Copyright 2011-2024 Google LLC.
Disclaimer: This is not an official Google product (experimental or otherwise), it is just code that happens to be owned by Google.
BinExport is the exporter component of BinDiff. It is a plugin/extension for the the disassemblers IDA Pro, Binary Ninja and Ghidra that exports disassembly data into the Protocol Buffer format that BinDiff requires.
An experimental version for the open source software reverse engineering suite
Ghidra is available in the java/BinExport
directory.
This repository contains the complete source code necessary to build BinExport plugin binaries for Linux, macOS and Windows.
Download the binaries from the releases page and copy them into the IDA Pro plugins directory. These are the default paths:
OS | Plugin path |
---|---|
Linux | /opt/idapro-8.2/plugins |
macOS | /Applications/IDA Pro 8.2/idabin/plugins |
Windows | %ProgramFiles%\IDA 8.2\plugins |
To install just for the current user, copy the files into one of these directories instead:
OS | Plugin |
---|---|
Linux/macOS | ~/.idapro/plugins |
Windows | %AppData%\Hex-Rays\IDA Pro\plugins |
Help
|About programm...
Addons...
If installed correctly, the following dialog box appears:
Download the binaries from the releases page and copy them into the Binary Ninja plugins directory. These are the default paths for the current user:
OS | Plugin path |
---|---|
Linux | ~/.binaryninja/plugins |
macOS | ~/Library/Application Support/Binary Ninja/plugins/ |
Windows | %AppData%\Binary Ninja\plugins |
Log
native dock. If this is not visible, enable it via
View
|Native Docks
|Show Log
.BinExport 12 (@internal, Jan 3 2023), (c)2004-2011 zynamics GmbH, (c)2011-2024 Google LLC.
File
|Install Extensions...
ghidra_BinExport.zip
you downloaded
in step 1 and click OK
.OK
twice to close both the "Install Extensions" dialog and the notice to restart Ghidra.File
|Install Extensions...
The main use case is via BinDiff. However, BinExport can also be used to export disassembly into different formats:
Open an IDA Pro database
Select Edit
|Plugins
|BinExport 12
The following dialog box appears:
Select the type of the file to be exported
The BinExport plugin registers the IDC functions below.
IDC Function name | Exports to | Arguments |
---|---|---|
BinExportBinary | Protocol Buffer | filename |
BinExportText | Text file dump | filename |
BinExportStatistics | Statistics text file | filename |
Alternatively, the plugin can be invoked from IDC by calling its main function directly:
static main() {
batch(0);
auto_wait();
load_and_run_plugin("binexport12_ida", 2 /* kBinary */);
qexit(0);
}
Note that this does provide any control over the output filename. BinExport will always use the filename of the currently loaded database (without extension) and append ".BinExport".
The arguments are the same as for IDC (listed above).
Example invocation of one of the registered IDC functions:
import idaapi
idaapi.ida_expr.eval_idc_expr(None, ida_idaapi.BADADDR,
'BinExportBinary("exported.BinExport");')
BinExport defines the following plugin options, that can be specified on IDA's command line:
Option | Description |
---|---|
-OBinExportAutoAction:<ACTION> |
Invoke a BinExport IDC function and exit |
-OBinExportModule:<PARAM> |
Argument for BinExportAutoAction |
-OBinExportLogFile:<FILE> |
Log messages to a file |
-OBinExportAlsoLogToStdErr:TRUE |
If specified, also log to standard error |
-OBinExportX86NoReturnHeuristic:TRUE |
Enable the X86-specific heuristic to identify non-returning functions |
Note: These options must come before any files.
There is only minimal integration into the Binary Ninja UI at this time.
Tools
|Plugins
|BinExport
. This will start the export process.The .BinExport
file is placed next to the analysis database, in the same
directory.
File
|Import File...
