| name | ghidra-headless |
| description | Reverse engineers binaries using Ghidra's headless analyzer. Use when decompiling executables, extracting functions, strings, symbols, or analyzing call graphs from compiled binaries without the Ghidra GUI. |
| allowed-tools | ["Bash","Read","Grep","Glob"] |
Ghidra Headless Analysis
Perform automated reverse engineering using Ghidra's analyzeHeadless tool.
Import binaries, run analysis, decompile to C code, and extract useful
information.
When to Use
- Decompiling a binary to C pseudocode for review
- Extracting function signatures, strings, or symbols from executables
- Analyzing call graphs to understand binary control flow
- Triaging unknown binaries or firmware images
- Batch-analyzing multiple binaries for comparison
- Security auditing compiled code without source access
When NOT to Use
- Source code is available — read it directly instead
- Interactive debugging is needed — use GDB, LLDB, or Ghidra GUI
- The binary is a .NET assembly — use dnSpy or ILSpy
- The binary is Java bytecode — use jadx or cfr
- Dynamic analysis is required — use a debugger or sandbox
Quick Reference
| Task | Command |
|---|
| Full analysis with all exports | {baseDir}/scripts/ghidra-analyze.sh -s ExportAll.java -o ./output binary |
| Decompile to C code | {baseDir}/scripts/ghidra-analyze.sh -s ExportDecompiled.java -o ./output binary |
| List functions | {baseDir}/scripts/ghidra-analyze.sh -s ExportFunctions.java -o ./output binary |
| Extract strings | {baseDir}/scripts/ghidra-analyze.sh -s ExportStrings.java -o ./output binary |
| Get call graph | {baseDir}/scripts/ghidra-analyze.sh -s ExportCalls.java -o ./output binary |
| Export symbols | {baseDir}/scripts/ghidra-analyze.sh -s ExportSymbols.java -o ./output binary |
| Find Ghidra path | {baseDir}/scripts/find-ghidra.sh |
Prerequisites
- Ghidra must be installed. On macOS:
brew install --cask ghidra
- Java (OpenJDK 17+) must be available
The skill automatically locates Ghidra in common installation paths. Set
GHIDRA_HOME environment variable if Ghidra is installed in a non-standard
location.
Main Wrapper Script
{baseDir}/scripts/ghidra-analyze.sh [options] <binary>
Wrapper that handles project creation/cleanup and provides a simpler
interface to analyzeHeadless.
Options:
-o, --output <dir> — Output directory for results (default: current dir)
-s, --script <name> — Post-analysis script to run (can be repeated)
-a, --script-args <args> — Arguments for the last specified script
--script-path <path> — Additional script search path
-p, --processor <id> — Processor/architecture (e.g., x86:LE:32:default)
-c, --cspec <id> — Compiler spec (e.g., gcc, windows)
--no-analysis — Skip auto-analysis (faster, but less info)
--timeout <seconds> — Analysis timeout per file
--keep-project — Keep the Ghidra project after analysis
--project-dir <dir> — Directory for Ghidra project (default: /tmp)
--project-name <name> — Project name (default: auto-generated)
-v, --verbose — Verbose output
Built-in Export Scripts
ExportAll.java
Runs summary, decompilation, function list, strings, and interesting-pattern
exports. Does not include call graph or symbols — run ExportCalls.java and
ExportSymbols.java separately if needed. Best for initial analysis.
Output files:
{name}_summary.txt — Overview: architecture, memory sections, function counts
{name}_decompiled.c — All functions decompiled to C
{name}_functions.json — Function list with signatures and calls
{name}_strings.txt — All strings found (plain text; use ExportStrings.java for JSON)
{name}_interesting.txt — Functions matching security-relevant patterns
{baseDir}/scripts/ghidra-analyze.sh -s ExportAll.java -o ./analysis firmware.bin
ExportDecompiled.java
Decompile all functions to C pseudocode.
Output: {name}_decompiled.c
ExportFunctions.java
Export function list as JSON with addresses, signatures, parameters, and
call relationships.
Output: {name}_functions.json
ExportStrings.java
Extract all strings (ASCII, Unicode) with addresses.
Output: {name}_strings.json
ExportCalls.java
Export function call graph showing caller/callee relationships. Includes
full call graph, potential entry points, and most frequently called functions.
Output: {name}_calls.json
ExportSymbols.java
Export all symbols: imports, exports, and internal symbols.
Output: {name}_symbols.json
Common Workflows
Analyze an Unknown Binary
mkdir -p ./analysis
{baseDir}/scripts/ghidra-analyze.sh -s ExportAll.java -o ./analysis unknown_binary
cat ./analysis/unknown_binary_summary.txt
cat ./analysis/unknown_binary_interesting.txt
Analyze Firmware
{baseDir}/scripts/ghidra-analyze.sh \
-p "ARM:LE:32:v7" \
-s ExportAll.java \
-o ./firmware_analysis \
firmware.bin
Quick Function Listing
{baseDir}/scripts/ghidra-analyze.sh --no-analysis -s ExportFunctions.java -o . program
cat program_functions.json | jq '.functions[] | "\(.address): \(.name)"'
Find Specific Patterns
grep -n "password\|secret\|key" output_decompiled.c
grep -n "strcpy\|sprintf\|gets" output_decompiled.c
Architecture/Processor IDs
Common processor IDs for the -p option:
| Architecture | Processor ID |
|---|
| x86 32-bit | x86:LE:32:default |
| x86 64-bit | x86:LE:64:default |
| ARM 32-bit | ARM:LE:32:v7 |
| ARM 64-bit | AARCH64:LE:64:v8A |
| MIPS 32-bit | MIPS:BE:32:default or MIPS:LE:32:default |
| PowerPC | PowerPC:BE:32:default |
Troubleshooting
Ghidra Not Found
{baseDir}/scripts/find-ghidra.sh
export GHIDRA_HOME=/path/to/ghidra_11.x_PUBLIC
Analysis Takes Too Long
{baseDir}/scripts/ghidra-analyze.sh --timeout 300 -s ExportAll.java binary
{baseDir}/scripts/ghidra-analyze.sh --no-analysis -s ExportSymbols.java binary
Out of Memory
Set before running:
export MAXMEM=4G
Wrong Architecture Detected
Explicitly specify the processor:
{baseDir}/scripts/ghidra-analyze.sh -p "ARM:LE:32:v7" -s ExportAll.java firmware.bin
Tips
- Start with ExportAll.java — gives everything; the summary helps orient
- Check interesting.txt — highlights security-relevant functions automatically
- Use jq for JSON parsing — JSON exports are designed to be machine-readable
- Decompilation isn't perfect — use as a guide, cross-reference with disassembly
- Large binaries take time — use
--timeout and consider --no-analysis for quick scans