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post Obfuscating "Hello world!" Fun with functional programming in Python.

A few months ago, I got first place in this Code Golf contest to create the weirdest obfuscated program that prints the string “Hello world!". I decided to write up an explanation of how the hell it works. So, here’s the entry, in Python 2.7:

{% highlight python linenos=table %}

(lambda _, , , ____, , , ______, ________: getattr( import(True.class.name[] + [].class.name[]), ().class.eq.class.name[:] + ().iter().class.name[:_] )( _, (lambda _, __, ___: (, __, ___))( lambda _, __, : chr( % __) + (, __, ___ // __) if ___ else (lambda: _).func_code.co_lnotab, _ « ___, ((( « __) + ) « (( « ____) - )) + ((((( « ) - ) « ) + ) « (( « ) + ( « ))) + ((( « _) - ) « ((((( « ) + )) « ) + ( « ))) + ((( « ) + ) « (( « ) + )) + ((( « ) - ) « (( « ))) + ((( « ) - ) « (((( « ) + ) « ) - )) - ( « (((( « ) - ) « ) + )) + ( « ((((( « ___) + _)) « _))) - (((((( « ) + )) « ) + ) « (((( « ) + ) « ))) + ((( « ) - ) « ((((( « ) + )) « ))) + ((( « ) + ) « (( « ))) + ( « _____) + ( « ___) ) ) )( *(lambda _, __, ___: (, __, ___))( (lambda _, , : [([(lambda: _).func_code.co_nlocals])] + (, __, ___[(lambda _: _).func_code.co_nlocals:]) if ___ else [] ), lambda _: _.func_code.co_argcount, ( lambda _: _, lambda _, __: _, lambda _, __, ___: _, lambda _, __, ___, ____: _, lambda _, __, ___, ____, _____: _, lambda _, __, ___, ____, _____, ______: _, lambda _, __, ___, ____, _____, ______, _______: _, lambda _, __, ___, ____, _____, ______, _______, ________: _ ) ) )

{% endhighlight %}

String literals weren’t allowed, but I set some other restrictions for fun: it had to be a single expression (so no print statement) with minimal builtin usage and no integer literals.

Getting started

Since we can’t use print, we can write to the stdout file object:

{% highlight python %}

import sys sys.stdout.write(“Hello world!\n”)

{% endhighlight %}

But let’s use something lower-level: os.write(). We need stdout's file descriptor, which is 1 (you can check with print sys.stdout.fileno()).

{% highlight python %}

import os os.write(1, “Hello world!\n”)

{% endhighlight %}

We want a single expression, so we’ll use __import__():

{% highlight python %}

import(“os”).write(1, “Hello world!\n”)

{% endhighlight %}

We also want to be able to obfuscate the write(), so we’ll throw in a getattr():

{% highlight python %}

getattr(import(“os”), “write”)(1, “Hello world!\n”)

{% endhighlight %}

This is the starting point. Everything from now on will be obfuscating the three strings and the int.

Stringing together strings

"os" and "write" are fairly simple, so we’ll create them by joining parts of the names of various built-in classes. There are many different ways to do this, but I chose the following:

  • "o" from the second letter of bool: True.__class__.__name__[1]
  • "s" from the third letter of list: [].__class__.__name__[2]
  • "wr" from the first two letters of wrapper_descriptor, an implementation detail in CPython found as the type of some builtin classes’ methods (more on that here): ().__class__.__eq__.__class__.__name__[:2]
  • "ite" from the sixth through eighth letters of tupleiterator, the type of object returned by calling iter() on a tuple: ().__iter__().__class__.__name__[5:8]

We’re starting to make some progress!

{% highlight python linenos=table %}

getattr( import(True.class.name[1] + [].class.name[2]), ().class.eq.class.name[:2] + ().iter().class.name[5:8] )(1, “Hello world!\n”)

{% endhighlight %}

"Hello world!\n" is more complicated. We’re going to encode it as a big integer, which will be formed of the ASCII code of each character multiplied by 256 to the power of the character’s index in the string. In other words, the following series:

$$\sum_{n=0}^{L-1} c_n(256^n)$$

where \(L\) is the length of the string and \(c_n\) is the ASCII code of the \(n\)th character in the string. To create the number:

{% highlight pycon %}

codes = [ord(c) for c in “Hello world!\n”] num = sum(codes[i] * 256 ** i for i in xrange(len(codes))) print num 802616035175250124568770929992

{% endhighlight %}

Now we need the code to convert this number back into a string. We use a simple recursive algorithm:

{% highlight pycon %}

def convert(num): ... if num: ... return chr(num % 256) + convert(num // 256) ... else: ... return "” ... convert(802616035175250124568770929992) ‘Hello world!\n’