Export...
from the context menu..BinExport
will be appended automatically.The BinExport.java
Ghidra script can be run in both headless and GUI mode. In GUI mode, it is available under the BinExport
category in the Script Manager. For headless mode, a BinExport.properties
file with the following content (or similar, depending on the options you want to use) can be used:
Choose export file Export = test.BinExport
Choose options IDA Pro Compatibility = "Subtract Imagebase;Remap mnemonics;Prepend Namespace to Function Names"
Create a project, import and analyze a binary:
$ ./analyzeHeadless <project_location> <project_name> -import <file>
Run BinExport.java
which will generate the .BinExport
file specified in BinExport.properties
:
$ ./analyzeHeadless <project_location> <project_name> -process <file> -propertiesPath <path> -preScript BinExport.java -noanalysis
Alternatively, use command-line arguments instead of BinExport.properties
:
$ ./analyzeHeadless <project_location> <project_name> -process <file> -preScript BinExport.java test.BinExport "Prepend Namespace to Function Names" -noanalysis
Below are build instructions for the native code plugins for IDA Pro and Binary Ninja. To build the Java-based extension for Ghidra, please refer to the BinExport for Ghidra instructions.
There are quite a few dependencies to satisfy:
boost_parts
)third_party/idasdk
)The preferred build environment is Debian 11 ("Bullseye").
This should install all the necessary packages:
sudo apt update -qq
sudo apt install -qq --no-install-recommends build-essential
Install the latest stable version of CMake:
wget https://github.com/Kitware/CMake/releases/download/v3.25.1/cmake-3.25.1-linux-x86_64.sh
mkdir ${HOME}/cmake
sh cmake-3.25.1-Linux-x86_64.sh --prefix=${HOME}/cmake --exclude-subdir
export PATH=${HOME}/cmake/bin:${PATH}
The following sections assume that your current working directory is at the root of the cloned repository.
Unzip the contents of the IDA SDK into third_party/idasdk
. Shown commands are
for IDA Pro 8.2:
unzip PATH/TO/idasdk_pro82.zip -d third_party/idasdk
mv third_party/idasdk/idasdk_pro82/* third_party/idasdk
rmdir third_party/idasdk/idasdk_pro82
With all prerequisites in place, configure and build BinExport and run its tests:
mkdir -p build_linux && cd build_linux
cmake .. \
-G Ninja \
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release \
"-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=${PWD}" \
-DBINEXPORT_ENABLE_IDAPRO=ON \
"-DIdaSdk_ROOT_DIR=${PWD}/../third_party/idasdk" \
-DBINEXPORT_ENABLE_BINARYNINJA=ON \
cmake --build . --config Release
ctest --build-config Release --output-on-failure
cmake --install . --config Release --strip
Note: If you don't want to use Ninja to perform the actual build, omit
the -G Ninja
part.
To disable the IDA Pro build, set -DBINEXPORT_ENABLE_IDAPRO=OFF
. Likewise, to
disable the Binary Ninja build, set -DBINEXPORT_ENABLE_BINARYNINJA=OFF
.
This will download and build Abseil, GoogleTest, Protocol Buffers and the
Binary Ninja API. If all went well, the build_linux/binexport-prefix
directory should contain two the files binexport12_ida.so
and
binexport12_ida64.so
(for use with ida
and ida64
, respectively) as well
as binexport12_binaryninja.so
(for Binary Ninja).
The preferred build environment is macOS 13 "Ventura" using Xcode 15.1. Using macOS 12 "Monterey" should also work.
After installing the Developer Tools, make sure to install the command-line tools as well:
sudo xcode-select --install
The following sections assume that your current working directory is at the root of the cloned repository.
Download the latest stable version of CMake from the official site and mount its disk image:
curl -fsSL https://github.com/Kitware/CMake/releases/download/v3.25.1/cmake-3.25.1-Darwin-x86_64.dmg \
-o $HOME/Downloads/cmake-osx.dmg
hdiutil attach $HOME/Downloads/cmake-osx.dmg
At this point you will need to review and accept CMake's license agreement. Now install CMake:
sudo cp -Rf /Volumes/cmake-3.25.1-Darwin-x86_64/CMake.app /Applications/
hdiutil detach /Volumes/cmake-3.25.1-Darwin-x86_64
sudo /Applications/CMake.app/Contents/bin/cmake-gui --install
The last command makes CMake available in the system path.
