Thursday, March 28, 2013

Decompiling Android By Godfrey Nolan

Decompiling Android By Godfrey Nolan

Authors Year Pages Publisher Dimensions, inch. File type Size, Mb First 20 pages
Godfrey Nolan 2012 296 Apress; 1 edition 7.5х11 PDF 5 First 20 pages


Book Description
Decompiling Android looks at the the reason why Android apps can be decompiled to recover their source code, what it means to Android developers and how you can protect your code from prying eyes. This is also a good way to see how good and bad Android apps are constructed and how to learn from them in building your own apps.

This is becoming an increasingly important topic as the Android marketplace grows and developers are unwittingly releasing the apps with lots of back doors allowing people to potentially obtain credit card information and database logins to back-end systems, as they don’t realize how easy it is to decompile their Android code.      

  • In depth examination of the Java and Android class file structures
  • Tools and techniques for decompiling Android apps
  • Tools and techniques for protecting your Android apps

What you’ll learn

  • How to download an Android app and decompile it into its original Java source and HTML5 and CSS code
  • How to protect your Android apps so that others cannot decompile it
  • To identify potential security threats that currently exist and how to avoid them  
  • What tools are available to decompile and protect Android apps
  • The structure of a Java Classfile and an Android classfile
  • How the standard JVM and the Dalvik JVM differ
  • How to create your own Android decompiler and obfuscator

Who this book is for
This book is for Android developers and their managers. It's also for hackers and hobbyist types who wish to see how Android apps are constructed as a means of learning how to build Android apps.

Table of Contents

  1. Laying the Groundwork
  2. Ghost in the Machine 
  3. Inside the DEX File
  4. Tools of the Trade
  5. Decompiler Design
  6. Decompiler Implementation
  7. Case Studies
Detailed explanation: ID 10016



About the Author
Godfrey Nolan is president of RIIS LLC, where he specializes in website optimization. He has written numerous articles for magazines and newspapers in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Ireland. Nolan has had a healthy obsession with reverse engineering bytecode since he wrote Decompile Once, Run Anywhere, which first appeared in Web Techniques in September 1997.
Detailed explanation: ID 10016

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