The Bitdefender disassembler (bddisasm) is a lightweight, x86/x64 only instruction decoder. It is easy to integrate, easy to work with, it has no external dependencies, it is thread-safe, it allocates no memory at all, it works in virtually any environment (we use it inside user, kernel, hypervisor, on both Windows and Linux environments), and it provides lots of info regarding the decoded instructions, such as: operands (both explicit and implicit), access mode for each operand, CPUID feature flag, flags access, etc. More examples and info about the project can be found on the official documentation: [Bitdefender disassembler](http://bddisasm.readthedocs.io)
1. bddisasm - this is the main disassembler project. In order to use the Bitdefender disassembler, all you have to do is build this project, and link with the output library. The only headers you need are located inside the `inc` folder.
2. bdshemu - this project makes use of the main bddisasm lib in order to build a simple, lightweight, fast, instructions emulator, designated to target shellcodes. This project is also integrated inside the disasmtool, so you can
emulate raw binary files, and see their output. Note that this simple emulator supports basic x86/x64 instructions, and does not support emulating any kind of API call. In addition, the only supported memory accesses are inside the shellcode itself, and on the emulated stack.
3. isagenerator - this project contains the instruction definitions and the scripts required to generate the disassembly tables. If you wish to add support for a new instruction, this is the place. This project will automatically generate several header files (instructions.h, mnemonics.h, constants.h, table_\*.h), so please make sure you don't manually edit any of these files. You will need Python 3 to run the generation scripts.
For the DebugKernel and ReleaseKernel configurations, [WDK 1903](https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?linkid=2085767) is needed, alongside the Windows Driver Kit Visual Studio extension (the WDK installer should take care of this).
In order to build disasmtool_lix go to the disasmtool_lix directory and run `make`. The results will be in the bin directory in the disasmtool_lix/build directory.