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EazFixer

A deobfuscation tool for Eazfuscator.

Description

EazFixer is a deobfuscation tool for Eazfuscator, a commercial .NET obfuscator. For a list of features, see the list below.

Implemented features:

  • String encryption
  • Resource encryption
  • Assembly embedding

Considered features:

  • Code and data virtualization
  • Entrypoint obfuscation
  • Useless code obfuscation (may only be present in Eazfuscator binary itself)

Not considered:

  • Symbol renaming (usually the symbol names are unrecoverable)
  • Automatic code optimization (not an anti-feature!)
  • Code control flow obfuscation (I didn't have any problems with my samples in dnSpy)
  • Assemblies merging (doesn't seem probable, especially with symbol renaming)

Usage

Call from the command line or drag and drop the file on and let it run or use the command line flag --file.

If your assembly is protected with control-flow obfuscation, run it through de4dot with the --only-cflow-deob flag first.

  • --file path
  • --keep-types
  • --virt-fix

The flag --file is used for the input file. The flag --keep-types is similar to the de4dot flag, Keeps obfuscator types and assemblies. The flag --virt-fix keeps certain parts obfuscated to stay working with virtualized assemblies.

example: EazFixer.exe --file test.exe --keep-types

Building

Clone the repository recursively and use the latest version of Visual Studio (2017, at the time of writing) to build.

Support

EazFixer is (and will always be) targeted at the latest version of Eazfuscator. If your version is not supported, try a more universal deobfuscator like de4dot. If your version is newer than what this tool supports, create an issue only after verifying with the latest version of Eazfuscator.

Also, I will not help you use this program. Consider it for advanced users only. If you do run into a problem and are sure it is a bug, feel free to submit an issue but I cannot guarantee I will fix it.

Credits

This tool uses the following (open source) software:

  • dnlib by 0xd4d, license under the MIT license, for reading/writing assemblies.
  • a fork of Harmony by hcoona, licensed under the MIT license, to patch runtime methods.
    The original Harmony is by Andreas Pardeike, but does not unprotect the memory pages it writes to, making the program crash.