{% endhighlight %}

Rewriting in one line with lambda:

{% highlight python %}

convert = lambda num: chr(num % 256) + convert(num // 256) if num else "”

{% endhighlight %}

Now we use anonymous recursion to turn this into a single expression. This requires a combinator. Start with this:

{% highlight pycon %}

comb = lambda f, n: f(f, n) convert = lambda f, n: chr(n % 256) + f(f, n // 256) if n else "” comb(convert, 802616035175250124568770929992) ‘Hello world!\n’

{% endhighlight %}

Now we just substitute the two definitions into the expression, and we have our function:

{% highlight pycon %}

(lambda f, n: f(f, n))( ... lambda f, n: chr(n % 256) + f(f, n // 256) if n else “", ... 802616035175250124568770929992) ‘Hello world!\n’

{% endhighlight %}

Now we can stick this into our code from before, replacing some variable names along the way (f_, n__):

{% highlight python linenos=table %}

getattr( import(True.class.name[1] + [].class.name[2]), ().class.eq.class.name[:2] + ().iter().class.name[5:8] )( 1, (lambda _, __: (, __))( lambda _, : chr( % 256) + (, __ // 256) if __ else “", 802616035175250124568770929992 ) )

{% endhighlight %}

Function internals

We’re left with a "" in the body of our convert function (remember: no string literals!), and a large number that we’ll have to hide somehow. Let’s start with the empty string. We can make one on the fly by examining the internals of some random function:

{% highlight pycon %}

(lambda: 0).func_code.co_lnotab '’

{% endhighlight %}

What we’re really doing here is looking at the line number table of the code object contained within the function. Since it’s anonymous, there are no line numbers, so the string is empty. Replace the 0 with _ to make it more confusing (it doesn’t matter, since the function’s not being called), and stick it in. We’ll also refactor out the 256 into an argument that gets passed to our obfuscated convert() along with the number. This requires adding an argument to the combinator:

{% highlight python linenos=table %}

getattr( import(True.class.name[1] + [].class.name[2]), ().class.eq.class.name[:2] + ().iter().class.name[5:8] )( 1, (lambda _, __, ___: (, __, ___))( lambda _, __, : chr( % __) + (, __, ___ // __) if ___ else (lambda: _).func_code.co_lnotab, 256, 802616035175250124568770929992 ) )

{% endhighlight %}

A detour

Let’s tackle a different problem for a bit. We want a way to obfuscate the numbers in our code, but it’ll be cumbersome (and not particularly interesting) to recreate them each time they’re used. If we can implement, say, range(1, 9) == [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8], then we can wrap our current work in a function that takes variables containing the numbers from 1 to 8, and replace occurrences of integer literals in the body with these variables:

{% highlight python linenos=table %}

(lambda n1, n2, n3, n4, n5, n6, n7, n8: getattr( import(True.class.name[n1] + [].class.name[n2]), ... )( ... ) )(*range(1, 9))

{% endhighlight %}

Even though we need to form 256 and 802616035175250124568770929992 as well, these can be created using arithmetic operations on these eight “fundamental” numbers. The choice of 1–8 is arbitrary, but seems to be a good middle ground.

We can get the number of arguments a function takes via its code object:

{% highlight pycon %}

(lambda a, b, c: 0).func_code.co_argcount 3

{% endhighlight %}

Build a tuple of functions with argcounts between 1 and 8:

{% highlight python linenos=table %}

funcs = ( lambda _: _, lambda _, __: _, lambda _, __, ___: _, lambda _, __, ___, ____: _, lambda _, __, ___, ____, _____: _, lambda _, __, ___, ____, _____, ______: _, lambda _, __, ___, ____, _____, ______, _______: _, lambda _, __, ___, ____, _____, ______, _______, ________: _ )

{% endhighlight %}

Using a recursive algorithm, we can turn this into the output of range(1, 9):

{% highlight pycon %}

def convert(L): ... if L: ... return [L[0].func_code.co_argcount] + convert(L[1:]) ... else: ... return [] ... convert(funcs) [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]

{% endhighlight %}

As before, we convert this into lambda form:

{% highlight python %}

convert = lambda L: [L[0].func_code.co_argcount] + convert(L[1:]) if L else []

{% endhighlight %}

Then, into anonymous-recursive form:

{% highlight pycon %}

(lambda f, L: f(f, L))( ... lambda f, L: [L[0].func_code.co_argcount] + f(f, L[1:]) if L else [], ... funcs) [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]

{% endhighlight %}

For fun, we’ll factor out argcount operation into an additional function argument, and obfuscate some variable names:

{% highlight python linenos=table %}

(lambda _, __, ___: (, __, ___))( (lambda _, , : [([0])] + (, __, ___[1:]) if ___ else [] ), lambda _: _.func_code.co_argcount, funcs )

