Hi,

NDepend here is pretty much the industry standard for analysing
defects in assemblies.

Alternatives are FxCop and Gendarme.

If you really want to batch decompile assemblies, you can use ILSpy's
engine (using Cecil) to generate C# code from assemblies.

Jb

On Sat, Dec 6, 2014 at 12:32 AM, Mike Waldron <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Everybody!
>
> I need to develop an automatic way to decompile .NET DLLs and inspect the
> output for a laundry list of potential problems. I can easily do this by
> hand with dotPeek on Windows, but I need to do it on Linux (long story,
> don't ask) and I don't want to do it by hand because it doesn't scale. I'm
> talking about hundreds, potentially thousands of DLLs, with new ones popping
> up somewhat frequently. I can code as much as needed - oh boy can I code -
> but I'd rather not write the decompiler from scratch.
>
> Based on some documentation I've read, it sounds like mono-cecil will work,
> but I ain't 100% so I thought I'd just ask directly. Does this sound like
> something mono-cecil is well-suited for?
>
> mjw
>
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