| #ifndef CAPSTONE_ENGINE_H |
| #define CAPSTONE_ENGINE_H |
| |
| /* Capstone Disassembly Engine */ |
| /* By Nguyen Anh Quynh <aquynh@gmail.com>, 2013-2014 */ |
| |
| #ifdef __cplusplus |
| extern "C" { |
| #endif |
| |
| #include <stdint.h> |
| #include <stdarg.h> |
| #if defined(CAPSTONE_HAS_OSXKERNEL) |
| #include <libkern/libkern.h> |
| #else |
| #include <stdlib.h> |
| #include <stdio.h> |
| #endif |
| |
| #include "platform.h" |
| |
| #ifdef _MSC_VER |
| #pragma warning(disable:4201) |
| #pragma warning(disable:4100) |
| #ifdef CAPSTONE_SHARED |
| #define CAPSTONE_EXPORT __declspec(dllexport) |
| #else // defined(CAPSTONE_STATIC) |
| #define CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| #endif |
| #else |
| #ifdef __GNUC__ |
| #define CAPSTONE_EXPORT __attribute__((visibility("default"))) |
| #else |
| #define CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| #endif |
| #endif |
| |
| #ifdef __GNUC__ |
| #define CAPSTONE_DEPRECATED __attribute__((deprecated)) |
| #elif defined(_MSC_VER) |
| #define CAPSTONE_DEPRECATED __declspec(deprecated) |
| #else |
| #pragma message("WARNING: You need to implement CAPSTONE_DEPRECATED for this compiler") |
| #define CAPSTONE_DEPRECATED |
| #endif |
| |
| // Capstone API version |
| #define CS_API_MAJOR 3 |
| #define CS_API_MINOR 0 |
| |
| // Macro to create combined version which can be compared to |
| // result of cs_version() API. |
| #define CS_MAKE_VERSION(major, minor) ((major << 8) + minor) |
| |
| // Handle using with all API |
| typedef size_t csh; |
| |
| // Architecture type |
| typedef enum cs_arch { |
| CS_ARCH_ARM = 0, // ARM architecture (including Thumb, Thumb-2) |
| CS_ARCH_ARM64, // ARM-64, also called AArch64 |
| CS_ARCH_MIPS, // Mips architecture |
| CS_ARCH_X86, // X86 architecture (including x86 & x86-64) |
| CS_ARCH_PPC, // PowerPC architecture |
| CS_ARCH_SPARC, // Sparc architecture |
| CS_ARCH_SYSZ, // SystemZ architecture |
| CS_ARCH_XCORE, // XCore architecture |
| CS_ARCH_MAX, |
| CS_ARCH_ALL = 0xFFFF, // All architectures - for cs_support() |
| } cs_arch; |
| |
| // Support value to verify diet mode of the engine. |
| // If cs_support(CS_SUPPORT_DIET) return True, the engine was compiled |
| // in diet mode. |
| #define CS_SUPPORT_DIET (CS_ARCH_ALL + 1) |
| |
| // Support value to verify X86 reduce mode of the engine. |
| // If cs_support(CS_SUPPORT_X86_REDUCE) return True, the engine was compiled |
| // in X86 reduce mode. |
| #define CS_SUPPORT_X86_REDUCE (CS_ARCH_ALL + 2) |
| |
| // Mode type |
| typedef enum cs_mode { |
| CS_MODE_LITTLE_ENDIAN = 0, // little-endian mode (default mode) |
| CS_MODE_ARM = 0, // 32-bit ARM |
| CS_MODE_16 = 1 << 1, // 16-bit mode (X86) |
| CS_MODE_32 = 1 << 2, // 32-bit mode (X86) |
| CS_MODE_64 = 1 << 3, // 64-bit mode (X86, PPC) |
| CS_MODE_THUMB = 1 << 4, // ARM's Thumb mode, including Thumb-2 |
| CS_MODE_MCLASS = 1 << 5, // ARM's Cortex-M series |
| CS_MODE_V8 = 1 << 6, // ARMv8 A32 encodings for ARM |
| CS_MODE_MICRO = 1 << 4, // MicroMips mode (MIPS) |
| CS_MODE_MIPS3 = 1 << 5, // Mips III ISA |
| CS_MODE_MIPS32R6 = 1 << 6, // Mips32r6 ISA |
| CS_MODE_MIPSGP64 = 1 << 7, // General Purpose Registers are 64-bit wide (MIPS) |
| CS_MODE_V9 = 1 << 4, // SparcV9 mode (Sparc) |
| CS_MODE_BIG_ENDIAN = 1 << 31, // big-endian mode |
| CS_MODE_MIPS32 = CS_MODE_32, // Mips32 ISA (Mips) |
| CS_MODE_MIPS64 = CS_MODE_64, // Mips64 ISA (Mips) |
| } cs_mode; |
| |
| typedef void* (*cs_malloc_t)(size_t size); |
| typedef void* (*cs_calloc_t)(size_t nmemb, size_t size); |
| typedef void* (*cs_realloc_t)(void *ptr, size_t size); |
| typedef void (*cs_free_t)(void *ptr); |
| typedef int (*cs_vsnprintf_t)(char *str, size_t size, const char *format, va_list ap); |
| |
| |
| // User-defined dynamic memory related functions: malloc/calloc/realloc/free/vsnprintf() |
