msdocviewer
is a simple tool for viewing Microsoft’s win32 API and driver technical documentation. msdocviewer
consists of two parts.
The first is a parser (run_me_first.py
) that searches for all markdown files in the Microsoft sdk-api and driver repository, it then checks if the document is related to a function and if so, it copies the document to a directory and then renames the file with their corresponding API name.
For example, the file nf-fileapi-createfilea.md
is renamed to CreateFileA.md
. The second part is a markdown viewer that exists within an IDA plugin (ida_plugin/msdocviewida.py
) that displays the document in IDA. An example of the output can be seen below.
msdocviewer
is similar to the old MSDN IDA viewers but doesn’t rely on browsers, network requests or extracting the documents from a Visual Studio SDK.
Since Microsoft started storing their API documents in Markdown and hosting them on GitHub, all the documents can be easily downloaded by cloning a repository.
This is super useful because it is easy to copy the repositories to a portable drive or have them in a VM or host that doesn’t have network access.
It should also make it easy to port this code to other tools (e.g. Binary Ninja, Ghidra, etc).
Note
The .git
log for the sdk-api
and driver
repository takes up over 2GB of space. Deleting these files or their downloaded repositories does not affect the usage of the plugin because all of the needed files are saved to the apis_md
directory.
Installation
Clone this repository. Note: Since the repository is using submodules it might take some time to download. The Microsoft sdk-api repository is over 1GB in size.
git clone https://github.com/alexander-hanel/msdocsviewer.git
If sdk-api
or windows-driver-docs-ddi
are empty, the following commands needs to be executed
cd msdocsviewer
git submodule update --init --recursive
If the above command errors out, execute it again.
Once downloaded, execute python run_me_first.py
then wait. Below is an example output.
python.exe c:/Users/Admin/Documents/repo/msdocsviewer/run_me_first_copy.py
INFO - deleting and overwriting apis_md directory
INFO - creating apis_md directory at C:\Users\Admin\Documents\repo\msdocsviewer\apis_md
INFO - starting the parsing, this can take a few minutes
INFO - parsing C:\Users\Admin\Documents\repo\msdocsviewer\sdk-api\sdk-api-src\content
INFO - parsing C:\Users\Admin\Documents\repo\msdocsviewer\sdk-api\sdk-api-src\content completed
INFO - parsing C:\Users\Admin\Documents\repo\msdocsviewer\windows-driver-docs-ddi\wdk-ddi-src\content
INFO - parsing C:\Users\Admin\Documents\repo\msdocsviewer\windows-driver-docs-ddi\wdk-ddi-src\content completed
INFO - finished parsing, if using IDA add path C:\Users\Admin\Documents\repo\msdocsviewer\apis_md to API_MD variable in idaplugin/msdocviewida.py
To update (recommended) the documention, execute the following command
python.exe c:/Users/Admin/Documents/repo/msdocsviewer/run_me_first_copy.py --overwrite
There is also an option of --log
to create a debug log to see all skipped files. Here is the help for run_me_first_copy
usage: run_me_first_copy.py [-h] [-l] [-o]
msdocviewer parser component
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-l, --log Log all parsing errors to debug-parser.log
-o, --overwrite overwrite apis_md directory
Edit ida_plugin/msdocviewida.py
and add the directory path of apis_md
to the API_MD
variable (currently on line 19ish).
Then copy msdocviewida.py
to the IDA
plugin directory. The following idapython command can be executed to find the plugin directory path.
Python>import ida_diskio
Python>ida_diskio.get_user_idadir()
'C:\\Users\\Admin\\AppData\\Roaming\\Hex-Rays\\IDA Pro'
If a directory named plugins
is not present, it needs to be created.
Requirements
pyaml
– strangely the yaml data can also be parsed as a markdown table