pepy (pronounced p-pie) is a python binding to the pe-parse parser.
pepy supports Python versions 3.6 and above.
The easiest way to use pepy is to install it via pip:
$ pip3 install pepy
If you can build pe-parse and have a working python environment (headers and libraries) you can build pepy.
- Build pepy:
python3 setup.py build
- Install pepy:
python3 setup.py install
Building on Windows: Python 3.x is typically installed as python.exe, NOT python3.exe.
There are a number of objects involved in pepy. The main one is the parsed object. This object is returned by the parse method.
import pepy
p = pepy.parse("/path/to/exe")
The parsed object has a number of methods:
get_entry_point
: Return the entry point addressget_machine_as_str
: Return the machine as a human readable stringget_subsystem_as_str
: Return the subsystem as a human readable stringget_bytes
: Return the first N bytes at a given addressget_sections
: Return a list of section objectsget_imports
: Return a list of import objectsget_exports
: Return a list of export objectsget_relocations
: Return a list of relocation objectsget_resources
: Return a list of resource objects
The parsed object has a number of attributes:
signature
machine
numberofsections
timedatestamp
numberofsymbols
characteristics
magic
majorlinkerver
minorlinkerver
codesize
initdatasize
uninitdatasize
entrypointaddr
baseofcode
baseofdata
imagebase
sectionalignement
filealignment
majorosver
minorosver
win32ver
imagesize
headersize
checksum
subsystem
dllcharacteristics
stackreservesize
stackcommitsize
heapreservesize
heapcommitsize
loaderflags
rvasandsize
Example:
import time
import pepy
p = pepy.parse("/path/to/exe")
print("Timedatestamp: %s" % time.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S", time.localtime(p.timedatestamp)))
ep = p.get_entry_point()
print("Entry point: 0x%x" % ep)
The get_sections
, get_imports
, get_exports
, get_relocations
and
get_resources
methods each return a list of objects. The type of object
depends upon the method called. get_sections
returns a list of section
objects, get_imports
returns a list of import
objects, etc.
The section
object has the following attributes:
base
length
virtaddr
virtsize
numrelocs
numlinenums
characteristics
data
The import
object has the following attributes:
sym
name
addr
The export
object has the following attributes:
mod
func
addr
The relocation
object has the following attributes:
type
addr
The resource
object has the following attributes:
type_str
name_str
lang_str
type
name
lang
codepage
RVA
size
data
The resource
object has the following methods:
type_as_str
Resources are stored in a directory structure. The first three levels of the
are called type
, name
and lang
. Each of these levels can have
either a pre-defined value or a custom string. The pre-defined values are
stored in the type
, name
and lang
attributes. If a custom string is
found it will be stored in the type_str
, name_str
and lang_str
attributes. The type_as_str
method can be used to convert a pre-defined
type value to a string representation.
The following code shows how to iterate through resources:
import pepy
from hashlib import md5
import sys
p = pepy.parse(sys.argv[1])
resources = p.get_resources()
print("Resources: (%i)" % len(resources))
for resource in resources:
print("[+] MD5: (%i) %s" % (len(resource.data), md5(resource.data).hexdigest()))
if resource.type_str:
print("\tType string: %s" % resource.type_str)
else:
print("\tType: %s (%s)" % (hex(resource.type), resource.type_as_str()))
if resource.name_str:
print("\tName string: %s" % resource.name_str)
else:
print("\tName: %s" % hex(resource.name))
if resource.lang_str:
print("\tLang string: %s" % resource.lang_str)
else:
print("\tLang: %s" % hex(resource.lang))
print("\tCodepage: %s" % hex(resource.codepage))
print("\tRVA: %s" % hex(resource.RVA))
print("\tSize: %s" % hex(resource.size))
Note that some binaries (particularly packed) may have corrupt resource entries.
In these cases you may find that len(resource.data)
is 0 but resource.size
is
greater than 0. The size
attribute is the size of the data as declared by the
resource data entry.
pe-parse was designed and implemented by Andrew Ruef ([email protected]).
pepy was written by Wesley Shields ([email protected]).