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pepy

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

Building

If you can build pe-parse and have a working python environment (headers and libraries) you can build pepy.

  1. Build pepy:
  • python3 setup.py build
  1. Install pepy:
  • python3 setup.py install

Building on Windows: Python 3.x is typically installed as python.exe, NOT python3.exe.

Using

Parsed object

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 address
  • get_machine_as_str: Return the machine as a human readable string
  • get_subsystem_as_str: Return the subsystem as a human readable string
  • get_bytes: Return the first N bytes at a given address
  • get_sections: Return a list of section objects
  • get_imports: Return a list of import objects
  • get_exports: Return a list of export objects
  • get_relocations: Return a list of relocation objects
  • get_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.

Section Object

The section object has the following attributes:

  • base
  • length
  • virtaddr
  • virtsize
  • numrelocs
  • numlinenums
  • characteristics
  • data

Import Object

The import object has the following attributes:

  • sym
  • name
  • addr

Export Object

The export object has the following attributes:

  • mod
  • func
  • addr

Relocation Object

The relocation object has the following attributes:

  • type
  • addr

Resource Object

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.

Authors

pe-parse was designed and implemented by Andrew Ruef ([email protected]).

pepy was written by Wesley Shields ([email protected]).