if ( input > 5 ) return 1; else return 0;
push ebp mov ebp, esp mov eax, [ebp+arg_0] cmp eax, 5 jg short loc_401020 ... ida pro decompile to c
import ida_hexrays import ida_funcs for func_ea in ida_funcs.functions(): func = ida_funcs.get_func_name(func_ea) if ida_hexrays.decompile(func_ea): print(f"Decompiled func") cfunc = ida_hexrays.decompile(func_ea) c_code = str(cfunc) # Save c_code to a file, etc. if ( input > 5 ) return 1;
Introduction In the world of reverse engineering, few tools are as venerable and powerful as IDA Pro (Interactive Disassembler). Developed by Hex-Rays, IDA Pro has been the gold standard for disassembly for decades. However, reading raw assembly language (x86, ARM, MIPS, etc.) is a time-consuming and error-prone process. This is where the Hex-Rays Decompiler changes the game. Developed by Hex-Rays, IDA Pro has been the
However, the logic is preserved. A skilled reverser can reconstruct the original intent with careful renaming and retyping. You are not limited to manual F5 presses. IDA Pro supports batch decompilation via IDAPython:
int __cdecl check_value(int input)