I'm looking for a library that will disassemble x86 code into some sort of object model that I can then use to write routines that analyze the code. I'm not interested in a library that converts x86 code to text disassembly--I've found more than a few of those, but they're not that useful since I want to do some work on top of the code that I disassemble. Oh, and I'd like it to be .Net code (VB or C# preferable).
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Reflector doesn't do x86 as far as I know. Your best bet is using the scripting or COM interface to OllyDbg or IDA Pro. I would recommend IDA Pro if you can afford it. IDA has a very rich API, active development and lots of documentation. You can run it in autonomous mode, I believe using the '-AS' switch. See http://www.hex-rays.com/idapro/idadoc/417.htm for more info on the command line arguments. I also ran into libdasm, but never used it, so not sure how good it is. libdasm looks like C/C++ so it should be simple to write an API wrapper in C#. |
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Reflector is your friend. |
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