Luac Decompiler 〈Hot - 2025〉
| Technique | Effect on Decompiler | |-----------|----------------------| | Stripping debug info ( luac -s ) | Loss of local variable names – annoying but not fatal. | | Control flow flattening | Produces irreducible CFG; many decompilers crash or output garbled logic. | | Custom VM/opcodes | Standard decompilers fail entirely; requires reverse engineering the custom loader. | | String encryption (XOR, AES) | Output shows decryption calls instead of literals. | | Dead code & opaque predicates | Decompiler may output nonsense or infinite loops. | | Using luac from modified Lua versions (e.g., LuaJIT, LuaU) | Bytecode incompatible; decompiler must be updated. |
function factorial(n) if n <= 1 then return 1 else return n * factorial(n - 1) end end print(factorial(5)) Perfect recovery despite stripping. Local variable name n is preserved? No – unluac inferred it from the GETLOCAL instruction's register mapping, but the name n is actually generic. However, because the function parameter name is not stored, unluac defaults to the name given in the prototype's local list (which is empty). Wait — the output above shows n . In reality, stripped bytecode loses all local names; the decompiler would output function factorial(arg0) or function factorial(local_1) . Correction: The example above is idealized. Actual stripped output would be: luac decompiler
Report ID: CS-SRE-0426 Subject: Reversing Lua Bytecode ( luac output) Date: April 14, 2026 Author: AI Research & Analysis Unit 1. Executive Summary This report investigates the ecosystem of decompilers targeting the Lua programming language, specifically the bytecode format generated by the standard luac compiler. Decompilation—the process of translating low-level bytecode back into high-level source code—is a critical tool for software maintenance, legacy system recovery, and security auditing. However, for Lua, it presents unique challenges due to the language's dynamic nature, rapid evolution of its virtual machine (VM), and the intentional or unintentional loss of high-level information during compilation. | | String encryption (XOR, AES) | Output
