6

If I write Java software for a BlackBerry, can it be decompiled using freely available tools similar to .NET Reflector, or is it a more elaborate process?

8 Answers 8

16

Software you write for any language, any platform, can be decompiled. It doesn't matter what code mangling (obfuscation) tools you use, it can be decompiled.

Any attempt to worry about this is going to be a waste of time. Just like DRM ;p

But the real point is, and I wish I had the link to the discussion I am thinking of because it was very good. But the point is this. Some one can decompile it, and if they just straight recompile it and try and resell it, what has been the point? It's still easy peasy to take them to court and win.

But you say "They can look at my code and figure out how I did it and redo it!". And to this I say: Don't flatter your self.

Think if you could get your hands on the source code to Windows. There would be a lot of "WTF are they doing here"? And "boy I would have done things differently". A few moments where you scratch your chin and go "Wow, nice". But over all, it's nothing you wouldn't have come to on your own. The real value is the time they spent to truly wrap their heads around the issue and come up with a solution.

Anyone who rips off your code won't be doing that. What is harder? writing new software or maintaining software? I think most developers would prefer the former.

So someone decompiles your software and either sells it in such an obvious way that you can easily prosecute, or they take the time to fully wrap their mind around the problems and design their own which in the end (years later?) will probably be completely different from yours.

It's just such a ridiculous scenario, I really wounder if anyone has ripped off a product by decompiling a competing product.

Don't worry about some one "stealing" your code. It CAN be done and there is nothing you can do to prevent it, but it won't be done, because it's ridiculous.

3
  • 3
    Awesome comment! I remember talking to a guy whose startup had gone out of business and he was asking me about wiping the disks so they couldn't use his code. I'm like, "dude, YOU couldn't sell your code, and you wrote it." Code stealing is not the issue... Dec 18, 2008 at 19:16
  • 2
    This is a terrible answer. A good java decompiler can make it very, very easy to recover easy to use source results. The simple use of a quality obfuscator like Proguard can make it so much more difficult that it is hardly worth the effort. If your source code contains trade secrets, and it's in java, it can easily be decompiled and you should use an obfuscator. May 6, 2010 at 4:02
  • 3
    This doesn't answer the original question - are there any free tools to decompile blackberry application code? Oct 23, 2010 at 21:40
10

RIM's RAPC tool transforms standard J2ME .jar files into .cod files - this is a proprietary format, and no details of it have been published. What's known is that the .cod file sizes are smaller than .jar file sizes, and a lot of stuff gets stripped out (anything not reachable from a static context, basically).

Note that when .cod files get big enough (or more accurately when their code or data sizes get big enough) then RAPC splits the .cod into 2 or more separate cods (named CODNAME-2.cod, etc.), zips them and renames the .zip to .cod. You can unzip this, but you're still left with a bunch of .cod files that you can't decompile.

So generally, no you can't decompile BlackBerry application files. There's a tool called coddec which claims to be able to decompile .cod files, but I haven't had any luck with it.

1
4

Java code is easy to decompile. Search for obfuscators for Java Me, if you are interested in securing your code. Notably check this.

However, Adam's comment on why you shouldn't care should also be taken into account.

3

RIM's toolchain also runs your code through an optimizer (rapc) that makes it even hard to decompile than standard bytecode. Unless somebody spent a lot of time specifically in order to decompile it, it's pretty unlikely.

1

If you write a Midlet using pure J2ME and Sun's Compiler, the resulting bytecode can easily be decompiled. (Not that I have ever done this :P). However if you use RIM's BlackBerry JDE and it's RAPC Compiler, your bytecode will be in a proprietary, undocumented format and it's really hard for somebody to decompile that or make any sense of your code.

Be aware though, its always possible to find out hard-coded Strings in an application, so you don't wanna hard code your TripeDES Key or something like that.

-1

Pretty much all software can be decompiled. The question is only the amount of involvement and resources required to pull it off.

-1

Yes, it can in theory, since it's essentially just Java bytecode. However, last time I did BB development (2 years ago) it was actually quite difficult to do in practice.

-1

I like JAD for Java classes - http://www.kpdus.com/jad.html.

Echoing the above sentiment - don't worry about people stealing your code.

My two favorite things about decompiling:

  1. You learn how the compiler treats your code. For example, you can verify that string concatenation is handled by the StringBuilder class. Or, you may uncover some thought-provoking "for" statements beyond the traditional "for (int i=0, i

  2. You can really learn a product and extend it. I've used Microsoft OCS2007 Speech Server. I learned a lot about the product be decompiling some of their assemblies. I also extended some of the basic tools to fit my needs.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.