Ghidra by NSA

(github.com)

211 points | by handfuloflight 2 days ago

28 comments

  • alexrp 3 hours ago
    Binary Ninja deserves a mention in these threads: https://binary.ninja

    I've used IDA, Ghidra, and Binary Ninja a lot over the years. At this point I much prefer Binary Ninja for the task of building up an understanding of large binaries with many thousands of types and functions. It also doesn't hurt that its UI/UX feel like something out of this century, and it's very easy to automate using Python scripts.

    • 1vuio0pswjnm7 4 minutes ago
      The Linux free trial version is a 400MB .zip file including a 255.2MB "binaryninja" shared binary

      https://github.com/Vector35/binaryninja-api/releases/downloa...

    • charcircuit 2 minutes ago
      Wow, they made it free. The last time I used it I bought a $100 subscription for non commercial use.
    • ActorNightly 2 hours ago
    • b8 1 hour ago
      Yep, it's cheaper than IDA and I like the UI better. Also I love that it's made by game hacking folks (my clique).
    • capl 2 hours ago
      Binary Ninja seems way ahead in terms of UX, as a hobby reverser. It's my default as well.
    • xvilka 3 hours ago
      In particularly I like their approach of creating modern IR pipeline.
  • palata 4 hours ago
    Taking the opportunity to ask: are there nice recommended resources for a beginner to start with reverse engineering (ideally using Ghidra)? Let's say for an experienced developer, but not so experienced in reverse engineering?

    I guess one issue I have is that I don't have good ideas of fun projects, and that's probably something I need to actually get the motivation to learn. I can find a "hello world", that's easy, but it won't help me get an idea of what I could reverse engineer in my life.

    For instance I have a smartspeaker that I would like to hack (being able to run my own software on it, for fun), but I don't know if it is a good candidate for reverse engineering... I guess I would first need to find a security flaw in order to access the OS? Or flash my own OS (hoping that it's a Linux running there), but then I would probably want to extract binary blobs that work with the buttons and the actual speaker?

    • baby_souffle 3 hours ago
      > Taking the opportunity to ask: are there nice recommended resources for a beginner to start with reverse engineering (ideally using Ghidra)? Let's say for an experienced developer, but not so experienced in reverse engineering?

      The good news is that there has never been MORE resources out there. If you want to use this learning expedition as an excuse to also build up a small electronics lab then $100 on ali express to buy whatever looks cheap and interesting and then tear it apart and start poking around to find where the firmware lives. Pull the firmware, examine it, modify it and put it back :)

      This guy has a discord server with a specific "book club" section where they all choose a cheap $thing and reverse engineer it: https://www.youtube.com/@mattbrwn/about

      I can't help much with "traditional" app/software RE work, sorry.

      • palata 1 hour ago
        Oh, it feels like it may be what I want! Find some cheap electronic device and hack it!

        Thanks a lot!

    • hxtk 33 minutes ago
      The Nightmare Course [1], so named because someone with that skillset (developing zero-days) is a nightmare for security, not because the course itself is a nightmare, and Roppers Academy [2] are both good for learning how to reverse engineer software and look for vulnerabilities.

      The nightmare course explicitly talks about how to use Ghidra.

      1: https://guyinatuxedo.github.io 2: https://www.roppers.org

    • unleaded 2 hours ago
      Somewhat unconventional (and i'm not really a seasoned reverse engineer so take it with some salt) but I started by hacking old video games (nes, gameboy, arcade.. that kind of thing). You could start with making basic action replay RAM cheats to e.g. give Mario infinite lives, then you can use breakpoints, the debugger, and a 6502 ISA reference to edit instructions and make ROM patches.

      from then you can use things like Ghidra (which supports a lot of those old CPU arches) for more advanced analysis and make the game do almost whatever the hell you want if you have the patience.

      I think a lot of the skills will transfer quite well (obviously not 1:1, you will need to learn some things) to the more employable side of RE if that's what you're interested in

      • palata 1 hour ago
        Thanks! I have been "hacking" with games in the past (getting infinite lives and such) or bypassing some licence check (back then it was with OllyDbg).

        I guess I'm struggling to transfer that to "real-life" scenarios. Like getting something useful out of reverse engineering (getting infinite lives is interesting to see that I can tamper with the game, but it's not exactly useful).

