Tool comparison
UltraEdit by IDM Computer Solutions is a veteran commercial text editor that also includes a full hex-editing mode, letting users switch between text and byte views of the same file. It handles very large files, offers powerful search-and-replace including regular expressions, column editing, and scripting/macros for automating repetitive changes. In tuning and firmware contexts it is used to view and edit binary reads in hex, search for byte or ASCII signatures such as ECU identifiers and software numbers, and script bulk edits across files. While not a dedicated reverse-engineering suite, its blend of robust text tooling and a capable hex mode makes it a practical everyday editor for people who work across scripts, logs, and binaries. It runs on Windows, macOS, and Linux.
XirDecoder is a specialist utility used in the chip-tuning community to decode, decompress and unpack raw ECU firmware images so their calibration data becomes readable and editable in map editors. It targets ECUs whose flash content is stored in a packed or transformed layout, converting the dump into a linear image suitable for tools such as WinOLS. Tuners run it as a pre-processing step before locating injection, boost, torque and emissions maps. Because it works purely at the binary level, it sits alongside hex editors and checksum utilities rather than diagnostic scanners. It is a niche reverse-engineering aid, not a flashing device, so it never reads from or writes to an ECU itself.
UltraEdit (Hex Editor / Reverse Engineering, IDM Computer Solutions) and XirDecoder (Hex Editor / Reverse Engineering) compete in the same space, so the choice comes down to coverage, workflow and price for your specific ECUs. Text and hex editor with a column-mode hex view for binary files Utility for decoding and unpacking ECU firmware so maps become editable
Whichever you flash with, Softechpro Solutions auto-applies DPF/EGR/AdBlue/DTC-off modules and Stage patterns with automatic checksum correction across ~1,400 firmwares on Windows & macOS — the fast way to get the actual file edits done.
See SoftechproMore on UltraEdit