| // By default, Capstone uses system's malloc(), calloc(), realloc(), free() & vsnprintf(). |
| typedef struct cs_opt_mem { |
| cs_malloc_t malloc; |
| cs_calloc_t calloc; |
| cs_realloc_t realloc; |
| cs_free_t free; |
| cs_vsnprintf_t vsnprintf; |
| } cs_opt_mem; |
| |
| // Runtime option for the disassembled engine |
| typedef enum cs_opt_type { |
| CS_OPT_SYNTAX = 1, // Assembly output syntax |
| CS_OPT_DETAIL, // Break down instruction structure into details |
| CS_OPT_MODE, // Change engine's mode at run-time |
| CS_OPT_MEM, // User-defined dynamic memory related functions |
| CS_OPT_SKIPDATA, // Skip data when disassembling. Then engine is in SKIPDATA mode. |
| CS_OPT_SKIPDATA_SETUP, // Setup user-defined function for SKIPDATA option |
| } cs_opt_type; |
| |
| // Runtime option value (associated with option type above) |
| typedef enum cs_opt_value { |
| CS_OPT_OFF = 0, // Turn OFF an option - default option of CS_OPT_DETAIL, CS_OPT_SKIPDATA. |
| CS_OPT_ON = 3, // Turn ON an option (CS_OPT_DETAIL, CS_OPT_SKIPDATA). |
| CS_OPT_SYNTAX_DEFAULT = 0, // Default asm syntax (CS_OPT_SYNTAX). |
| CS_OPT_SYNTAX_INTEL, // X86 Intel asm syntax - default on X86 (CS_OPT_SYNTAX). |
| CS_OPT_SYNTAX_ATT, // X86 ATT asm syntax (CS_OPT_SYNTAX). |
| CS_OPT_SYNTAX_NOREGNAME, // Prints register name with only number (CS_OPT_SYNTAX) |
| } cs_opt_value; |
| |
| //> Common instruction operand types - to be consistent across all architectures. |
| typedef enum cs_op_type { |
| CS_OP_INVALID = 0, // uninitialized/invalid operand. |
| CS_OP_REG, // Register operand. |
| CS_OP_IMM, // Immediate operand. |
| CS_OP_MEM, // Memory operand. |
| CS_OP_FP, // Floating-Point operand. |
| } cs_op_type; |
| |
| //> Common instruction groups - to be consistent across all architectures. |
| typedef enum cs_group_type { |
| CS_GRP_INVALID = 0, // uninitialized/invalid group. |
| CS_GRP_JUMP, // all jump instructions (conditional+direct+indirect jumps) |
| CS_GRP_CALL, // all call instructions |
| CS_GRP_RET, // all return instructions |
| CS_GRP_INT, // all interrupt instructions (int+syscall) |
| CS_GRP_IRET, // all interrupt return instructions |
| } cs_group_type; |
| |
| /* |
| User-defined callback function for SKIPDATA option. |
| See tests/test_skipdata.c for sample code demonstrating this API. |
| |
| @code: the input buffer containing code to be disassembled. |
| This is the same buffer passed to cs_disasm(). |
| @code_size: size (in bytes) of the above @code buffer. |
| @offset: the position of the currently-examining byte in the input |
| buffer @code mentioned above. |
| @user_data: user-data passed to cs_option() via @user_data field in |
| cs_opt_skipdata struct below. |
| |
| @return: return number of bytes to skip, or 0 to immediately stop disassembling. |
| */ |
| typedef size_t (*cs_skipdata_cb_t)(const uint8_t *code, size_t code_size, size_t offset, void *user_data); |
| |
| // User-customized setup for SKIPDATA option |
| typedef struct cs_opt_skipdata { |
| // Capstone considers data to skip as special "instructions". |
| // User can specify the string for this instruction's "mnemonic" here. |
| // By default (if @mnemonic is NULL), Capstone use ".byte". |
| const char *mnemonic; |
| |
| // User-defined callback function to be called when Capstone hits data. |
| // If the returned value from this callback is positive (>0), Capstone |
| // will skip exactly that number of bytes & continue. Otherwise, if |
| // the callback returns 0, Capstone stops disassembling and returns |
| // immediately from cs_disasm() |
| // NOTE: if this callback pointer is NULL, Capstone would skip a number |
| // of bytes depending on architectures, as following: |
| // Arm: 2 bytes (Thumb mode) or 4 bytes. |
| // Arm64: 4 bytes. |
| // Mips: 4 bytes. |
| // PowerPC: 4 bytes. |
| // Sparc: 4 bytes. |
| // SystemZ: 2 bytes. |
| // X86: 1 bytes. |
| // XCore: 2 bytes. |
