commit | 1a5cdba8b8145a757028f88580bb2d9867aea668 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Gil Dabah <distorm@gmail.com> | Fri Mar 19 16:56:04 2021 |
committer | GitHub <noreply@github.com> | Fri Mar 19 16:56:04 2021 |
tree | d99c891b7d32a32e00a05abc13fe4bbdf043afcc | |
parent | 9f7980d9dd4e49fadae1f0d1f430af01f11750e9 [diff] | |
parent | 0f5894311cae409c23c767c17c2211171de2aaf4 [diff] |
Merge pull request #167 from sfinktah/sfink-tcc-compat-2 for tinyc compatibility stdint wasnt included on 32-bit, _INLINE_ needed to be static;
Welcome to the diStorm3 binary stream disassembler library project.
diStorm3 is really a decomposer, which means it takes an instruction and returns a binary structure which describes it rather than static text, which is great for advanced binary code analysis.
diStorm3 is super lightweight (~45KB), ultra fast and easy to use (a single API)!
For a tested and light hooking library see the https://github.com/gdabah/distormx project.
“We benchmarked five popular open-source disassembly libraries and chose diStorm3, which had the best performance (and furthermore, has complete 64-bit support).”, July 2014, Quoting David Williams-King in his Thesis about Binary Shuffling.
diStorm3 is licensed under BSD!
Installing diStorm3 - Clone repo locally and then ‘python setup.py install’ or alternatively: ‘python -m pip install distorm3’.
For Windows, use these pre-built installers in https://pypi.org/project/distorm3/#files.
RTFM, the wiki has plenty of info.