Analyses#

angr’s goal is to make it easy to carry out useful analyses on binary programs. To this end, angr allows you to package analysis code in a common format that can be easily applied to any project. We will cover writing your own analyses Writing Analyses, but the idea is that all the analyses appear under project.analyses (for example, project.analyses.CFGFast()) and can be called as functions, returning analysis result instances.

Built-in Analyses#

Name

Description

CFGFast

Constructs a fast Control Flow Graph of the program

CFGEmulated

Constructs an accurate Control Flow Graph of the program

VFG

Performs VSA on every function of the program, creating a Value Flow Graph and detecting stack variables

DDG

Calculates a Data Dependency Graph, allowing one to determine what statements a given value depends on

BackwardSlice

Computes a Backward Slice of a program with respect to a certain target

Identifier

Identifies common library functions in CGC binaries

More!

angr has quite a few analyses, most of which work! If you’d like to know how to use one, please submit an issue requesting documentation.

Resilience#

Analyses can be written to be resilient, and catch and log basically any error. These errors, depending on how they’re caught, are logged to the errors or named_errors attribute of the analysis. However, you might want to run an analysis in “fail fast” mode, so that errors are not handled. To do this, the argument fail_fast=True can be passed into the analysis constructor.