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222 lines
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ReStructuredText
222 lines
9.5 KiB
ReStructuredText
Introduction
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============
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The original versions of this code up until the time I started were
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pretty awesome. You can get a sense of this by running it. For the
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most part it was remarkably fast, and a single module with few dependencies.
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Here I will largely give what are the major improvements over old code.
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This also serves to outline a little bit about what is in this code.
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See also `How does this code work? <https://github.com/rocky/python-uncompyle6/wiki/How-does-this-code-work%3F>`_.
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Old Cool Features
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==================
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Before getting to the new stuff, I'll describe cool things that was there before.
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I particularly liked the ability to show the assembly, grammar
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reduction rules as they occurred, and the resulting parse tree. It is
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neat that you could follow the process and steps that deparser takes,
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and in this not only see the result how the bytecode corresponds to
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the resulting source. Compare this with other Python decompilers.
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And of course also neat was that this used a grammar and table-driven
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approach to decompile.
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Expanding decompilation to multiple Python Versions
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==================================================
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Aside from ``pycdc``, most of the Python decompilers handle a small
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number of Python versions, if they supported more than one. And even
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when more than one version is supported if you have to be running the
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Python version that the bytecode was compiled for.
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There main reason that you have to be running the Python bytecode
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interpreter as the one you want to decompile largely stems from the
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fact that Python's ``dis`` module is often what is used and that has this limitation.
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``pycdc`` doesn't suffer this problem because it is written in C++,
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not Python. Hartmut Goebel's code had provisions for multiple Python
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versions running from an interpreter different from the one that was
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running the decompiler. That however used compiled code in the process
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was tied a bit to the Python C headers for a particular version.
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You need to not only to account for different "marshal" and "unmarshal"
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routines for the different Python versions, but also, as the Python versions
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extend, you need a different code type as well.
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Enter ``xdis``
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--------------
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To handle all of these problems, I split off the marshal loading
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portion and disassembly routines into a separate module,
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`xdis <https://pypi.org/project/xdis/>`_. This also allows older Pythons to have access to features
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found in newer Pythons, such as parsing the bytecode, a uniform stream
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of bytes, into a list of structured bytecode instructions.
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Python 2.7's ``dis`` module doesn't has provide a instruction abstraction.
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Therefore in ``uncompyle2`` and other earlier decompilers you see code with magic numbers like 4 in::
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if end > jump_back+4 and code[end] in (JF, JA):
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if code[jump_back+4] in (JA, JF):
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if self.get_target(jump_back+4) == self.get_target(end):
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self.fixed_jumps[pos] = jump_back+4
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end = jump_back+4
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elif target < pos:
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self.fixed_jumps[pos] = jump_back+4
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end = jump_back+4
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and in other code -1 and 3 in::
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if self.get_target(jmp) != start_else:
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end_else = self.get_target(jmp)
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if self.code[jmp] == JF:
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self.fixed_jumps[jmp] = -1
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self.structs.append({'type': 'except',
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'start': i,
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'end': jmp})
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i = jmp + 3
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All of that offset arithmetic is trying to find the next instruction
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offset or the previous offset. Using a list of instructions you simply
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take the ``offset`` field of the previous or next instruction.
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The above code appears in the ``uncompyle2`` "Scanner" class in
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service of trying to figure out control flow. Note also that there
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isn't a single comment in there about what specifically it is trying
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to do, the logic or that would lead one to be confident that this is
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correct, let alone assumptions that are needed for this to be true.
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While this might largely work for Python 2.7, and ``uncompyle2`` does
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get control flow wrong sometimes, it is impossible to adapt code for
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other versions of Python.
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In addition adding an instruction structure, ``xdis`` adds various
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flags and features that assist in working with instructions. In the
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example above this replaces code like ``... in (JF, JA)`` which is
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some sort of unconditional jump instruction.
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Although not needed in the decompiler, ``xdis`` also has nicer
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instruction print format. It can show you the bytes as well as the
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interpreted instructions. It will interpret flag bits and packed
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structures in operands so you don't have to. It can even do a limited
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form of inspection at previous instructions to give a more complete
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description of an operand. For example on ``LOAD_ATTR`` which loads
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the attribute of a variable, often the variable name can be found as
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the previous instruction. When that is the case the disassembler can
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include that in the disassembly display for the ``LOAD_ATTR`` operand.