    • quux0r 3 hours ago
      So a couple things. Bruce Dang’s book, while a little old, is still a great spot to get started. Another great book is Blue Fox by Maria Markstedter for ARM. From there, finding small binaries and just trying to get the “flow” is a good next step, for me this is largely renaming functions and variables and essentially trying to work the decompiled code into something readable, then you can find flaws.

      So for the second thing, pulling the data off chips like that typically involves some specialized hardware, and you have to potentially deal with a bunch of cryptographic safeguards to read from the chip’s memory. Not impossible though, and there are not always good safeguards, but might be worth checking out some simpler programs and working up to it, or learning some basic hardware hacking to get an idea of how that process works.

      • palata 1 hour ago
        Interesting! Yeah maybe my first step is on the hardware side, which I guess is what is blocking me right now.
    • brynnbee 1 hour ago
      I personally learn best by doing which is why I love learning with LLMs. They're going to be wrong a lot, and give bad advice, and do things in silly ways. I learn well from the process of working with them, seeing them fail constantly, then learn the tool yourself by researching what it's doing wrong to fix it. I just attempted to use Ghidra to reverse engineer the game Shenmue from Dreamcast. I was previously unfamiliar with Ghidra and I mostly did it as a learning exercise, but it wasn't really the right tool for the job. However the project itself made lots of progress without it:

      https://www.newyokosuka.com/

    • 0x54MUR41 3 hours ago
      If you are into the book, I would recommend The Ghidra Book from No Starch publisher https://nostarch.com/ghidra-book-2e.

      The book is designed for beginner and advance users.

    • ramuel 3 hours ago
      https://pwn.college has really good modules/dojos that cover a bunch of reverse engineering concepts.
    • gray_charger 3 hours ago
      You can start here to learn reverse engineering.

      https://beginners.re/

    • ActorNightly 2 hours ago
      >are there nice recommended resources

      I often wondered why people asks this in the age of LLMs, and I think i know why now.

      When you ask this question, you are not asking for resources, you are asking for "what is a guide that I can just follow mindlessly without thinking that will enable me to do said thing"

      You will never learn anything this way, or be anywhere decent at it.

      If you actually want to learn, you have to be curious. And if you are curious, you are able to ask questions. And for questions, you have LLMs.

      If you are still clueless on what questions to ask, then start by learning how to actually learn.

      • palata 1 hour ago
        Since we're judging each other, I'm genuinely wondering how bad you are at making friends. I mean, non-LLM friends. Relatives don't count.
      • gosub100 27 minutes ago
        You were rude but I understand what you mean. People can obviously Google "reverse engineering tutorial" or something similar. And certainly "what are good resources for X" can be a way to signal interest in something, get people to respond, and not necessarily do anything about it. But I think the most charitable interpretation of that question is they want a group consensus for the best place to start, since Google might return a heavily promoted site that had deprecated info. I remember years ago people hated "cplusplus.com" because out of a volume that is the size of a textbook, it had a few bad examples. So instead they promoted cppreference. (For learning C++).

        I think we should conclude people want to maximize learning while minimizing wasted time, hence they ask for the "best resources". Even though the question seems tiring at times (when I was on reddit I heard this constantly, and cynically projected that very few people actually used the resources they requested. But I solved this problem by quitting/getting banned from Reddit and never looked back).

      • megraf 2 hours ago
        How interesting.

        Anyway, I would recommend YouTube. Find a series you can follow along. Best of luck!

      • el_benhameen 1 hour ago
        God forbid someone pose an interesting question on a discussion board.
      • salawat 1 hour ago
        I often wonder why on this forum of alleged hacker types, there seems to be such an impetus to push what all VC's are desperately bought into at the moment, whether it be crypto, or AI nonsense.

        Oh wait... Right.

        Asking for resources or asking "does anyone know where I can start?" Followed by a description of "here's where I'm at" has been table stakes for the uninitiated since time immemorial.

        When I see "ask the LLM", all I hear is "prop up my investment portfolio".

        To this OP in particular: try playing around with different binaries you already have source to, and using the RE tools to get a feel for their post compilation structure and flow; start by compiling with no compiler optimization. You'll want an understanding of what the structural primitives of "nothing up my sleeve" code reads and looks like post-compilation to build off of. Then start enabling different layers of optimization, again, to continue familiarizing yourself with output of modern compilers when dealing with fundamentally "honest" code.