| cs_skipdata_cb_t callback; // default value is NULL |
| |
| // User-defined data to be passed to @callback function pointer. |
| void *user_data; |
| } cs_opt_skipdata; |
| |
| |
| #include "arm.h" |
| #include "arm64.h" |
| #include "mips.h" |
| #include "ppc.h" |
| #include "sparc.h" |
| #include "systemz.h" |
| #include "x86.h" |
| #include "xcore.h" |
| |
| // NOTE: All information in cs_detail is only available when CS_OPT_DETAIL = CS_OPT_ON |
| typedef struct cs_detail { |
| uint8_t regs_read[12]; // list of implicit registers read by this insn |
| uint8_t regs_read_count; // number of implicit registers read by this insn |
| |
| uint8_t regs_write[20]; // list of implicit registers modified by this insn |
| uint8_t regs_write_count; // number of implicit registers modified by this insn |
| |
| uint8_t groups[8]; // list of group this instruction belong to |
| uint8_t groups_count; // number of groups this insn belongs to |
| |
| // Architecture-specific instruction info |
| union { |
| cs_x86 x86; // X86 architecture, including 16-bit, 32-bit & 64-bit mode |
| cs_arm64 arm64; // ARM64 architecture (aka AArch64) |
| cs_arm arm; // ARM architecture (including Thumb/Thumb2) |
| cs_mips mips; // MIPS architecture |
| cs_ppc ppc; // PowerPC architecture |
| cs_sparc sparc; // Sparc architecture |
| cs_sysz sysz; // SystemZ architecture |
| cs_xcore xcore; // XCore architecture |
| }; |
| } cs_detail; |
| |
| // Detail information of disassembled instruction |
| typedef struct cs_insn { |
| // Instruction ID (basically a numeric ID for the instruction mnemonic) |
| // Find the instruction id in the '[ARCH]_insn' enum in the header file |
| // of corresponding architecture, such as 'arm_insn' in arm.h for ARM, |
| // 'x86_insn' in x86.h for X86, etc... |
| // This information is available even when CS_OPT_DETAIL = CS_OPT_OFF |
| // NOTE: in Skipdata mode, "data" instruction has 0 for this id field. |
| unsigned int id; |
| |
| // Address (EIP) of this instruction |
| // This information is available even when CS_OPT_DETAIL = CS_OPT_OFF |
| uint64_t address; |
| |
| // Size of this instruction |
| // This information is available even when CS_OPT_DETAIL = CS_OPT_OFF |
| uint16_t size; |
| // Machine bytes of this instruction, with number of bytes indicated by @size above |
| // This information is available even when CS_OPT_DETAIL = CS_OPT_OFF |
| uint8_t bytes[16]; |
| |
| // Ascii text of instruction mnemonic |
| // This information is available even when CS_OPT_DETAIL = CS_OPT_OFF |
| char mnemonic[32]; |
| |
| // Ascii text of instruction operands |
| // This information is available even when CS_OPT_DETAIL = CS_OPT_OFF |
| char op_str[160]; |
| |
| // Pointer to cs_detail. |
| // NOTE: detail pointer is only valid when both requirements below are met: |
| // (1) CS_OP_DETAIL = CS_OPT_ON |
| // (2) Engine is not in Skipdata mode (CS_OP_SKIPDATA option set to CS_OPT_ON) |
| // |
| // NOTE 2: when in Skipdata mode, or when detail mode is OFF, even if this pointer |
| // is not NULL, its content is still irrelevant. |
| cs_detail *detail; |
| } cs_insn; |
| |
| |
| // Calculate the offset of a disassembled instruction in its buffer, given its position |
| // in its array of disassembled insn |
| // NOTE: this macro works with position (>=1), not index |
| #define CS_INSN_OFFSET(insns, post) (insns[post - 1].address - insns[0].address) |
| |
| |
| // All type of errors encountered by Capstone API. |
| // These are values returned by cs_errno() |
| typedef enum cs_err { |
| CS_ERR_OK = 0, // No error: everything was fine |
| CS_ERR_MEM, // Out-Of-Memory error: cs_open(), cs_disasm(), cs_disasm_iter() |
| CS_ERR_ARCH, // Unsupported architecture: cs_open() |
| CS_ERR_HANDLE, // Invalid handle: cs_op_count(), cs_op_index() |
| CS_ERR_CSH, // Invalid csh argument: cs_close(), cs_errno(), cs_option() |
