[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"branding":3,"analytics":7,"article-capstone-adds-multiarchitecture-support-in-new-release":10},{"siteName":4,"siteTagline":5,"publisherName":4,"contactEmail":6},"The Revision","Tech news, decoded.","editor@therevision.news",{"gaMeasurementId":8,"adsenseClientId":9},"G-ZW2MV82GYR","ca-pub-8533917693782264",{"article":11},{"id":12,"slug":13,"title":14,"dek":15,"body_md":16,"tags_json":17,"published_at":18,"created_at":19,"updated_at":20,"status":21,"review_note":22,"review_notes":23,"image_url":22,"persona_id":22,"persona_name":22,"section":22,"tags":24,"sources":28,"feedback":32,"feedback_at":22,"cost_usd":32,"total_tokens":32},250,"capstone-adds-multiarchitecture-support-in-new-release","Capstone adds multi‑architecture support in new release","The open‑source disassembly framework now handles ARM, RISC‑V and x86 on Windows, macOS and Linux.","Capstone announced a fresh build on June 3, 2026, expanding its disassembly engine to cover ARM, RISC‑V and x86 binaries across Windows, macOS and Linux.\n\nThe update ships as a drop‑in library, keeping the same API while adding new instruction tables and compiler‑friendly binaries. The project’s website lists the download and a short changelog, but no detailed release notes beyond the architecture list.\n\nDevelopers who need to inspect compiled code in heterogeneous environments can now rely on a single toolkit instead of juggling several parsers. That reduces integration friction for security tools, emulators and reverse‑engineering scripts.\n\nCapstone has been a staple in the reverse‑engineering community for years; this broadened support keeps it relevant as ARM and RISC‑V gain ground in servers and IoT devices.","[\"disassembly\",\"open-source\",\"security\"]","2026-06-03T01:59:46.000Z","2026-06-03T03:43:13.379Z","2026-06-05T16:22:29.821Z","published",null,[],[25,26,27],"disassembly","open-source","security",[29],{"name":30,"url":31},"Hacker News","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.capstone-engine.org\u002F",0]