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54 lines
1.8 KiB
Plaintext
54 lines
1.8 KiB
Plaintext
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Assorted notes
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--------------
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Wrapped functions and constants:
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All the symbols from the idaapi module are listed in symbollist.txt.
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Documentation for the plugin API functions functions is in the IDA
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SDK header files. All function and symbol names directly translate
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to the C++ counterparts. If you try to use a function that is not
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wrapped yet you will get an exception like this:
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Traceback (most recent call last):
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File "<string>", line 1, in ?
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NameError: name 'foobar' is not defined
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If this happens you can check the function in symbollist.txt. If it
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is not included and it should be please report it to the author.
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Data types:
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All the C++ data types are mapped to corresponding Python data types.
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For example ea_t maps to a Python integer. Complex data types (like
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structures and classes) are mapped to Python classes that have the
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same attributes as the original type.
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Arguments and return values:
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Generally all function arguments should be the same type as specified
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by the original headers. Pointers to complex types (structures, classes)
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are checked and must match the original declarations.
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For example comment = get_func_comment("aa", 0) will raise an exception:
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Traceback (most recent call last):
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File "<string>", line 1, in ?
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TypeError: Type error. Got aa, expected _p_func_t
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When calling functions that return a string in a buffer (usually with
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maximum size) the buffer and size parameter is omitted. These functions
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return either the result in a string or None if the call fails and returns
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NULL. The output buffers are maximized at MAXSTR.
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Example:
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C++: get_func_name(0x1234, buf, sizeof(buf));
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Python: name = get_func_name(0x1234)
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Any function that should return a char * is going to return either a
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Python string (up to MAXSTR) or None.
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