        Once you can eyeball things and get an intuitive sense for that sort of thing is where you jump off into dealing with dishonest code. Stuff put through obfuscators. Stuff designed to work in ways that hide what the actual intent of the code is, or things designed in ways that make it clear that the author had something up their sleeve.

        It'll be a lot of work and memorization and pattern recognition building, and you'll have to put in the effort to get to know the hardware and memory architecture, and opcodes and ISA's, and virtual machines you're reversing for, but it will click eventually.

        Just remember; odds are it won't make you money, and it will set time on fire. I cut my teeth on reversing some security firm's snake oil, and just trying to figure out why the code I wrote was acting weird after the compiler got done with it. (I have cursed at more compiler writers than about anyone but myself).

        Then just remember that if someone got it to run, then it's gotta eventually make sense. The rest is all persistence on your part of laying bare their true, usually perverted motivations (generally boiling down to greed, job security, or wasting your goddamn time).

        Would the world be nicer if that wasn't the case? Absolutely. I lived through a period where a lot of code wasn't "something up my sleeve" code. Now is not so much that time anymore. We've made programming too accessible to business types that now the interests of organization's at securing their power has a non-trivial distortion on how code gets written; which generally means user hostile in one way or another.

  • xvilka 4 hours ago
    • aktau 3 hours ago
      +1

      I once tried learning how to RE with radare2 but got very frustrated by frequent project file corruption (meaning radare2 could no longer open it). The way these project files work(ed?) in radare2 at the time was that it just saved all the commands you executed, instead of the state. This was brittle, in my experience.

      I don't have a lot of free time, so I have to leave projects for long periods of time, not being able to restart from a previous checkpoints meant I never actually got further.

      IIUC, one of the first things Rizin did was focus on saving the actual state, and backwards/forwards-compatibility. This fact alone made me switch to Rizin. To its credit, my 3-year old project file still works!

      Now for the downside: there is apparently a gap in Windows (32-bit) PE support, causing stack variables to be poorly discovered: https://github.com/rizinorg/rizin/issues/4608. I tested this on radare2, which does not have this bug. I'm hoping this gets fixed in Rizin at some point, at which point I'll continue my RE adventure. Or maybe I should give an AI reverse engineer a try... (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46846101).

      • xvilka 3 hours ago
        Yes, we are working on rewriting analysis completely[1][2] that would fix your issue along with many others.

        [1] https://github.com/rizinorg/rizin/pull/5505

        [2] https://github.com/rizinorg/rizin/issues/4736

        • aktau 2 hours ago
          Can't wait! Do you have any idea how far along this is? Is it likely to be months, quarters, years?

          (Funny expression, that. I'll wait, of course. It'll be a happy day when this works again and I can slowly make progress RE'ing again.)

      • alberto-m 2 hours ago
        I tried radare2 with the official GUI Iaito. Iaito saves the project in a git repo, so whenever I got corruption (and I got it a lot, like every 4-5 saves) I was just a `git reset --hard` away from restoring a good state. Not the most efficient way of operation, but for me it was better this than tolerating Ghidra's tiny Courier New font.
        • aktau 2 hours ago
          Thanks for the note.

          Your corruption frequency anecdote matches mine. I don't have the mental werewithal to deal with that. I won't go back to radare2 until they change their project file stability somehow.

  • quux0r 3 hours ago
    While on the topic, I want to highlight two incredible plugins for Ghidra: https://github.com/jtang613/GhidrAssist And https://github.com/jtang613/GhidrAssistMCP

    Being able to hook Claude code up to this has made reversing way more productive. Highly recommend!

  • jakozaur 3 hours ago
    Funny thing, AI is not that terrible at using Ghidra. We released a benchmark on that and hopefully models will improve: https://quesma.com/blog/introducing-binaryaudit/
    • Alifatisk 2 hours ago
      There is MCPs for Ghidra
      • joe_mamba 2 hours ago
        Yeah this. I saw some guys on youtube use AI MCPs to do some crazy reverse engineering.

        It's difficult to be an AI doomer when you see stuff like this.

  • stared 2 hours ago
    Awesome soft!

    It works surprisingly nicely with AI agents (I mean, like Cursor or Claude Code, I don't let it run autonomously!).

