Hi!
Hi
OK it's getting interesting perhaps it would lead into
instrumentation topic, which is quite hot topic in qemu-devel quite
recently, so you jump into the wagon just about the right time :)
OK, one thing for sure here is, I think you can implement your idea on
top of
Mulyadi Santosa writes:
Yes, I have read that paper, it’s wonderful!
Besides the Argos, the bitblaze group, led by Dawn Song in Berkeley, has
achieved great success in the taint analysis. The website about their
dynamic analysis work (called TEMU) can be found at:
Hi
OK it's getting interesting perhaps it would lead into
instrumentation topic, which is quite hot topic in qemu-devel quite
recently, so you jump into the wagon just about the right time :)
2010/11/15 F. Zhang qemust...@163.com:
I am very pleased to share ideas with you. But my
Mulyadi Santosa writes:
Yes, I have read that paper, it’s wonderful!
Besides the Argos, the bitblaze group, led by Dawn Song in Berkeley, has
achieved great success in the taint analysis. The website about their
dynamic analysis work (called TEMU) can be found at:
Hi Zhang...
Please consider it a casual user trying to share simple ideas with you
2010/11/14 F. Zhang qemust...@163.com:
Hi,
I am a newbie of QEMU. I want to use the QEMU for the dynamic analysis of
malware, usually called “taint analysis”.
Just before it goes too far, have you check
Please consider it a casual user trying to share simple ideas with you
I am very pleased to share ideas with you. But my English is too poor, er…,
I’ll try my best to make it clear.J
Just before it goes too far, have you check quite similar project
which is Argos
Hi,
I am a newbie of QEMU. I want to use the QEMU for the dynamic analysis of
malware, usually called “taint analysis”. The main idea is to tag data from
some specific sources, for example, network packets, files in a harddisk, and
user inputs and so on, and then trace the propagation of the