Hey! I have a video about one of the approaches you can take to learn RE. I feature a handful of resources there. Also, fell free to check out other TH-cam channels like LiveOverflow and of course Open Security Training that offers free video courses
Have you got any idea why isn't whole ghidra written in c++ instead of java? Only ghidra decompiler is written in c++. I'am only asking from curiosity.
I don’t know that either. Maybe the decompiler and the rest of Ghidra were written by different teams 🤷♂️ The choice of Java makes Ghidra less prone to binary vulns and provides the same look at feel across different platforms. Also in my opinion it makes the development experience much better (for me, at least)
@@PathCybersecSlavaMoskvin The fact that it is written in Java makes it slow and buggy and ugly. IDA is so sleek and pretty in comparison. I think Ghidra was written in Java because of the tendency of big corporations and organizations to use Java. They chose to write the decompiler in C++ for speed.
i use ida to 'buy' ida.
genius
pro
I'd love to learn reverse engineering!
You have any recommendations (youtube channels/videos, websites, courses, etc)?
Hey! I have a video about one of the approaches you can take to learn RE. I feature a handful of resources there. Also, fell free to check out other TH-cam channels like LiveOverflow and of course Open Security Training that offers free video courses
Imagine considering that IDA costs money when talking about reverse engineering code...
Yes
Have you poked around with Binary Ninja? It's better than Ghidra for my reversing needs.
Yes binary is better of guidra and ida pro is better.
you don't actually pay for ida. i'd rather buy a physical car.
real
Well i did buy it and never received the activation code
check sspam
IDA PRO> Binary ninja> guidra.
alright mister! let give a like to my friend haha 😂
🥸le me who cracked ida
Have you got any idea why isn't whole ghidra written in c++ instead of java? Only ghidra decompiler is written in c++. I'am only asking from curiosity.
I don’t know that either. Maybe the decompiler and the rest of Ghidra were written by different teams 🤷♂️ The choice of Java makes Ghidra less prone to binary vulns and provides the same look at feel across different platforms. Also in my opinion it makes the development experience much better (for me, at least)
@@PathCybersecSlavaMoskvin th-cam.com/video/kx2xp7IQNSc/w-d-xo.html 25:29 I found answer.
Its explained in their blackhat talk :)
@@kiyotaka31337 where
@@PathCybersecSlavaMoskvin The fact that it is written in Java makes it slow and buggy and ugly. IDA is so sleek and pretty in comparison.
I think Ghidra was written in Java because of the tendency of big corporations and organizations to use Java.
They chose to write the decompiler in C++ for speed.
so ida is windows and ghidra is linux