{% endhighlight %}

There’s a new problem now: we still need a way to hide 0 and 1. We can get these by examining the number of local variables within arbitrary functions:

{% highlight pycon %}

(lambda: _).func_code.co_nlocals 0 (lambda _: _).func_code.co_nlocals 1

{% endhighlight %}

Even though the function bodies look the same, _ in the first function is not an argument, nor is it defined in the function, so Python interprets it as a global variable:

{% highlight pycon %}

import dis dis.dis(lambda: ) 1 0 LOAD_GLOBAL 0 () 3 RETURN_VALUE dis.dis(lambda _: ) 1 0 LOAD_FAST 0 () 3 RETURN_VALUE

{% endhighlight %}

This happens regardless of whether _ is actually defined in the global scope.

Putting this into practice:

{% highlight python linenos=table %}

(lambda _, __, ___: (, __, ___))( (lambda _, , : [([(lambda: _).func_code.co_nlocals])] + (, __, ___[(lambda _: _).func_code.co_nlocals:]) if ___ else [] ), lambda _: _.func_code.co_argcount, funcs )

{% endhighlight %}

Now we can substitute the value of funcs in, and then using * to pass the resulting list of integers as eight separate variables, we get this:

{% highlight python linenos=table %}

(lambda n1, n2, n3, n4, n5, n6, n7, n8: getattr( import(True.class.name[n1] + [].class.name[n2]), ().class.eq.class.name[:n2] + ().iter().class.name[n5:n8] )( n1, (lambda _, __, ___: (, __, ___))( lambda _, __, : chr( % __) + (, __, ___ // __) if ___ else (lambda: _).func_code.co_lnotab, 256, 802616035175250124568770929992 ) ) )( *(lambda _, __, ___: (, __, ___))( (lambda _, , : [([(lambda: _).func_code.co_nlocals])] + (, __, ___[(lambda _: _).func_code.co_nlocals:]) if ___ else [] ), lambda _: _.func_code.co_argcount, ( lambda _: _, lambda _, __: _, lambda _, __, ___: _, lambda _, __, ___, ____: _, lambda _, __, ___, ____, _____: _, lambda _, __, ___, ____, _____, ______: _, lambda _, __, ___, ____, _____, ______, _______: _, lambda _, __, ___, ____, _____, ______, _______, ________: _ ) ) )

{% endhighlight %}

Shifting bits

Almost there! We’ll replace the n{1..8} variables with _, __, ___, ____, etc., since it creates confusion with the variables used in our inner functions. This doesn’t cause actual problems, since scoping rules mean the right ones will be used. This is also one of the reasons why we refactored 256 out to where _ refers to 1 instead of our obfuscated convert() function. It’s getting long, so I’ll paste only the first half:

{% highlight python linenos=table %}

(lambda _, , , ____, , , ______, ________: getattr( import(True.class.name[] + [].class.name[]), ().class.eq.class.name[:] + ().iter().class.name[:_] )( _, (lambda _, __, ___: (, __, ___))( lambda _, __, : chr( % __) + (, __, ___ // __) if ___ else (lambda: _).func_code.co_lnotab, 256, 802616035175250124568770929992 ) ) )

{% endhighlight %}

Only two more things are left. We’ll start with the easy one: 256. \(256 = 2^8\), so we can rewrite it as 1 << 8 (using a left bit shift), or _ << ________ with our obfuscated variables.

We’ll use the same idea with 802616035175250124568770929992. A simple divide-and-conquer algorithm can break it up into sums of numbers which are themselves sums of numbers that are shifted together, and so on. For example, if we had 112, we could break it up into 96 + 16 and then (3 << 5) + (2 << 3). I like using bit shifts because the << reminds me of std::cout << "foo" in C++, or print chevron (print >>) in Python, both of which are red herrings involving other ways of doing I/O.

The number can be decomposed in a variety of ways; no one method is correct (after all, we could just break it up into (1 << 0) + (1 << 0) + ..., but that’s not interesting). We should have some substantial amount of nesting, but still use most of our numerical variables. Obviously, doing this by hand isn’t fun, so we’ll come up with an algorithm. In pseudocode:

{% highlight text linenos=table %}

func encode(num): if num <= 8: return “_” * num else: return “(” + convert(num) + “)”

func convert(num): base = shift = 0 diff = num span = ... for test_base in range(span): for test_shift in range(span): test_diff = |num| - (test_base « test_shift) if |test_diff| < |diff|: diff = test_diff base = test_base shift = test_shift encoded = “(” + encode(base) + " « " + encode(shift) + “)” if diff == 0: return encoded else: return encoded + " + " + convert(diff)

convert(802616035175250124568770929992)

{% endhighlight %}

The basic idea here is that we test various combinations of numbers in a certain range until we come up with two numbers, base and shift, such that base << shift is as closest to num as possible (i.e. we minimize their absolute difference, diff). We then use our divide-and-conquer algorithm to break up best_base and best_shift, and then repeat the procedure on diff until it reaches zero, summing the terms along the way.

