Beye: Difference between revisions
DanielPharos (talk | contribs) m →History: Changed external link into article link |
|||
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
==History== |
==History== |
||
Beye was born in 1994 and had the name: "biew". Later (February 2010) it was renamed into: "beye" because its name had some negative associations in English.<ref>http://beye.sourceforge.net/en/ |
Beye was born in 1994 and had the name: "biew". Later (February 2010) it was renamed into: "beye" because its name had some negative associations in English.<ref>http://beye.sourceforge.net/en/beye_intro.html</ref> At that time, compilers were not able to produce highly optimized executables, and CPUs were too slow. That caused many programmers to code in [[assembly language]]. In those days many countries, including [[Russia]], had no [[Internet]] access and it was problematic to find information about CPUs. Many programs produced errors and it was too difficult to understand the true source of the problems. The compiler might be defective, or the program might have design defects or oversights. |
||
After spending a long time trying to understand the causes of the defects in his own programs, the author of beye coded his own disassembler. Perhaps the needs of the author could have been covered by existing disassemblers but it was impossible to get them, and so he wrote his own. The author of beye was familiar with some disassemblers, like [[hiew]] and qview. But these covered only half of the author's needs. When the project achieved the functionality of [[hiew]], the author started redistributing his project to friends. |
After spending a long time trying to understand the causes of the defects in his own programs, the author of beye coded his own disassembler. Perhaps the needs of the author could have been covered by existing disassemblers but it was impossible to get them, and so he wrote his own. The author of beye was familiar with some disassemblers, like [[hiew]] and qview. But these covered only half of the author's needs. When the project achieved the functionality of [[hiew]], the author started redistributing his project to friends. |
Revision as of 16:44, 27 March 2012
This article needs additional citations for verification. (February 2009) |
This article's tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia. (February 2009) |
Developer(s) | Nickols Kurshev |
---|---|
Stable release | 6.1.0
/ December 12, 2009 |
Operating system | Cross-platform |
Type | Utility |
Licence | GNU General Public License |
Website | beye.sourceforge.net |
BEYE (Binary EYE) is a multiplatform, portable viewer of binary files with a built-in editor that functions in binary, hexadecimal and disassembler modes. It uses native Intel syntax for disassembly. Features include an AVR/Java/x86-i386-AMD64/ARM-XScale/PPC64 disassemblers, a Russian code pages converter, full preview of MZ, NE, PE, NLM, COFF32, ELF formats, partial preview of a.out, LE and LX, Phar Lap formats, and a code navigator.
History
Beye was born in 1994 and had the name: "biew". Later (February 2010) it was renamed into: "beye" because its name had some negative associations in English.[1] At that time, compilers were not able to produce highly optimized executables, and CPUs were too slow. That caused many programmers to code in assembly language. In those days many countries, including Russia, had no Internet access and it was problematic to find information about CPUs. Many programs produced errors and it was too difficult to understand the true source of the problems. The compiler might be defective, or the program might have design defects or oversights.
After spending a long time trying to understand the causes of the defects in his own programs, the author of beye coded his own disassembler. Perhaps the needs of the author could have been covered by existing disassemblers but it was impossible to get them, and so he wrote his own. The author of beye was familiar with some disassemblers, like hiew and qview. But these covered only half of the author's needs. When the project achieved the functionality of hiew, the author started redistributing his project to friends.
Initially beye was closed-source, but friends helped to improve the project with new ideas, and in some cases with new code. Later, after purchasing a modem, the author decided to open the source and publish beye on the Internet. The author understood that commercial profit from selling executables of beye would be too low to make much money. On the other hand, attracting volunteers would permit serious improvements of the project.
In 2000, the sources were published at SourceForge.
Features
Beye's features include[2]:
- Built-in AVR/Java/x86-i386-AMD64/ARM-XScale/PPC64 disassemblers.
- Saving and restoring parts of files.
- Support for a-out, arch, coff-386, ELF, MZ, jvmclass, LMF, LE and LX, NE, NLM-386, PharLap, PE, RDOFF, SIS and SISX executable formats.
- Instruction high-lighting.
- A code navigator.
- A CPU performance utility
- A built-in 64-bit calculator
- Support for the formats: asf, avi, bmp, jpeg, mov, mp3, mpeg, realmedia, wav multimedia.
- Console-Input viewer
- Pattern searching in different modes: disassembler, hexadecimal and binary.
- Russian code-page converter.