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Binary Analysis Cookbook

Binary Analysis Cookbook

By : Born
5 (1)
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Binary Analysis Cookbook

Binary Analysis Cookbook

5 (1)
By: Born

Overview of this book

Binary analysis is the process of examining a binary program to determine information security actions. It is a complex, constantly evolving, and challenging topic that crosses over into several domains of information technology and security. This binary analysis book is designed to help you get started with the basics, before gradually advancing to challenging topics. Using a recipe-based approach, this book guides you through building a lab of virtual machines and installing tools to analyze binaries effectively. You'll begin by learning about the IA32 and ELF32 as well as IA64 and ELF64 specifications. The book will then guide you in developing a methodology and exploring a variety of tools for Linux binary analysis. As you advance, you'll learn how to analyze malicious 32-bit and 64-bit binaries and identify vulnerabilities. You'll even examine obfuscation and anti-analysis techniques, analyze polymorphed malicious binaries, and get a high-level overview of dynamic taint analysis and binary instrumentation concepts. By the end of the book, you'll have gained comprehensive insights into binary analysis concepts and have developed the foundational skills to confidently delve into the realm of binary analysis.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
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Using nm

The GNU nm tool offers an alternative to readelf when we need to output the symbols within an object file during our analysis. The difference is that nm offers additional display formatting and various options for the type of symbols you want to display from the binary. The nm tool also has some shortcomings that we'll examine in this recipe compared to readelf. As you think about where this tool fits into the methodology we covered in the previous chapter, as an alternative to readelf and its symbol listing options, it really just depends on which output we prefer and whether or not we're analyzing a stripped binary. That last statement will become clearer as we work through this recipe. As I've already mentioned, there are some shortcomings when using only nm.

We will highlight the use of nm as an alternative to readelf when listing the symbols that are...

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