2

The ReadProcessMemory function of kernel32.dll appears to be returning Unicode.

kernel32 = ctypes.windll.kernel32
PROCESS_QUERY_INFORMATION = 0x0400
PROCESS_VM_READ = 0x0010

pid = int(raw_input("Enter PID: "))
hproc = kernel32.OpenProcess(PROCESS_QUERY_INFORMATION |PROCESS_VM_READ, False, pid)
lpbaseaddr = 16799644
read_buff = ctypes.create_string_buffer(4)
bytread = ctypes.c_ulong(0)
kernel32.ReadProcessMemory(hproc, lpbaseaddr, read_buff,
                               4, ctypes.byref(bytread))
print read_buff.raw #i also tried read_buff.value

I know the value at that address is 80 because I used cheat engine to make it 80. The print read_buff line returns P. If I make the value of that address 81 with cheat engine and run my program it returns the value Q. I have been messing around and unichr(80) returns P and unichr(81) returns Q. There is obviously a problem with create_string_buff. Should I be using a byte buffer or integer buffer and how would I do that? Using unichr() works for a few values but say the address value is 800, unichr(800) obviously won't work. I'm looking for read_buff to return 50 or 60 or 800, etc.

1 Answer 1

5

It is not returning Unicode, but four bytes as a string (probably '\x80\x00\x00\x00') Pass a pointer to an integer not a string buffer:

read_buff = ctypes.c_uint()
kernel32.ReadProcessMemory(hproc, lpbaseaddr, ctypes.byref(read_buff),
                           ctypes.sizeof(read_buff), ctypes.byref(bytread))
print read_buff.value
5
  • thank you so much mark it worked perfectly, thats exactly the answer i was looking for :) one last question tho, the read_buff = ctypes.c_uint() will that hold any size variable? unlike the string buffer where i had to specify 4 bytes long etc.. thanks again for the fast reply
    – james
    Oct 30, 2010 at 10:11
  • ok one last question.. say i wanted to return that byte string. eg "\x80\x00\x00\x00". what pointer would i use then?
    – james
    Oct 30, 2010 at 12:30
  • No, c_uint is 4 bytes in size, ctypes.sizeof returns the size. print repr(read_buff.raw) will display the string in escaped format. Oct 30, 2010 at 14:26
  • sigh every time i push enter it sends... anyway.. heres my code.. read_buff = ctypes.create_string_buffer(4) print repr(read_buff.raw) this returns "\x90\x00\x00\x00" for example. then using the struct module i go struct.unpack("i", "\x90\x00\x00\x00") and it gives me the integer i want :) but now how do i get the string version? say for example at that address the value could be an int or a str of a word and i want to try both possible options to see which might contain the value im looking for... thanks
    – james
    Oct 30, 2010 at 15:27
  • If it is a string just use create_string_buffer like you were using, and print read_buff.value. Oct 30, 2010 at 17:58

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