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The FLARE team's open-source library to disassemble Common Intermediate Language (CIL) instructions.

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dncil

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dncil is a Common Intermediate Language (CIL) disassembly library written in Python that supports parsing the header, instructions, and exception handlers of .NET managed methods. Parsed data is exposed through an object-oriented API to help you quickly develop CIL analysis tools using dncil.

Why Python? Existing libraries that support CIL disassembly, like dnLib, are written in C#. To leverage these tools, you must build C# applications which requires C# development experience. Using dncil, a pure Python alternative, you:

  1. Do not need C# experience to analyze CIL programmatically.
  2. Can quickly develop and test your CIL analysis tools.
  3. Can easily integrate your CIL analysis tools with existing Python projects.

Example

The example script print_cil_from_dn_file.py uses dncil together with .NET analysis library dnfile to disassemble the managed methods found in a .NET executable. Let's see what it can do.

First, we compile the following C# source code:

using System;	

public class HelloWorld
{
    public static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        Console.WriteLine ("Hello World!");
    }
}

Compilation results in a PE executable containing .NET metadata which informs the Common Language Runtime (CLR) how to execute our code. We use dnfile to parse this metadata which gives us the offset of our managed method Main. We then use dncil to disassemble and display the CIL instructions stored at this location.

Let's see the above in action:

$ python scripts/print_cil_from_dn_file.py hello-world.exe 

Method: Main
0000    00                  nop            
0001    72 01 00 00 70      ldstr          "Hello World!"
0006    28 04 00 00 0a      call           System.Console::WriteLine
000B    00                  nop            
000C    2a                  ret            

Our method Main is represented by the CilMethodBody class. This class holds data that includes the header, CIL instructions, and exception handlers of a given managed method. It also exposes various helper functions:

>  main_method_body.flags
SmallFormat  :  false
TinyFormat   :  false
FatFormat    :  false
TinyFormat1  :  true
MoreSects    :  false
InitLocals   :  false
CompressedIL :  false
>  main_method_body.size
14
>  hexdump.hexdump(main_method_body.get_bytes())
00000000: 36 00 72 01 00 00 70 28  04 00 00 0A 00 2A        6.r...p(.....*
>  hexdump.hexdump(main_method_body.get_header_bytes())
00000000: 36                                                6
>  hexdump.hexdump(main_method_body.get_instruction_bytes())
00000000: 00 72 01 00 00 70 28 04  00 00 0A 00 2A           .r...p(.....*

Each CIL instruction found in our managed method Main is represented by the Instruction class. This class holds data that includes the offset, mnemonic, opcode, and operand of a given CIL instruction. It also exposes various helper functions:

>  len(main_method_body.instructions)
5
>  insn = main_method_body.instructions[1]
>  insn.offset
1
>  insn.mnemonic
'ldstr'
>  insn.operand
token(0x70000001)
>  insn.is_ldstr()
True
>  insn.size
5
>  hexdump.hexdump(insn.get_bytes())
00000000: 72 01 00 00 70                                    r...p
>  hexdump.hexdump(insn.get_opcode_bytes())
00000000: 72                                                r
>  hexdump.hexdump(insn.get_operand_bytes())
00000000: 01 00 00 70                                       ...p

Installing

To install dncil use pip to fetch the dncil module:

$ pip install dncil

To execute the example scripts be sure to install dnfile. Alternatively, install dncil with the development dependencies as described in the Development section below.

See print_cil_from_bytes.py for a quick example of using dncilto print the CIL instructions found in a byte stream containing a .NET managed method.

Development

If you'd like to review and modify dncil source code, you'll need to download it from GitHub and install it locally.

Use the following command to install dncil locally with development dependencies:

$ pip install /local/path/to/src[dev]

You'll need dncil's development dependencies to run tests and linting as described below.

Testing

Use the following command to run tests:

$ pytest /local/path/to/src/tests

Linting

Use the following commands to identify format errors:

$ black -l 120 -c /local/path/to/src
$ isort --profile black --length-sort --line-width 120 -c /local/path/to/src
$ mypy --config-file /local/path/to/src/.github/mypy/mypy.ini /local/path/to/src/dncil/ /local/path/to/src/scripts/ /local/path/to/src/tests/

Credits

dncil is based on the CIL parsing code found in dnLib.

About

The FLARE team's open-source library to disassemble Common Intermediate Language (CIL) instructions.

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