I am trying to edit a Greasemonkey/jQuery script. I can't post the link here.
The code is obfuscated and compressed with minify.
It starts like this:
var _0x21e9 = ["\x67\x65\x74\x4D\x6F\x6E\x74\x68", "\x67\x65\x74\x55\x54\x43\x44\x61\x74\x65", ...
After "decoding" it, I got this:
var _0x21e9=["getMonth","getUTCDate","getFullYear", ...
It is a huge list (500+ ). Then, it has some variables like this:
month = date[_0x21e9[0]](), day = date[_0x21e9[1]](), ...
_0x21e9[0] is getMonth, _0x21e9[1] is getUTCDate, etc.
Is it possible to replace the square brackets with the actual variable name? How?
I have little knowledge in javascript/jQuery and can not "read" the code the way it is right now.
I just want to use some functions from this huge script and remove the others I do not need.
Update: I tried using jsbeautifier.org as suggested here and in the duplicated question but nothing changed, except the "indent".
It did not replace the array variables with the decoded names.
For example:
- jsbeautifier still gives:
month = date[_0x21e9[0]]()
. - But I need:
month = date["getMonth"]()
.
None of the online deobfuscators seem to do this, How can I?
Is there a way for me to share the code with someone, at least part of it? I read I can not post pastebin, or similar here. I can not post it the full code here.
Here is another part of the code:
$(_0x21e9[8] + vid)[_0x21e9[18]]();
[8] is "." and [18] is "remove". Manually replacing it gives a strange result.
I haven't seen any online deobfuscator that does this yet, but the principle is simple.
Construct a text filter that parses the "key" array and then replaces each instance that that array is referenced, with the appropriate array value.
For example, suppose you have a file, evil.js that looks like this (AFTER you have run it though jsbeautifier.org with the
Detect packers and obfuscators?
and theUnescape printable chars...
options set):In that case, the "key" variable would be
_0xf17f
and the "key" array would be["(", ")", ...]
.The filter process would look like this:
_0xf17f
Extract the string src of the key array. Result:
In javascript, we can then use
.replace()
to parse the rest of the JS src. Like so:if you run that code, you get:
-- which is a bit easier to read/understand.
I've also created an online page that takes JS source and does all 3 remapping steps in a slightly more automated and robust manner. You can see it at:
jsbin.com/hazevo
(Note that that tool expects the source to start with the "key" variable declaration, like your code samples do)
@Brock Adams solution is brilliant, but there is a small bug: it doesn't take into account simple quoted vars.
Example:
If you try to decipher this example, it will result on this:
To resolve this, just edit the
replacedSrc.replace
into @Brock code:Here you have a patched version.
this will add all the function names as keys to the array. allowing you to do