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Next major version 4.0 (under development, in the next branch)
After installation, find in tutorials below how to write your reverse & analysis tools based on Capstone using your favorite programming languages.
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List of architectures supported by Capstone.
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Build a compact engine with only selected architectures
This documentation explains how to build a more compact engine with only selected architectures. A smaller library is useful when we want to embed Capstone in special environments such as firmware or OS kernel driver.
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Build "diet" engine to further slim down its size
To make an even smaller engine, version 2.1 presents a diet mode, in which non-critical data is removed. Combined with the method of building only selected architectures above, Capstone binary size can be reduced up to 50% in some cases, make it easier than ever for embedding purpose.
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Build embedded engine for firmware/OS kernel
Embedding Capstone requires a special engine, built by special methods. This documentation introduces necessary steps to compile the engine & program your code towards this target.
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Build X86-reduce engine for firmware/OS kernel
This introduces the compile-time option named X86-reduce to make X86 engine of Capstone to be ~60% smaller, to just around 100KB.
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This introduces the SKIPDATA mode to let Capstone keeps disassembling even when it encounters broken instruction, which is most likely data mixed inside the input.
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This explains how to use the API cs_disasm_iter to quickly iterates all the instructions in the input buffer using a memory cache provided by user.
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A part of Capstone is built with LLVM code. However, Capstone is not just LLVM, but superior because it is designed & implemented towards disassembling for security purpose.