radare2
rizin
Our great sponsors
radare2 | rizin | |
---|---|---|
9 | 46 | |
19,558 | 2,426 | |
1.2% | 3.6% | |
9.9 | 9.8 | |
7 days ago | about 13 hours ago | |
C | C | |
GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only | GNU Lesser 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.
radare2
-
I'm pretty sure this is possible, and would appreciate confirmation/direction.
https://github.com/radareorg/radare2 (You can git clone it, then run the install script)
- Introducing YaRadare - YARA scanning for cloud-native apps (containers)
- Radare2 - UNIX-like reverse engineering framework and command-line toolset
-
reverse engineering/de-compiling (with radare2/r2)
Has any one had an luck reverse engineering Pebble binaries? Whilst I've had success editing js code in existing applications I've not had any luck with C code. This is not an area I have a lot of experience but it looks like the disassembly support in radare2 might not be complete. I've opened a ticket https://github.com/radareorg/radare2/issues/20002 but thought it worth posting here to see what experiences people had.
-
An lsblk like command for OpenBSD
Thanks this is helpful but I think this is just for programs integrated into the OpenBSD os. openbsd_lsblk is a standalone. I think their coding style is similar to the Linux Kernel coding style . but I contribute to project called radare2 (coding style) so I am used to programming their way (except for the space before () in functions that is quite annoying).
- rabin2 for scraping ELF to JSON
-
That took a wild turn
True story: there is a project called Radare2 (or r2) which recently has been forked as Rizin. The reasons for the fork were many, but one of the things they changed was renaming occurrences in code of words like "anal", "sex", etc.
-
[Task] Explain C source code
I need you to go through an open source project (https://github.com/radareorg/radare2). I need you to go through this file(https://github.com/radareorg/radare2/blob/master/libr/core/cmd_anal.c) and tell me what the code does. I am a bit rusty reading C source code, hence seeking help. Specifically, I need help understanding the following cases:
-
Need help interpreting this C function.
Defined here:
rizin
-
Refix: Fast, Debuggable, Reproducible Builds
Just for the record, for nicer inspection of files with such debug information, including compressed sections, and debuginfod support, Rizin[1] can be used, since starting from the 0.7.0 release[2] all of those were added.
[1] https://rizin.re
- LLM4Decompile: Decompiling Binary Code with LLM
-
Revng translates (i386, x86-64, MIPS, ARM, AArch64, s390x) binaries to LLVM IR
Rizin[1] is also able to uplift native code to the new RzIL, which is based on the BAP Core Theory[2] and is essentially an extension of SMT theories of bitvectors, bitvector-indexed arrays of bitvectors and effects[3].
[2] https://binaryanalysisplatform.github.io/bap/api/master/bap-...
-
The Hiew Hex Editor
Everything Hiew can do, Rizin[1] can do too, and is completely free and open source[2] under LGPL3 license. Moreover, it supports more architectures, platforms, and file formats, as well as GUI in Qt - Cutter[3][4]. If something is missing in Rizin but presented in Hiew, please let us know by opening the issue with details.
[1] https://rizin.re
- Rizin – Free and Open Source Reverse Engineering Framework
-
Show HN: I spent 6 months building a new C debugger as a 17-year-old
This is precisely what we are trying to do at Rizin[1][2]. Though the primary goal of the tool/framework is static analysis. All that portability across OSes, their versions, platforms and architectures, etc is definitely hard. If anyone is interested in these subjects, all contributions are welcome. For example, check out our "RzDebug" label, marking debugging issues[3].
[1] https://rizin.re
- Rizin release 0.6.2
-
If you're interested in eye-tracking, I'm interested in funding you
Okay, so, your comment about a "Dasher + Guitar Hero music theory/improvisation practice program" just sent me down a huge rabbit hole...
