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i have a driver code havin an assembly code that is using _asm (inline assembly) its working fine when i am compiling in 32 bit WDK but it throw following error:

"error C4235: nonstandard extension used : '_asm' keyword not supported on this architecture"

please convert following _asm code for 64 bit compilation.

_asm
{
    mov     ebx, cr0 
    push    ebx 
    and     ebx, ~010000h 
    mov     cr0, ebx
    sti
} 

I was use __writecr0() to set cr0 value but how can i set interrupt flag (sti) in x64 windows driver? I have This Function

VOID RunHook(ULONG Service_Index,PVOID NewAddress,ULONG *OldAddress){
ULONG Address;

DbgPrint("RunHook - NewAddress:0x%00X - Service_Index:0x%0X",NewAddress,Service_Index);

Address = (ULONG)KeServiceDescriptorTable->ServiceTableBase + Service_Index * 4;

*OldAddress = *(ULONG*)Address;


/*__asm
{
    cli
        mov eax, cr0
        and eax, not 10000h
        mov cr0, eax
}*/
__writecr0(__readcr0() & ~0x10000);
// ÐÞ¸ÄSSDTÖÐNtOpenProcess·þÎñµÄµØÖ·
*((ULONG*)Address) = (ULONG)NewAddress;


__asm
{
    mov eax, cr0
        or eax, 10000h
        mov cr0, eax
        sti
}}
9
  • if (1); should set it to 1.
    – Havenard
    Aug 17, 2014 at 5:24
  • Not sure why you have to explicitly set it though, how exactly is your code being applied in the context?
    – Havenard
    Aug 17, 2014 at 5:25
  • I Want To Write Driver To Intercept windows Api Calls . i want to hook some Api that i need to intercept them in found This code in kernel mode Aug 17, 2014 at 5:32
  • I suppose this is hooking... something? But whatever it is it doesn't look like its hooking APIs. APIs are by definition at application layer, not kernel.
    – Havenard
    Aug 17, 2014 at 5:42
  • but This is my main Question How Can i intercept Windows API calls Aug 17, 2014 at 5:50

1 Answer 1

0

From MASM for x64 in the Visual Studio 2013 documentation:

Inline ASM is not supported for x64. Use MASM or compiler intrinsics (x64 Intrinsics).

I don't believe that there is any supported way to manipulate the interrupt flag, because by design kernel-mode drivers are Always Preemptible and Always Interruptible, so to do that you'll need to put the code in a separate module and use MASM.

However, there's little point; in 64-bit Windows, Kernel Patch Protection prevents you from modifying the service tables. You can only hook API calls at the application level, as described in the comments by Havenard.

1
  • Thanks for your help . i know about patchguard in windows 7 x64. i see some code like Havenard's code,but i don't know how can i find which process call API Aug 18, 2014 at 6:00

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