    Here on detecting malware in binaries (https://quesma.com/blog/introducing-binaryaudit/). I am now in process of recompiling and old game Chromatron, from PowerPC binary to Apple Silicon and WASM (https://p.migdal.pl/chromatron-recompiled/, ready to play, might be still rough edges).

  • mahaloz 2 hours ago
    Since we’re talking about decompilers, might as well mention the community around the research area: http://decompilation.wiki/

    As well as the research history (slated to be updated in a few days): https://mahaloz.re/dec-progress-2024

  • lacoolj 1 hour ago
    Posting this on Github is a brilliant move by the NSA, and it showing up on HN amplifies it even more.

    It's certainly not the first thing they've released (selinux, for one, and then all the other repos in the account), but this repo showing up on HN, with a prominent call-to-action to look at a career with them, is a great way to target the applicants you want ("those who would find this project interesting, because it's just the sort of thing we need them to work on")

    Atlassian used to do (maybe still does) this in bitbucket if you open dev tools - a link to their careers page shows up

  • tears-in-rain 22 minutes ago
    opus 4.6 can use that from cli, and do RE, make pseudo C, and later decode binaries based on this code into interpretable data.

    amazing tool

  • iamleppert 14 minutes ago
    Are these tools useable by OpenClaw yet?
  • yibers 4 hours ago
    Can anyone provide their opinion of Ghidra vs Ida? Is Ida worth the extra money?
    • bri3d 3 hours ago
      For UI based manual reversing of things that run on an OS, IDA is quite superior; it has really good pattern matching and is optimized on this use case, so combined with the more ergonomic UI, it’s way way faster than Ghidra and is well worth the money (provided you are making money off of RE). The IDA debugger is also very fast and easy to use compared to Ghidra’s provided your target works (again, anything that runs on an OS is probably golden here).

      For embedded IDA is very ergonomic still, but since it’s not abstract in the way Ghidra is, the decompiler only works on select platforms.

      Ghidra’s architecture lends itself to really powerful automation tricks since you can basically step through the program from your plugin without having an actual debug target, no matter the architecture. With the rise of LLMs, this is a big edge for Ghidra as it’s more flexible and easier to hook into to build tools.

      The overall Ghidra plugin programming story has been catching up; it’s always been more modular than IDA but in the past it was too Java oriented to be fun for most people, but the Python bindings are a lot better now. IDA scripting has been quite good for a long time so there’s a good corpus of plugins out there too.

    • flipped 3 hours ago
      Almost every hobbyist reverse engineer uses cracked IDA which is easily available. I have never seen ghidra being recommended for serious work.
      • lima 2 hours ago
        This is changing, Ghidra is increasingly replacing IDA for commercial work.
      • IAmLiterallyAB 3 hours ago
        And everyone uses Ghidra exclusively where I work. I'd say we're a serious operation
      • jki275 2 hours ago
        The NSA doesn't do serious work?
        • ARandomerDude 2 hours ago
          That wasn't the claim. Ability + interest + time + budget + ... are what makes a serious tool.
      • q3k 3 hours ago
        I recommend it for serious work. Well, serious enough that I got paid for doing it, and/or given talks about it.

        (not if you're only doing x86/ARM stuff, though)

        • bri3d 3 hours ago
          Agree. IDA is surely the “primary” tool for anything that runs on an OS on a common arch, but once you get into embedded Ghidra is heavily used for serious work and once you get to heavily automation based scenarios or obscure microarchitectures it’s the best solution and certainly a “serious” product used by “real” REs.
    • apple1417 2 hours ago
      Leading this by saying I've only used Ida free, I can't comment on Ida pro. I'm also a very lite user of both, I give name functions/vars, save bookmarks, and occasionally work out custom types, and that's about it, none of the real fancy stuff.

      I was recently trying to analyse a 600mb exe (denuvo/similar). I wasted a week after ghidra crashed 30h+ in multiple times. A seperate project with a 300mb exe took about 5h, so there's some horrible scaling going on. So I tried out Ida for the first time, and it finished in less than an hour. Faced with having decomp vs not, I started learning how to use it.

      So first difference, given the above, Ida is far far better at interrupting tasks/crash recovery. Every time ghidra crashed I was left with nothing, when Ida crashes you get a prompt to recover from autosave. Even if you don't crash, in general it feels like Ida will let you interrupt a task and still get partial results which you might even be able to pick back up from later, while ghidra just leaves you with nothing.