Well, rabbit hole(s) plural, I guess, most not directly related. :D
Largely because I made the "mistake" of looking at your HN profile & discovering you're also in NZ & we seem to have somewhat overlapping interests (and an affinity for "bacon" in account names, apparently), so, some thoughts[0]... :)
# Topic 1: Nissan Leaf VSP hacking
After reading your recent posts (https://ianrrees.github.io//2023/07/03/vsp-hacking.html & https://ianrrees.github.io//2023/08/05/voltage-glitch-inject...) on this topic & noting your remark about wanting to try reverse engineering a firmware image, I found the following thesis PDF (via a brief google search for `"reverse engineer" "firmware" "Renesas"`):
* "AUTOMOTIVE FIRMWARE EXTRACTION AND ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES" by Jan Van den Herrewegen https://etheses.bham.ac.uk/id/eprint/11516/1/VandenHerrewege...
Not really what I was anticipating finding but seems relevant to your interests--I don't think it was already in your resource list.
While the thesis addresses the Renesas 78K0 rather than the Renesas 78K0R, from a brief look at the "Flash Protection" PDF Application Note in your resource list it seems there's a large overlap.
Perhaps most significantly the author presents "novel methods" that combine bootloader binary analysis with constraint-based power glitching in an effort to improve on the results described in "Shaping the Glitch".
While I haven't read the entire 186 pages :D they theorize that using their approach extracting 8kB firmware might only take ~10 hours.
And, most helpfully, they even published their source code under the GPL here: https://github.com/janvdherrewegen/bootl-attacks
So, an interesting adjacent read even if it turns out not to be directly applicable to your situation.
Given I have an interest in & a little experience with firmware reversing my original thought was to maybe provide some hopefully helpful references that more generically related to firmware reversing but more specific is good too, I guess. :)
In terms of reverse engineering tooling, I've used Rizin/Cutter/radare2 previously: https://rizin.re https://cutter.re
On the CAN tooling/info front, you might be interested in taking a look at my "Adequate CAN" list which I originally wrote-up for a client a couple years ago: https://gitlab.com/RancidBacon/adequate-can
Some other probably outdated reverse engineering tooling links of mine: https://web.archive.org/web/20200119074540/http://www.labrad...
In terms of how to approach RE, other than just "getting started & digging in" & learning by doing, I've sometimes found it informative to read other people's firmware reverse engineering write-ups to learn about potentially useful approaches/tools.
Anyway, hopefully some of this is helpful!
[0] I have a tendency to be a little... "verbose" and/or "thorough" (depending on one's POV :) ) so I'll probably split this over a couple of comments, in case I run out of steam while writing and for topic separation.
- Rizin release v0.6.1
-
Veles – A new age tool for binary analysis
See our FAQ[1] on why we forked. As three years passed and both projects are actively developed, the divergence has grown a lot since. We aim for exposing the proper API instead of relying just commands, see e.g. our new Python bindings and rz-bindgen[2]. We have completely different concept of projects, new intermediate language - RzIL[3], and many other things. And under the new organization Cutter is a first-class citizen, not an afterthought as before.
[1] https://rizin.re/posts/faq/
What are some alternatives?
flare-vm - A collection of software installations scripts for Windows systems that allows you to easily setup and maintain a reverse engineering environment on a VM.
ghidra - Ghidra is a software reverse engineering (SRE) framework
Il2CppInspector - Powerful automated tool for reverse engineering Unity IL2CPP binaries
cutter - Free and Open Source Reverse Engineering Platform powered by rizin
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]
r2ghidra - Native Ghidra Decompiler for r2
ret-sync - ret-sync is a set of plugins that helps to synchronize a debugging session (WinDbg/GDB/LLDB/OllyDbg2/x64dbg) with IDA/Ghidra/Binary Ninja disassemblers.
Kaitai Struct - Kaitai Struct: declarative language to generate binary data parsers in C++ / C# / Go / Java / JavaScript / Lua / Nim / Perl / PHP / Python / Ruby
zydis - Fast and lightweight x86/x86-64 disassembler and code generation library
rz-ghidra - Deep ghidra decompiler and sleigh disassembler integration for rizin
0x02-ARM-32-Hacking-Int - ARM 32-bit Raspberry Pi Hacking Int example in Kali Linux.
efiSeek - Ghidra analyzer for UEFI firmware.