ILSpy is the open-source .NET assembly browser and decompiler.
Download: latest release | latest CI build (master) | Microsoft Store (RC & RTM versions only)
CI Build Nuget Feed (master): https://ci.appveyor.com/nuget/ilspy-masterfeed
Aside from the WPF UI ILSpy (downloadable via Releases, see also plugins), the following other frontends are available:
- Visual Studio 2017/2019 extension marketplace
- Visual Studio Code Extension repository | marketplace
- ICSharpCode.Decompiler NuGet for your own projects
- Linux/Mac/Windows ILSpy UI based on Avalonia - check out https://github.com/icsharpcode/AvaloniaILSpy
- Linux/Mac/Windows command line client - check out ICSharpCode.Decompiler.Console in this repository
- Linux/Mac/Windows PowerShell cmdlets in this repository
- Decompilation to C#
- Whole-project decompilation (csproj, not sln!)
- Search for types/methods/properties (substring)
- Hyperlink-based type/method/property navigation
- Base/Derived types navigation, history
- BAML to XAML decompiler
- Extensible via plugins (MEF)
- Check out the language support status
ILSpy is distributed under the MIT License. Please see the About doc for details, as well as third party notices for included open-source libraries.
Windows:
- Install Visual Studio (documented version: 16.4) with the following components:
- Workload ".NET Desktop Development". This includes by default .NET Framework 4.8 SDK and the .NET Framework 4.7.2 targeting pack, as well as the .NET Core 3.1 SDK (ILSpy.csproj targets .NET 4.7.2, and ILSpy.sln uses SDK-style projects).
- Workload "Visual Studio extension development" (ILSpy.sln contains a VS extension project)
- Individual Component "MSVC v142 - VS 2019 C++ x64/x86 build tools (v14.23)" (or similar)
- The VC++ toolset is optional; if present it is used for
editbin.exe
to modify the stack size used by ILSpy.exe from 1MB to 16MB, because the decompiler makes heavy use of recursion, where small stack sizes lead to problems in very complex methods.
- The VC++ toolset is optional; if present it is used for
- Check out the ILSpy repository using git.
- Execute
git submodule update --init --recursive
to download the ILSpy-Tests submodule (used by some test cases). - Open ILSpy.sln in Visual Studio.
- NuGet package restore will automatically download further dependencies
- Run project "ILSpy" for the ILSpy UI
- Use the Visual Studio "Test Explorer" to see/run the tests
Note: Visual Studio 16.3 and later include a version of the .NET Core SDK that is managed by the Visual Studio installer - once you update, it may get upgraded too. Please note that ILSpy is only compatible with the .NET Core 3.1 SDK and Visual Studio will refuse to load some projects in the solution (and unit tests will fail). If this problem occurs, please manually install the .NET Core 3.1 SDK from here.
Unix / Mac:
- Make sure .NET Core 2.1 LTS Runtime is installed (you can get it here: https://get.dot.net).
- Make sure .NET Core 3.1 SDK is installed.
- Check out the repository using git.
- Execute
git submodule update --init --recursive
to download the ILSpy-Tests submodule (used by some test cases). - Use
dotnet build Frontends.sln
to build the non-Windows flavors of ILSpy (.NET Core Global Tool and PowerShell Core).
- Report bugs
- If you want to contribute a pull request, please add https://gist.github.com/siegfriedpammer/75700ea61609eb22714d21885e4eb084 to your
.git/hooks
to prevent checking in code with wrong indentation. We use tabs and not spaces. The build server runs the same script, so any pull requests using wrong indentation will fail.
Current and past contributors.
ILSpy does not collect any personally identifiable information, nor does it send user files to 3rd party services. ILSpy does not use any APM (Application Performance Management) service to collect telemetry or metrics.