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Python Grammar Isolation
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------------------------
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If you want to support multiple versions of Python in a manageable way
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you really need to provide different grammars for the different
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versions, in a grammar-based system. None of the published versions of
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this decompiler did this.
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If you look at the changes in this code, right now there are no
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grammar changes needed between 1.0 to 1.3. (Some of this may be wrong
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though since we haven't extensively tested these earliest Python versions
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For Python 1.4 which is based off of the grammar for 1.5 though there
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are number of changes, about 6 grammar rules. Later versions of though
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we start to see larger upheaval and at certain places, especially
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those where new opcodes are introduced, especially those that change
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the way calls or exceptions get handled, we have major upheaval in the
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grammar. It is not just that some rules get added, but we also need to
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*remove* some grammar rules as well.
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I have been largely managing this as incremental differences between versions.
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However in the future I am leaning more towards totally separate grammars.
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A well constructed grammar doesn't need to be that large.
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When starting out a new version, we can just copy the grammar from the
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prior version. Within a Python version though, I am breaking these
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into composable pieces. In particular the grammar for handling what
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can appear as the body of a lambda, is a subset of the full Python
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language. The language allowed in an ``eval`` is also a subset of the
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full Python language, as are what can appear in the various
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compilation modes like "single" versus "exec".
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Another nice natural self-contain grammar section is what can appear
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in list comprehensions and generators. The bodies of these are
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generally represented in a self-contained code block.
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Often in decompilation you may be interested not just in decompiling
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the entire code but you may be interested in only focusing on a
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specific part of the code. And if there is a problem in decompiling
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the entire piece of code, having these smaller breaking points can be
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of assistance.
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Other Modularity
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----------------
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Above we have mentioned the need for separate grammars or to isolate
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these per versions. But there are other major pieces that make up this
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decompiler. In particular there is a scanner and the source code
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generation part.
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Even though differences in version that occur in disassembly are
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handled by ``xdis``, we still have to do conversion of that to a token
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stream for parsing. So the scanners are again broken out per version
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with various OO mechanisms for reusing code. The same is true for
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source code generation.
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Expanding decompiler availability to multiple Python Versions
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--------------------------------------------------------------
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Above we mention decompiling multiple versions of bytecode from a
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single Python interpreter. We talk about having the decompiler
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runnable from multiple versions of Python, independent of the set of
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bytecode that the decompiler supports.
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There are slight advantages in having a decompiler that runs the same
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version as the code you are decompiling. The most obvious one is that
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it makes it easy to test to see whether the decompilation correct
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because you can run the decompiled code. Python comes with a suite of
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Python programs that check themselves and that aspects of Python are
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implemented correctly. These also make excellent programs to check
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whether a program has decompiled correctly.
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Aside from this, debugging can be easier as well. To assist
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understanding bytecode and single stepping it see `x-python
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<https://pypi.org/project/x-python/>`_ and the debugger for it
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`trepan-xpy <https://pypi.org/project/trepanxpy/>`_.
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Handling Language Drift
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-----------------------
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Given the desirability of having this code running on logs of Python
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versions, how can we get this done?
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The solution used here is to have several git branches of the
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code. Right now there are 3 branches. Each branch handles works across
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3 or so different releases of Python. In particular one branch handles
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Python 2.4 to 2.7 Another handles Python 3.3 to 3.5, and the master
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branch handles 3.6 to 3.10. (Again note that the 3.9 and 3.10
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decompilers do not decompile Python 3.9 or 3.10, but they do handle
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bytecode for all earlier versions.)
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Cool features of the Parser
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===========================
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* reduction rule checking
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* numbering tokens
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* showing a stack of completions
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Cool features Semantic Analysis
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===============================
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* ``--tree++`` (``-T``) option
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* showing precedence
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* See `Adding a tree transformation phase to uncompyle6 <https://github.com/rocky/python-uncompyle6/wiki/Adding-a-tree-transformation-phase-to-uncompyle6>`_
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* following AST
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* Fragment deparsing
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