AndroidManifest.xml which often has fun things hiding in it
While digging up those links, I was reminded that some folks enjoy https://github.com/Konloch/bytecode-viewer#is-there-a-demo because it can be easier to "try out" a few of the decompilation engines, but I don't use it because it's hard to do batch things with it, versus dex2jar into procyon is automation friendly
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Is there any tool for Java reverse engineering that doesn't totally suck?
Here's a good tool for inspecting the bytecode of applications, with built in decompiler support: https://github.com/Konloch/bytecode-viewer
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Stack Overflow Developer Survey: 54% of Respondents Dread Java?
If you're curious what anything (Lombok or otherwise) compiles to, JVM bytecode is much simpler than the kinds C/C++ compiles to. It's fairly readable even with the JDK disassembler javap. There are also various community disassemblers and decompilers that provide nicer output than javap. I use https://github.com/Konloch/bytecode-viewer, which is a GUI frontend for several. If one decompiler doesn't handle a class well, another usually does.
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Looking for a lightweight java decompiler / code viewer that has dark mode
I use Bytecode Viewer, https://github.com/Konloch/bytecode-viewer with Dark Mode.
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CandyPixel - Known Information Wanted Please.
if you do use this plugin i'd recommend also using https://bytecodeviewer.com/ to check the supposed malicious lines of code.
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A response from r/AskReddit. Are we even surprised?
Take a look at tools like this one to get an idea of what you can actually get: https://bytecodeviewer.com/
- Needed some suggestions
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1.8 source code
Also, you can always install the latest release and then put it through a Java decompiler to get the complete source code. It might have some errors since decompilers aren't perfect, but will give you a more complete source code than anything I can legally provide.
What are some alternatives?
sonar-scala - A free and open-source SonarQube plugin for static code analysis of Scala projects.
AndroRAT - A Simple android remote administration tool using sockets. It uses java on the client side and python on the server side
Caesium - A Java bytecode obfuscator
Perses - A project to cause (controlled) destruction on your jvm application
Mixin - Mixin is a trait/mixin and bytecode weaving framework for Java using ASM
jpexs-decompiler - JPEXS Free Flash Decompiler
Recaf - The modern Java bytecode editor
fernflower - Unofficial mirror of FernFlower Java decompiler (All pulls should be submitted upstream)
JByteMod-Beta - Java bytecode editor
Flowable (V6) - A compact and highly efficient workflow and Business Process Management (BPM) platform for developers, system admins and business users.
tommy - Tommy is Apache Tomcat, bundled as a single executable jar.
apk-dependency-graph - Android class dependency visualizer. This tool helps to visualize the current state of the project.