| CS_ERR_MODE, // Invalid/unsupported mode: cs_open() |
| CS_ERR_OPTION, // Invalid/unsupported option: cs_option() |
| CS_ERR_DETAIL, // Information is unavailable because detail option is OFF |
| CS_ERR_MEMSETUP, // Dynamic memory management uninitialized (see CS_OPT_MEM) |
| CS_ERR_VERSION, // Unsupported version (bindings) |
| CS_ERR_DIET, // Access irrelevant data in "diet" engine |
| CS_ERR_SKIPDATA, // Access irrelevant data for "data" instruction in SKIPDATA mode |
| CS_ERR_X86_ATT, // X86 AT&T syntax is unsupported (opt-out at compile time) |
| CS_ERR_X86_INTEL, // X86 Intel syntax is unsupported (opt-out at compile time) |
| } cs_err; |
| |
| /* |
| Return combined API version & major and minor version numbers. |
| |
| @major: major number of API version |
| @minor: minor number of API version |
| |
| @return hexical number as (major << 8 | minor), which encodes both |
| major & minor versions. |
| NOTE: This returned value can be compared with version number made |
| with macro CS_MAKE_VERSION |
| |
| For example, second API version would return 1 in @major, and 1 in @minor |
| The return value would be 0x0101 |
| |
| NOTE: if you only care about returned value, but not major and minor values, |
| set both @major & @minor arguments to NULL. |
| */ |
| CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| unsigned int cs_version(int *major, int *minor); |
| |
| |
| /* |
| This API can be used to either ask for archs supported by this library, |
| or check to see if the library was compile with 'diet' option (or called |
| in 'diet' mode). |
| |
| To check if a particular arch is supported by this library, set @query to |
| arch mode (CS_ARCH_* value). |
| To verify if this library supports all the archs, use CS_ARCH_ALL. |
| |
| To check if this library is in 'diet' mode, set @query to CS_SUPPORT_DIET. |
| |
| @return True if this library supports the given arch, or in 'diet' mode. |
| */ |
| CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| bool cs_support(int query); |
| |
| /* |
| Initialize CS handle: this must be done before any usage of CS. |
| |
| @arch: architecture type (CS_ARCH_*) |
| @mode: hardware mode. This is combined of CS_MODE_* |
| @handle: pointer to handle, which will be updated at return time |
| |
| @return CS_ERR_OK on success, or other value on failure (refer to cs_err enum |
| for detailed error). |
| */ |
| CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| cs_err cs_open(cs_arch arch, cs_mode mode, csh *handle); |
| |
| /* |
| Close CS handle: MUST do to release the handle when it is not used anymore. |
| NOTE: this must be only called when there is no longer usage of Capstone, |
| not even access to cs_insn array. The reason is the this API releases some |
| cached memory, thus access to any Capstone API after cs_close() might crash |
| your application. |
| |
| In fact,this API invalidate @handle by ZERO out its value (i.e *handle = 0). |
| |
| @handle: pointer to a handle returned by cs_open() |
| |
| @return CS_ERR_OK on success, or other value on failure (refer to cs_err enum |
| for detailed error). |
| */ |
| CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| cs_err cs_close(csh *handle); |
| |
| /* |
| Set option for disassembling engine at runtime |
| |
| @handle: handle returned by cs_open() |
| @type: type of option to be set |
| @value: option value corresponding with @type |
| |
| @return: CS_ERR_OK on success, or other value on failure. |
| Refer to cs_err enum for detailed error. |
| |
| NOTE: in the case of CS_OPT_MEM, handle's value can be anything, |
| so that cs_option(handle, CS_OPT_MEM, value) can (i.e must) be called |
| even before cs_open() |
| */ |
| CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| cs_err cs_option(csh handle, cs_opt_type type, size_t value); |
| |
| /* |
| Report the last error number when some API function fail. |
