I've noticed this question several times on SO, but none of the answers seems to be applicable to a Python 3.6 version. As most cases when this is asked, I accidentally deleted my .py source file but I still have a .exe built with pyinstaller (passing only the --onefile and --icon arguments).
I managed to reach the following point:
- Ran pyinstxtractor.py on the .exe I mentioned above. This gave me a bunch of files including one with no extension which is actually the .pyc of the source file missing the magic number.
- Renamed the file with no extension in order to have the .pyc extension
- Used a hex editor to append the magic number to the .pyc file, using the header from another .pyc file (used
__future__
for this example). It looks like this. - Ran uncompyle6 on the .pyc file that now has the correct magic number, but the operations fails as seen here. Some of the code is retrieved(about 15%) but this important part is just obfuscated byte-code.
Any other tools I managed to come across do not work on Python 3.6 such as Easy Python Decompiler, unpyclib, pyREtic.
I did not manage to use pycdc/Decompyle++ or Maynard as I don't understand how they work, but they still don't seem to support 3.6.
Anything else I might try?
PS: My OS is Win7 and I did try file recovery software and system rollbacks, none of which worked.