      In terms of pure decomp quality, I don't really think either wins, decomp is always awkward, it's awkward in different ways for each. I prefer ghidra's, but that might just be because I've used it much longer. Ida does do better at suggesting function/variable names - if a variable is passed to a bunch of functions taking a GameManager*, it might automatically call it game_manager.

      When defining types, I far prefer ida's approach of just letting me write C/C++. Ghidra's struct editor is awkward, and I've never worked out a good way of dealing with inheritance. For defining functions/args on the other hand, while Ida gives you a raw text box it just doesn't let you change some things? There I prefer the way ghidra does it, I especially like it showing what registers each arg is assigned to.

      Another big difference I've noticed between the two is ghidra seems to operate on more of a push model, while Ida is more of a pull model - i.e. when you make a change, ghidra tends to hang for a second propagating it to everything referencing it, while Ida tries pulling the latest version when you look at the reference? I have no idea if this is how they actually work internally, it's just what it feels like. Ida's pull model is a lot more responsive on a large exe, however multiple times I've had some decomp not update after editing one of the functions it called.

      Overall, I find Ida's probably slightly better. I'm not about to pay for Ida pro though, and I'm really uneasy about how it uploads all my executables to do decomp. While at the same time, ghidra is proper FOSS, and gives comparable results (for small executables). So I'll probably stick with ghidra where I can.

      • q3k 2 hours ago
        > I was recently trying to analyse a 600mb exe (denuvo/similar). I wasted a week after ghidra crashed 30h+ in multiple times.

        During the startup auto analysis? For large binaries it makes sense to dial back the number of analysis passes and only trigger them if you really need them, manually, one by one. You also get to save in between different passes.

        • apple1417 2 hours ago
          Yup. It was actually an openjdk crash, which was extra interesting.

          I figured I probably could remove some passes, but being a lite user I don't really know/didn't want to spend the time learning how important each one is and how long they take. Ida's defaults were just better.

    • q3k 3 hours ago
      IDA is the better tool if you're being paid to work with architectures that IDA supports well (ARM(64), x86(_64), etc). This usually means 'mainstream' security/malware research. It's not worth the price for hobbyists. Before Hex-Rays was sold to private equity, it could make sense for rich hobbyists to pay for a private license once and use it for a few years without software updates, with the cloud offering now it pretty much makes no sense.

      Ghidra is the better tool if you're dealing with exotic architectures, even ones that you need to implement support for yourself. That's because any architecture that you have a full SLEIGH definition for will get decompilation output for free. It might not be the best decompiler out there, sure, but for some architectures it's the only decompiler available.

      Both are generally shit UX wise and take time to learn. I've mostly switched from IDA to Ghidra a while back which felt like pulling teeth. Now when I sometimes go back to IDA it feels like pulling teeth.

      • 19h 3 hours ago
        Which exotic architectures is IDA missing from your perspective?
        • q3k 3 hours ago
          Stuff I've recently analyzed that IDA has no decomp support for (and Ghidra's is anywhere from good enough to actually good):

            - AVR
            - Z80
            - HC08
            - 8051
            - Tricore
            - Xtensa
            - WebAssembly
            - Apple/Samsung S5L87xx NAND controller command sequencer VLIW (custom SLEIGH)
          
          And probably more that I've forgotten.

          It's also not about lack of support, but the fact that you have to pay extra for every single decompiler. This sucks if you're analyzing a wide variety of targets because of the kind of work you do.

          IDA also struggles with disasm for Harvard architectures which tend to make up a bulk of what I analyze - it's all faked around synthetic relocations. Ghidra has native support for multiple address spaces.

          • xvilka 3 hours ago
            Binary Ninja supports some of them as well, highly recommend.
            • q3k 3 hours ago
              I really want to like Binary Ninja, but whenever I have the choice between not paying (Ghidra), paying for something that I know works (IDA) and paying for something that I don't know if it works (Binja) then the last option has always lost so far.

              Maybe we need to get some good cracked^Wcommunity releases of Binja so that we can all test it as thoroughly as IDA. The limited free version doesn't cut it unfortunately - if I can't test it on what I actually want to use it for, it's not a good test.