| Like glibc's errno, cs_errno might not retain its old value once accessed. |
| |
| @handle: handle returned by cs_open() |
| |
| @return: error code of cs_err enum type (CS_ERR_*, see above) |
| */ |
| CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| cs_err cs_errno(csh handle); |
| |
| |
| /* |
| Return a string describing given error code. |
| |
| @code: error code (see CS_ERR_* above) |
| |
| @return: returns a pointer to a string that describes the error code |
| passed in the argument @code |
| */ |
| CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| const char *cs_strerror(cs_err code); |
| |
| /* |
| Disassemble binary code, given the code buffer, size, address and number |
| of instructions to be decoded. |
| This API dynamically allocate memory to contain disassembled instruction. |
| Resulted instructions will be put into @*insn |
| |
| NOTE 1: this API will automatically determine memory needed to contain |
| output disassembled instructions in @insn. |
| |
| NOTE 2: caller must free the allocated memory itself to avoid memory leaking. |
| |
| NOTE 3: for system with scarce memory to be dynamically allocated such as |
| OS kernel or firmware, the API cs_disasm_iter() might be a better choice than |
| cs_disasm(). The reason is that with cs_disasm(), based on limited available |
| memory, we have to calculate in advance how many instructions to be disassembled, |
| which complicates things. This is especially troublesome for the case @count=0, |
| when cs_disasm() runs uncontrollably (until either end of input buffer, or |
| when it encounters an invalid instruction). |
| |
| @handle: handle returned by cs_open() |
| @code: buffer containing raw binary code to be disassembled. |
| @code_size: size of the above code buffer. |
| @address: address of the first instruction in given raw code buffer. |
| @insn: array of instructions filled in by this API. |
| NOTE: @insn will be allocated by this function, and should be freed |
| with cs_free() API. |
| @count: number of instructions to be disassembled, or 0 to get all of them |
| |
| @return: the number of successfully disassembled instructions, |
| or 0 if this function failed to disassemble the given code |
| |
| On failure, call cs_errno() for error code. |
| */ |
| CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| size_t cs_disasm(csh handle, |
| const uint8_t *code, size_t code_size, |
| uint64_t address, |
| size_t count, |
| cs_insn **insn); |
| |
| /* |
| Deprecated function - to be retired in the next version! |
| Use cs_disasm() instead of cs_disasm_ex() |
| */ |
| CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| CAPSTONE_DEPRECATED |
| size_t cs_disasm_ex(csh handle, |
| const uint8_t *code, size_t code_size, |
| uint64_t address, |
| size_t count, |
| cs_insn **insn); |
| |
| /* |
| Free memory allocated by cs_malloc() or cs_disasm() (argument @insn) |
| |
| @insn: pointer returned by @insn argument in cs_disasm() or cs_malloc() |
| @count: number of cs_insn structures returned by cs_disasm(), or 1 |
| to free memory allocated by cs_malloc(). |
| */ |
| CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| void cs_free(cs_insn *insn, size_t count); |
| |
| |
| /* |
| Allocate memory for 1 instruction to be used by cs_disasm_iter(). |
| |
| @handle: handle returned by cs_open() |
| |
| NOTE: when no longer in use, you can reclaim the memory allocated for |
| this instruction with cs_free(insn, 1) |
| */ |
| CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| cs_insn *cs_malloc(csh handle); |
| |
| /* |
| Fast API to disassemble binary code, given the code buffer, size, address |
| and number of instructions to be decoded. |
| This API put the resulted instruction into a given cache in @insn. |
| See tests/test_iter.c for sample code demonstrating this API. |
| |