Unzip the contents of the IDA SDK into third_party/idasdk
. Shown commands are
for IDA Pro 8.2:
unzip PATH/TO/idasdk_pro82.zip -d third_party/idasdk
mv third_party/idasdk/idasdk_pro82/* third_party/idasdk
rmdir third_party/idasdk/idasdk_pro82
With all prerequisites in place, configure and build BinExport and run its tests:
mkdir -p build_mac && cd build_mac
cmake .. \
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release \
"-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=${PWD}" \
-DBINEXPORT_ENABLE_IDAPRO=ON \
"-DIdaSdk_ROOT_DIR=${PWD}/../third_party/idasdk" \
-DBINEXPORT_ENABLE_BINARYNINJA=ON \
cmake --build . --config Release -- "-j$(sysctl -n hw.logicalcpu)"
ctest --build-config Release --output-on-failure
cmake --install . --config Release --strip
Note: This will use the standard CMake "Makefile Generator". You can use XCode or Ninja as generators as well.
To disable the IDA Pro build, set -DBINEXPORT_ENABLE_IDAPRO=OFF
. Likewise, to
disable the Binary Ninja build, set -DBINEXPORT_ENABLE_BINARYNINJA=OFF
.
This will download and build Abseil, GoogleTest, Protocol Buffers and the
Binary Ninja API. If all went well, the build_mac/binexport-prefix
directory should contain two the files binexport12_ida.dylib
and
binexport12_ida64.dylib
(for use with ida
and ida64
, respectively) as well
as binexport12_binaryninja.dylib
(for Binary Ninja).
The preferred build environment is Windows 10 (64-bit Intel) using the Visual Studio 2022 compiler and the Windows SDK for Windows 10.
Download and install the latest stable CMake (3.25.1 at the time of writing) from its download page. Make sure to select "Add CMake to the system PATH for all users".
Download and install Git from its download
page. Make sure to select the following
options: The installation directory should be left at the default
%ProgramFiles%\Git\bin\git.exe
"Use Git from the Windows Command Prompt" -
have the setup utility add Git to your system path. * "Use Windows' default
console window" - to be able to use Git from the regular command prompt.
The following sections assume an open command prompt with the current working directory located at the root of the cloned BinExport repository:
git clone https://github.com/google/binexport.git
cd binexport
Unzip the contents of the IDA SDK into third_party/idasdk
. Shown commands are
for IDA Pro 8.2, assuming that Git was installed into the default directory
first:
"%ProgramFiles%\Git\usr\bin\unzip" PATH\TO\idasdk_pro82.zip -d third_party
rename third_party\idasdk_pro82 idasdk
With all prerequisites in place, configure and build BinExport:
if not exist build_msvc mkdir build_msvc
cd build_msvc
cmake .. ^
-G "Visual Studio 17 2022" ^
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release ^
"-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=%cd%" ^
-DBINEXPORT_ENABLE_IDAPRO=ON ^
-DIdaSdk_ROOT_DIR=%cd%\..\third_party\idasdk ^
-DBINEXPORT_ENABLE_BINARYNINJA=ON
cmake --build . --config Release -- /m /clp:NoSummary;ForceNoAlign /v:minimal
ctest --build-config Release --output-on-failure
cmake --install . --config Release --strip
Note: This will use the CMake "Visual Studio" generator. You can use the Ninja generator as well.
To disable the IDA Pro build, set -DBINEXPORT_ENABLE_IDAPRO=OFF
. Likewise, to
disable the Binary Ninja build, set -DBINEXPORT_ENABLE_BINARYNINJA=OFF
.
This will download and build Abseil, GoogleTest, Protocol Buffers and the
Binary Ninja API. If all went well, the build_msvc/binexport-prefix
directory should contain two the files binexport12_ida.dll
and
binexport12_ida64.dll
(for use with ida.exe
and ida64.exe
, respectively) as well
as binexport12_binaryninja.dll
(for Binary Ninja).