              (also it doesn't have collaborative analysis in anything but the 'call us' enterprise plan)

  • Supermancho 3 hours ago
    I first used Ghidra this weekend as part of this series:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d7qVlf81fKA&list=PL4X0K6ZbXh...

    (#3 forward uses Ghidra)

    It worked fine in Ubuntu and Windows. The interface takes some getting used to, but paired with Bless Unofficial (using snap to install), it makes reverse engineering smooth.

  • mturk 4 hours ago
    Ghidra is a very impressive piece of software with a deep bench of functionality. The recent couple major releases that move to a more integrated Python experience have been very nice to use.
  • zeon256 4 hours ago
    Been awhile since I used this but decided to open the latest version to check my rust binary and was pleasantly surprised how much better it is today wrt rust binaries
    • flipped 3 hours ago
      Can you be more specific? Is it getting easier to reverse rust and go, since I have read about it being the hardest to reverse.
      • quux0r 1 hour ago
        It's not perfect, but in my personal experience it is still tough in languages like that due to the sheer volume of indirection and noise that makes it hard to follow. For example Go's calling convention is a little nutty compared to other languages, and you'll encounter a few *****ppppppppVar values that are otherworldly to make sense of, but the ability to recognize library functions and sys calls is for sure better.
  • kugutsumen 1 hour ago
  • Alifatisk 2 hours ago
    There is also Hopper for ObjC/Swift, haven't tried it personally though

    https://www.hopperapp.com

  • mdavid626 4 hours ago
    Works well. I used this tool once to disassemble and understand how key manager works on Vivotek cameras.

    They create executables, which contain encrypted binary data. Then, when the executable runs, it decodes the encrypted data and pipes it into "sh".

    The security is delusional here - the password is hard coded in the executable. It was something like "VIVOTEK Inc.".

    Ghidra was able to create the C code and I was able to extract also the binary data to a file (which is essentially the bash script).

    • mickeyp 3 hours ago
      Sounds like `strings' on the binary would've sufficed if it's just hardcoded.
      • mdavid626 2 hours ago
        No, that’s not enough.

        The password would be visible, but the encyption algorithm and the script’s text wouldn’t.

  • commandersaki 3 hours ago
    Awful to use with a tiling window manager.
  • systems 4 hours ago
    is ghidralite dot com a safe link or an official link

    when i try to expand their faq, it seem to try an open a (presumabl) malicious link , i wont paste the link here just in case it is really malicious

    • staubfinger 4 hours ago
      Just use the official github link or links that are linked there. The URL you mentioned seems bogus at best.
      • waltbosz 4 hours ago
        Curious, the ghidralite page download button links to the NSA's github releases page.

        I wonder what is the purpose of ghidralite dot com. SEO spam? Are they building trust and then will swap out the Download button with a poisoned binary.

        • h4ch1 2 hours ago
          Or climb up high enough in the search results and sell the domain to a malicious actor.
    • dizzy9 2 hours ago
      Looks like AI slop and SEO junk. The Guide page you linked opens with an article on Dubai sports car rental. There are also .net and .org variants of the domain, which appear to be also AI-generated slop. There's no such program as Ghidralite, and every site just links to the official Ghidra repository.
  • 29athrowaway 2 hours ago
  • ambitious_whale 2 hours ago
    What does it do I don't understand a think can someone explain me
  • jevinskie 2 hours ago
    Is it just me or is the merge style used for the repo very difficult to follow? Am I holding it wrong?
  • atemerev 4 hours ago
    I always wondered whether they have a much more capable internal version. And I wonder the same thing for AI labs (they have to do a lot of lobotomy for their models to be ready for public use... but internally, they can just skip this perhaps?)
    • bjackman 4 hours ago
      Very likely people who actually work on RE at the NSA also have access to IDA Pro licenses. I don't work in this space, so take it with a pinch of salt, but my understanding is this is a fairly long term strategic initiative to _eventually_ be the best tool.
      • bri3d 4 hours ago
        It’s better in some dimensions and not others, and it’s built on a fundamentally different architecture, so of course they use both.

        Ghidra excels because it is extremely abstract, so new processors can be added at will and automatically have a decompiler, control flow tracing, mostly working assembler, and emulation.

        IDA excels because it has been developed for a gazillion years against patterns found in common binaries and has an extremely fast, ergonomic UI and an awesome debugger.