| NOTE 1: this API will update @code, @size & @address to point to the next |
| instruction in the input buffer. Therefore, it is convenient to use |
| cs_disasm_iter() inside a loop to quickly iterate all the instructions. |
| While decoding one instruction at a time can also be achieved with |
| cs_disasm(count=1), some benchmarks shown that cs_disasm_iter() can be 30% |
| faster on random input. |
| |
| NOTE 2: the cache in @insn can be created with cs_malloc() API. |
| |
| NOTE 3: for system with scarce memory to be dynamically allocated such as |
| OS kernel or firmware, this API is recommended over cs_disasm(), which |
| allocates memory based on the number of instructions to be disassembled. |
| The reason is that with cs_disasm(), based on limited available memory, |
| we have to calculate in advance how many instructions to be disassembled, |
| which complicates things. This is especially troublesome for the case |
| @count=0, when cs_disasm() runs uncontrollably (until either end of input |
| buffer, or when it encounters an invalid instruction). |
| |
| @handle: handle returned by cs_open() |
| @code: buffer containing raw binary code to be disassembled |
| @code_size: size of above code |
| @address: address of the first insn in given raw code buffer |
| @insn: pointer to instruction to be filled in by this API. |
| |
| @return: true if this API successfully decode 1 instruction, |
| or false otherwise. |
| |
| On failure, call cs_errno() for error code. |
| */ |
| CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| bool cs_disasm_iter(csh handle, |
| const uint8_t **code, size_t *size, |
| uint64_t *address, cs_insn *insn); |
| |
| /* |
| Return friendly name of register in a string. |
| Find the instruction id from header file of corresponding architecture (arm.h for ARM, |
| x86.h for X86, ...) |
| |
| WARN: when in 'diet' mode, this API is irrelevant because engine does not |
| store register name. |
| |
| @handle: handle returned by cs_open() |
| @reg_id: register id |
| |
| @return: string name of the register, or NULL if @reg_id is invalid. |
| */ |
| CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| const char *cs_reg_name(csh handle, unsigned int reg_id); |
| |
| /* |
| Return friendly name of an instruction in a string. |
| Find the instruction id from header file of corresponding architecture (arm.h for ARM, x86.h for X86, ...) |
| |
| WARN: when in 'diet' mode, this API is irrelevant because the engine does not |
| store instruction name. |
| |
| @handle: handle returned by cs_open() |
| @insn_id: instruction id |
| |
| @return: string name of the instruction, or NULL if @insn_id is invalid. |
| */ |
| CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| const char *cs_insn_name(csh handle, unsigned int insn_id); |
| |
| /* |
| Return friendly name of a group id (that an instruction can belong to) |
| Find the group id from header file of corresponding architecture (arm.h for ARM, x86.h for X86, ...) |
| |
| WARN: when in 'diet' mode, this API is irrelevant because the engine does not |
| store group name. |
| |
| @handle: handle returned by cs_open() |
| @group_id: group id |
| |
| @return: string name of the group, or NULL if @group_id is invalid. |
| */ |
| CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| const char *cs_group_name(csh handle, unsigned int group_id); |
| |
| /* |
| Check if a disassembled instruction belong to a particular group. |
| Find the group id from header file of corresponding architecture (arm.h for ARM, x86.h for X86, ...) |
| Internally, this simply verifies if @group_id matches any member of insn->groups array. |
| |
| NOTE: this API is only valid when detail option is ON (which is OFF by default). |
| |
| WARN: when in 'diet' mode, this API is irrelevant because the engine does not |
| update @groups array. |
| |
| @handle: handle returned by cs_open() |