The argument to range(), span, represents the width of the search space. This can’t be too large, or we’ll end getting num as our base and 0 as our shift (because diff is zero), and since base can’t be represented as a single variable, it’ll repeat, recursing infinitely. If it’s too small, we’ll end up with something like the (1 << 0) + (1 << 0) + ... mentioned above. In practice, we want span to get smaller as the recursion depth increases. Through trial and error, I found this equation to work well:

$$\mathit{span} = \lceil\log_{1.5} \lvert{\mathit{num}}\lvert\rceil + \lfloor2^{4-\mathit{depth}}\rfloor$$

Translating the pseudocode into Python and making some tweaks (support for the depth argument, and some caveats involving negative numbers), we get this:

{% highlight python linenos=table %}

from math import ceil, log

def encode(num, depth): if num == 0: return “_ - _” if num <= 8: return “_” * num return “(” + convert(num, depth + 1) + “)”

def convert(num, depth=0): result = "” while num: base = shift = 0 diff = num span = int(ceil(log(abs(num), 1.5))) + (16 » depth) for test_base in xrange(span): for test_shift in xrange(span): test_diff = abs(num) - (test_base « test_shift) if abs(test_diff) < abs(diff): diff = test_diff base = test_base shift = test_shift if result: result += " + " if num > 0 else " - " elif num < 0: base = -base if shift == 0: result += encode(base, depth) else: result += “(%s « %s)” % (encode(base, depth), encode(shift, depth)) num = diff if num > 0 else -diff return result

{% endhighlight %}

Now, when we call convert(802616035175250124568770929992), we get a nice decomposition:

{% highlight pycon %}

convert(802616035175250124568770929992) (((_____ « ____) + _) « ((___ « _____) - ___)) + (((((___ « __) - _) « ___) + _) « ((_____ « ____) + (_ « _))) + (((_______ « __) - _) « (((((_ « ___) + _)) « ___) + (_ « _))) + (((_______ « ___) + _) « ((_ « ______) + _)) + (((_______ « ____) - _) « ((_______ « ___))) + (((_ « ____) - _) « ((((___ « __) + _) « __) - _)) - (_______ « ((((___ « __) - _) « __) + _)) + (_______ « (((((_ « ___) + _)) « __))) - ((((((_ « ___) + _)) « __) + _) « ((((___ « __) + _) « _))) + (((_______ « __) - _) « (((((_ « ___) + _)) « _))) + (((___ « ___) + _) « ((_____ « _))) + (_____ « ______) + (_ « ___)

{% endhighlight %}

Stick this in as a replacement for 802616035175250124568770929992, and put all the parts together:

{% highlight python linenos=table %}

(lambda _, , , ____, , , ______, ________: getattr( import(True.class.name[] + [].class.name[]), ().class.eq.class.name[:] + ().iter().class.name[:_] )( _, (lambda _, __, ___: (, __, ___))( lambda _, __, : chr( % __) + (, __, ___ // __) if ___ else (lambda: _).func_code.co_lnotab, _ « ___, ((( « __) + ) « (( « ____) - )) + ((((( « ) - ) « ) + ) « (( « ) + ( « ))) + ((( « _) - ) « ((((( « ) + )) « ) + ( « ))) + ((( « ) + ) « (( « ) + )) + ((( « ) - ) « (( « ))) + ((( « ) - ) « (((( « ) + ) « ) - )) - ( « (((( « ) - ) « ) + )) + ( « ((((( « ___) + _)) « _))) - (((((( « ) + )) « ) + ) « (((( « ) + ) « ))) + ((( « ) - ) « ((((( « ) + )) « ))) + ((( « ) + ) « (( « ))) + ( « _____) + ( « ___) ) ) )( *(lambda _, __, ___: (, __, ___))( (lambda _, , : [([(lambda: _).func_code.co_nlocals])] + (, __, ___[(lambda _: _).func_code.co_nlocals:]) if ___ else [] ), lambda _: _.func_code.co_argcount, ( lambda _: _, lambda _, __: _, lambda _, __, ___: _, lambda _, __, ___, ____: _, lambda _, __, ___, ____, _____: _, lambda _, __, ___, ____, _____, ______: _, lambda _, __, ___, ____, _____, ______, _______: _, lambda _, __, ___, ____, _____, ______, _______, ________: _ ) ) )

{% endhighlight %}

And there you have it.