qbicc
bytecode-viewer
qbicc | bytecode-viewer | |
---|---|---|
3 | 9 | |
127 | 14,351 | |
0.0% | - | |
9.0 | 7.2 | |
6 days ago | 9 days ago | |
Java | Java | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
qbicc
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Project loom + valhalla + graalvm = Java on steroids
The idea of Leyden seems to be suspended within Oracle (perhaps they didn't want to compete with Graal), but some Red Hat engineers are trying to keep it alive: https://github.com/qbicc/qbicc
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What are the most exciting future features in Java and JVM?
And further to that there's this mail-archive entry and the experiment-in-progress github repo.
- qbicc - Exploring the possibilities of Java native images.
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?
project-loom-c5m - Experiment to achieve 5 million persistent connections with Project Loom virtual threads
AndroRAT - A Simple android remote administration tool using sockets. It uses java on the client side and python on the server side
JDK - JDK main-line development https://openjdk.org/projects/jdk
Caesium - A Java bytecode obfuscator
SAP Machine - An OpenJDK release maintained and supported by SAP
Perses - A project to cause (controlled) destruction on your jvm application
hades-lang - A systems programming language
Mixin - Mixin is a trait/mixin and bytecode weaving framework for Java using ASM
picocli - Picocli is a modern framework for building powerful, user-friendly, GraalVM-enabled command line apps with ease. It supports colors, autocompletion, subcommands, and more. In 1 source file so apps can include as source & avoid adding a dependency. Written in Java, usable from Groovy, Kotlin, Scala, etc.
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)