| @insn: disassembled instruction structure received from cs_disasm() or cs_disasm_iter() |
| @group_id: group that you want to check if this instruction belong to. |
| |
| @return: true if this instruction indeed belongs to aboved group, or false otherwise. |
| */ |
| CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| bool cs_insn_group(csh handle, const cs_insn *insn, unsigned int group_id); |
| |
| /* |
| Check if a disassembled instruction IMPLICITLY used a particular register. |
| Find the register id from header file of corresponding architecture (arm.h for ARM, x86.h for X86, ...) |
| Internally, this simply verifies if @reg_id matches any member of insn->regs_read array. |
| |
| NOTE: this API is only valid when detail option is ON (which is OFF by default) |
| |
| WARN: when in 'diet' mode, this API is irrelevant because the engine does not |
| update @regs_read array. |
| |
| @insn: disassembled instruction structure received from cs_disasm() or cs_disasm_iter() |
| @reg_id: register that you want to check if this instruction used it. |
| |
| @return: true if this instruction indeed implicitly used aboved register, or false otherwise. |
| */ |
| CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| bool cs_reg_read(csh handle, const cs_insn *insn, unsigned int reg_id); |
| |
| /* |
| Check if a disassembled instruction IMPLICITLY modified a particular register. |
| Find the register id from header file of corresponding architecture (arm.h for ARM, x86.h for X86, ...) |
| Internally, this simply verifies if @reg_id matches any member of insn->regs_write array. |
| |
| NOTE: this API is only valid when detail option is ON (which is OFF by default) |
| |
| WARN: when in 'diet' mode, this API is irrelevant because the engine does not |
| update @regs_write array. |
| |
| @insn: disassembled instruction structure received from cs_disasm() or cs_disasm_iter() |
| @reg_id: register that you want to check if this instruction modified it. |
| |
| @return: true if this instruction indeed implicitly modified aboved register, or false otherwise. |
| */ |
| CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| bool cs_reg_write(csh handle, const cs_insn *insn, unsigned int reg_id); |
| |
| /* |
| Count the number of operands of a given type. |
| Find the operand type in header file of corresponding architecture (arm.h for ARM, x86.h for X86, ...) |
| |
| NOTE: this API is only valid when detail option is ON (which is OFF by default) |
| |
| @handle: handle returned by cs_open() |
| @insn: disassembled instruction structure received from cs_disasm() or cs_disasm_iter() |
| @op_type: Operand type to be found. |
| |
| @return: number of operands of given type @op_type in instruction @insn, |
| or -1 on failure. |
| */ |
| CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| int cs_op_count(csh handle, const cs_insn *insn, unsigned int op_type); |
| |
| /* |
| Retrieve the position of operand of given type in <arch>.operands[] array. |
| Later, the operand can be accessed using the returned position. |
| Find the operand type in header file of corresponding architecture (arm.h for ARM, x86.h for X86, ...) |
| |
| NOTE: this API is only valid when detail option is ON (which is OFF by default) |
| |
| @handle: handle returned by cs_open() |
| @insn: disassembled instruction structure received from cs_disasm() or cs_disasm_iter() |
| @op_type: Operand type to be found. |
| @position: position of the operand to be found. This must be in the range |
| [1, cs_op_count(handle, insn, op_type)] |
| |
| @return: index of operand of given type @op_type in <arch>.operands[] array |
| in instruction @insn, or -1 on failure. |
| */ |
| CAPSTONE_EXPORT |
| int cs_op_index(csh handle, const cs_insn *insn, unsigned int op_type, |
| unsigned int position); |
| |
| #ifdef __cplusplus |
| } |
| #endif |
| |
| #endif |