Code structure
--------------

Capstone source is organized as followings.

.                   <- core engine + README + COMPILE.TXT etc
├── arch            <- code handling disasm engine for each arch
│   ├── AArch64     <- AArch64 engine
│   ├── Alpha       <- Alpha engine
│   ├── ARM         <- ARM engine
│   ├── BPF         <- Berkeley Packet Filter engine
│   ├── EVM         <- Ethereum engine
│   ├── M680X       <- M680X engine
│   ├── M68K        <- M68K engine
│   ├── Mips        <- Mips engine
│   ├── MOS65XX     <- MOS65XX engine
│   ├── PowerPC     <- PowerPC engine
│   ├── RISCV       <- RISCV engine
│   ├── SH          <- SH engine
│   ├── Sparc       <- Sparc engine
│   ├── SystemZ     <- SystemZ engine
│   ├── TMS320C64x  <- TMS320C64x engine
│   ├── TriCore     <- TriCore engine
│   └── WASM        <- WASM engine
├── bindings        <- all bindings are under this dir
│   ├── java        <- Java bindings + test code
│   ├── ocaml       <- Ocaml bindings + test code
│   └── python      <- Python bindings + test code
├── contrib         <- Code contributed by community to help Capstone integration
├── cstool          <- Cstool
├── docs            <- Documentation
├── include         <- API headers in C language (*.h)
├── msvc            <- Microsoft Visual Studio support (for Windows compile)
├── packages        <- Packages for Linux/OSX/BSD.
├── windows         <- Windows support (for Windows kernel driver compile)
├── suite           <- Development test tools - for Capstone developers only
├── tests           <- Test code (in C language)
└── xcode           <- Xcode support (for MacOSX compile)


Follow the instructions in COMPILE.TXT for how to compile and run test code.

Note: if you find some strange bugs, it is recommended to firstly clean
the code and try to recompile/reinstall again. This can be done with:

	$ ./make.sh
	$ sudo ./make.sh install

Then test Capstone with cstool, for example:

	$ cstool x32 "90 91"

At the same time, for Java/Ocaml/Python bindings, be sure to always use
the bindings coming with the core to avoid potential incompatibility issue
with older versions.
See bindings/<language>/README for detail instructions on how to compile &
install the bindings.


Coding style
------------
- C code follows Linux kernel coding style, using tabs for indentation.
- Python code uses 4 spaces for indentation.

Updating an Architecture
------------------------

The update tool for Capstone is called `auto-sync` and can be found in `suite/auto-sync`.

Not all architectures are supported yet.
Run `suite/auto-sync/Updater/ASUpdater.py -h` to get a list of currently supported architectures.

The documentation how to update with `auto-sync` or refactor an architecture module
can be found in [docs/AutoSync.md](docs/AutoSync.md).

If a module does not support `auto-sync` yet, it is highly recommended to refactor it
instead of attempting to update it manually.
Refactoring will take less time and updates it during the procedure.

The one exception is `x86`. In LLVM we use several emitter backends to generate C code.
One of those LLVM backends (the `DecoderEmitter`) has two versions.
One for `x86` and another for all the other architectures.
Until now it was not worth it to refactoring this unique `x86` backend. So `x86` is not
supported currently.

Adding an architecture
----------------------

If your architecture is supported in LLVM or one of its forks, you can use `auto-sync` to
add the new module.

<!-- TODO: Move this info to the auto-sync docs -->

Obviously, you first need to write all the logic and put it in a new directory arch/newarch
Then, you have to modify other files.
(You can look for one architecture such as EVM in these files to get what you need to do)

Integrate:
- cs.c
- cstool/cstool.c
- cstool/cstool_newarch.c: print the architecture specific details
- include/capstone/capstone.h
- include/capstone/newarch.h: create this file to export all specifics about the new architecture

Compile:
- CMakeLists.txt
- Makefile
- config.mk

Tests:
- tests/Makefile
- tests/test_basic.c
- tests/test_detail.c
- tests/test_iter.c
- tests/test_newarch.c
- suite/fuzz/platform.c: add the architecture and its modes to the list of fuzzed platforms
- suite/capstone_get_setup.c
- suite/MC/newarch/mode.mc: samples
- suite/test_corpus.py: correspondence between architecture and mode as text and architecture number for fuzzing

Bindings:
- bindings/Makefile
- bindings/const_generator.py: add the header file and the architecture
- bindings/python/Makefile
- bindings/python/capstone/__init__.py
- bindings/python/capstone/newarch.py: define the python structures
- bindings/python/capstone/newarch_const.py: generate this file
- bindings/python/test_newarch.py: create a basic decoding test
- bindings/python/test_all.py

Docs:
- README.md
- HACK.txt
- CREDITS.txt: add your name
