Practical Reverse Engineering: x86, x64, ARM, Windows Kernel, Reversing Tools, and ObfuscationJohn Wiley & Sons, 2014 M02 17 - 384 pages Analyzing how hacks are done, so as to stop them in the future Reverse engineering is the process of analyzing hardware or software and understanding it, without having access to the source code or design documents. Hackers are able to reverse engineer systems and exploit what they find with scary results. Now the good guys can use the same tools to thwart these threats. Practical Reverse Engineering goes under the hood of reverse engineering for security analysts, security engineers, and system programmers, so they can learn how to use these same processes to stop hackers in their tracks. The book covers x86, x64, and ARM (the first book to cover all three); Windows kernel-mode code rootkits and drivers; virtual machine protection techniques; and much more. Best of all, it offers a systematic approach to the material, with plenty of hands-on exercises and real-world examples.
Practical Reverse Engineering: Using x86, x64, ARM, Windows Kernel, and Reversing Tools provides crucial, up-to-date guidance for a broad range of IT professionals. |
Contents
18 | |
Section 2 | 47 |
Section 3 | 57 |
Section 4 | 76 |
Section 5 | 81 |
Section 6 | 88 |
Section 7 | 89 |
Section 8 | 115 |
Section 10 | 222 |
Section 11 | 223 |
Section 12 | 238 |
Section 13 | 244 |
Section 14 | 251 |
Section 15 | 256 |
Section 16 | 308 |
Section 17 | 311 |
Section 9 | 146 |
Section 18 | 341 |