This already caught some cases of public members that should have been
private and one case where the inferred type was too specific.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.dev>
We could use LocalVariableTable in theory, but it's more complicated as
we'd need to do live variable analysis and type inference. It's much
easier to leave that for the decompiler.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.dev>
The next commit will introduce an ArgRef class which uses a MemberRef
directly, rather than a MemberRef partition.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.dev>
This allows two different classes in different modules to be refactored
to the same name - for example, Node in client and unpackclass.
Under the hood, it is implemented by prefixing each class name with the
library name and an exclamation mark (which is highly unlikely to appear
in a class name, as it is invalid Java syntax).
At first, prefixing class names with the library name feels like a bit
of a hack. However, it is much simpler than trying to track libraries
throughout the existing code. Furthermore, it allows us to avoid
forking ASM classes like Remapper.
The Fernflower driver was also changed to deobfuscate each library in
its own context, rather than trying to decompile them all in one go - by
the time classes reach Fernflower, the prefixes have already been
removed and Fernflower can't deal with duplicate class names either.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.dev>
I suspect it is excluded on Jagex's end so the client deals correctly
with any class loading failures caused by the absence of the
netscape.javascript.JSObject class.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.dev>
This commit adds support for mapping:
* class names
* field names
* field owners
* method names
* method owners
It does not yet support argument names, local variable names or
re-ordering method arguments. Local variable names are blocked on
Fernflower patches and method argument re-ordering is blocked on the IR.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.dev>
At the moment, this means hard-coding the HD client but we should
reintroduce support for the SD and unsigned clients in the future.
This change provides a few benefits:
* Performance (~3x faster), as I generally only care about the HD
client.
* Allows us to continue injecting the NameMap for the HD client without
worrying about how to avoid injecting it (or support a different
NameMap) for the SD and unsigned clients.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.dev>
volatile is pointless if a field is final - even on arrays/objects, as
it only applies to the reference, not the contents of the target.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.dev>
If we don't do this then we incorrectly mark some fields as final, due
to writes present inside if blocks removed by ConstantArgTransformer.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.dev>
This fixes a bug where fields could never become static if a class had a
mixture of static and non-static fields and constructors.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.dev>
The new entry set functionality allows us to distinguish fields NEVER
written from fields we haven't explored yet. This allows us to find more
EXACTLY_ONCE fields in constructors with loops.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.dev>
Propagating them looks a bit silly, because the arguments are unused. I
think this problem mainly occurs in constructors, which the dummy
argument obfuscator doesn't touch.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.dev>
The aim of this change is to ensure that the automatically chosen class,
field and method names stay as similar as possible between runs.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.dev>
This change paves the way to feed the NameMap into the TypedRemapper,
such that refactored names (and static member movements) are preserved
across deobfuscator runs.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.dev>
This reverts commit b6bba95435.
Although this code is more complicated, it allows us to control the
destination class for fields individually (rather than an entire set at
a time). This is a requirement for name mapping.
While the jaggl jar isn't actually obfuscated, this change means we'll
support the @OriginalXXX annotations (which is useful for local
variables, whose names aren't retained). The unused method, visibility
and final transformers will also tidy up the code slightly.
The new class/member filtering infrastructure is used to retain the
names of every class, method and field.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.dev>
The new system will make it easier to port the deobfuscator to different
revisions.
There are two main changes:
- The addition of a Profile class, which contains a list of excluded
classes, methods and fields, and the maximum obfuscated name length.
It is passed to Transformers that require it with dependency
injection.
- New ClassFilter and MemberFilter infrastructure. The MemberFilter
class adds support for filtering fields and methods based on the
owner and descriptor, in addition to the name. This makes the filters
more precise than the previous system. It also supports globs, which
makes it easy to filter whole groups of classes, fields and methods
in one go.
The Profile class uses a ClassFilter and MemberFilters to
represent the list of excluded classes, methods and fields.
A separate benefit is the addition of a separate entry points filter
to the Profile class. Prior to this commit, many Transformers re-used
the excluded method filter to find entry points, which is less precise
(many of the excluded methods in 550 are not entry points).
Support for filtering methods by owner and descriptor in addition to
name allows the DEFAULT_PUBLIC_CTOR_CLASSES Set in VisibilityTransformer to
be combined with the entry points filter.
In the future it might be desirable to split the excluded method set
into three separate sets:
- One to represent methods that can't be renamed.
- One to represent methods whose signature can't be changed.
- One to represent methods that can't be removed.
Signed-off-by: Graham <gpe@openrs2.dev>