        For UI driven reversing against anything that runs on an OS I generally prefer IDA, for anything below that I’m 50/50 on Ghidra, and for anything where IDA doesn’t have a decompiler, Ghidra wins by default.

        For plugin development or automated reversing (even pre LLMs, stuff like pattern matching scripts or little evaluators) Ghidra offers a ton of power since you can basically execute the underlying program using PCode, but the APIs are clunky and until recently you really needed to be using Java.

      • 19h 4 hours ago
        Ghidra has a slightly different focus than IDA, so they're definitely not just using Ghidra :-)
        • sergent_moon 4 hours ago
          I have only a very basic understanding of the two tools. Can you give me just some highlights regarding their differences?
          • 19h 3 hours ago
            Well, Ghidra's strength is batch processing at scale (which is why P-Code is less accurate than IDA's but still good enough) while allowing a massive amount of modules to execute. That allows huge distributed fleets of Ghidra. IDA has idalib now, and hcli will soon allow batch fleets, but IDA's focus is very much highly accurate analysis (for now), which makes it a lot less scalable performance wise (for now).
    • jacquesm 4 hours ago
      Too many people in the know about this stuff I think to keep it hidden for that long. At the same time, we keep finding stuff that that should have held for and it didn't, so maybe you're right.
    • hn92726819 3 hours ago
      I doubt it. Ghidra is extremely extensible with their plugin/tool architecture. Public Ghidra includes the extremely helpful decompiler tool, and a few others, but I'm willing to bet that NSA uses regular Ghidra + some way more capable plugins instead of having another Ghidra.
      • HelloNurse 2 hours ago
        Powerful, "capable" plugins are obvious; NSA cannot stop people from writing them, and they have little reason to restrict their use.

        I think what NSA is likely to keep confidential are in-house plugins that are so specialized and/or underengineered that their publication would give away confidential information: stolen and illegitimate secrets (e.g. cryptographic private keys from a game console SDK), or exploits that they intend to deny knowledge of and continue milking, or general strategies and methods (e.g. a tool to "customize" UEFI images, with the implication that they have means to install them on a victim's computer).

    • cactusplant7374 4 hours ago
      The gains come from pairing Ghidra with a coding agent. It works amazing well.
      • Mattwmaster58 3 hours ago
        I'll second this. I used opencode + opus 4.6 + ghidra to reverse engineer a seedkey generation algorithm[1] from v850 assembly. I gave it the binary, the known address for the generation function, and a set of known inputs/outputs, and it was able to crack it.

        [1] https://github.com/Mattwmaster58/ic204

      • bibelo 3 hours ago
        would you have a tutorial on that?
  • maximalthinker 2 hours ago
    [dead]
  • jeevacation 4 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • reactordev 4 hours ago
      No. Cheat engine scans memory as a program is running, for values of interest to pin (or modify). Allowing you to change behavior.

      Ghidra takes a program and unravels the machine code back into assembly and thus, something resembling C code. Allowing you to change behavior.

      Cheat Engine doesn’t modify the binary. Ghidra can.

      • kaibee 3 hours ago
        > Cheat Engine doesn’t modify the binary. Ghidra can.

        To clarify for other people who may not be familiar, (though I'm far from an expert on it myself) you can inject/modify asm of a running binary with CE. I'm not sure if there's a way to bake the changes to the exe permanently.

  • jeevacation 4 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • 13hunteo 4 hours ago
      You have a disgusting username
      • flipped 3 hours ago
        You're just giving the troll an audience by reacting to it.
      • jeevacation 2 hours ago
        [dead]
  • flipped 3 hours ago
    Is this backdoored just like SELinux?
    • jandrese 4 minutes ago
      Seems like it would be of limited value to backdoor a program like Ghidra. Might be useful in identifying security researchers, except that it's also the kind of program that will often be running on disconnected systems with little valuable data beyond whatever is being disassembled.
    • dizzy9 2 hours ago
      This was discussed when Ghidra was first open sourced. To the best of my knowledge, nobody's found an NSA backdoor in Ghidra.
    • sabas123 2 hours ago
      Without providing any proof that either this or SELinux is backdoored.
    • LPisGood 2 hours ago
      Well it’s open source, so you can check in principle. I would imagine there’s some fame and notoriety in discovering that.