ruby-macho
A Ruby library for examining and modifying Mach-O files.
What is a Mach-O file?
The Mach-O file format is used by macOS and iOS (among others) as a general purpose binary format for object files, executables, dynamic libraries, and so forth.
Installation
ruby-macho can be installed via RubyGems:
$ gem install ruby-macho
Documentation
Full documentation is available on RubyDoc.
A quick example of what ruby-macho can do:
require 'macho'
file = MachO::MachOFile.new("/path/to/my/binary")
# get the file's type (object, dynamic lib, executable, etc)
file.filetype # => :execute
# get all load commands in the file and print their offsets:
file.load_commands.each do |lc|
puts "#{lc.type}: offset #{lc.offset}, size: #{lc.cmdsize}"
end
# access a specific load command
lc_vers = file[:LC_VERSION_MIN_MACOSX].first
puts lc_vers.version_string # => "10.10.0"
What works?
- Reading data from x86/x86_64/PPC Mach-O files
- Changing the IDs of Mach-O and Fat dylibs
- Changing install names in Mach-O and Fat files
- Adding, deleting, and modifying rpaths.
What needs to be done?
- Unit and performance testing.
Contributing, setting up overcommit
and the linters
In order to keep the repo, docs and data tidy, we use a tool called overcommit
to connect up the git hooks to a set of quality checks. The fastest way to get setup is to run the following to make
sure you have all the tools:
gem install overcommit bundler
bundle install
overcommit --install
Attribution
- Constants were taken from Apple, Inc's
loader.h
incctools/include/mach-o
. (Apple Public Source License 2.0). - Binary files used for testing were taken from The LLVM Project. (Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions).
License
ruby-macho
is licensed under the MIT License.
For the exact terms, see the license file.