It's been baffling me how the "AnyCPU" feature in .NET works: It loads the executable as native 32-bit if the system is 32-bit, and as 64-bit if the system is 64-bit (which you can easily confirm with Task Manager). So obviously, this isn't impossible.
The question is, how exactly did Microsoft do this? Windows originally didn't know about the .NET framework, so the Windows PE Loader can't possibly look for any extra features in PE headers for the CLR header; this feature must have been added by some sort of kernel-mode extension. But the .NET framework seems to install no such thing... I'm at a complete loss at how the same executable can be native 32-bit and 64-bit at the same time, especially since a disassembly of mscoree.dll doesn't even show references to undocumented native functions.
Does anyone have any knowledge and/or reasonable guesses as to how this was done? It's obviously possible (so no saying things like "it's not possible"), and it makes me want to try to write a native cross-platform EXE...
Edit:
As a side note, consider how you can't run 32-bit executables in a 64-bit Windows PE environment... there's got to be some way to extend or modify the PE loader with some sort of "plugin", right?