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I am creating a DLL for Windows Mobile 6.x. I need to obtain HMODULE of my own DLL, but so far I haven't been successful. For standard Windows DLLs this seems to be quite simple, as DllMain signature is:

BOOL DllMain(HMODULE, DWORD, LPVOID)

And you can just take the first parameter and save it in a global variable. However signature for Windows Mobile DLLs is (for reasons I don't understand):

BOOL DllMain(HANDLE, DWORD, LPVOID)

Where or how do I get HMODULE for my DLL in such case? Thank you very much for your answer.

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That HANDLE is the HMODULE. They both are typedefed from void *.

EDIT

I just tested this and it worked as expected:

#include "windows.h"


BOOL APIENTRY DllMain( HANDLE hModule, 
                       DWORD  ul_reason_for_call, 
                       LPVOID lpReserved
                     )
{
    HMODULE module = (HMODULE)hModule;
    RETAILMSG(TRUE, (_T("module = 0x%08x\r\n", module));

    return TRUE;
}
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  • No they aren't in Windows Mobile SDK. Excerpts from winnt.h: typedef void *HANDLE; #define DECLARE_HANDLE(name) struct name##__ { int unused; }; typedef struct name##__ *name and from windef.h: DECLARE_HANDLE(HINSTANCE); typedef HINSTANCE HMODULE; This code throw error during compilation: HMODULE module; HANDLE handle; module = handle;
    – Omikr0n
    Nov 13, 2010 at 17:38
  • From msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa910684.aspx: "The HINSTANCE of a DLL is the same as the HMODULE of the DLL, so hinstDLL can be used in subsequent calls to the GetModuleFileName function and other functions that require a module handle.". While it's not following the C or C++ rules, you can most likely safely cast between these two types. The struct based declarations are there to prevent code from doing this by accident (eg confusing HWNDs with HANDLEs). Nov 13, 2010 at 18:24
  • Could you please clarify how should I cast? Using both module = (HMODULE)handle; and module = reinterpret_cast<HMODULE>(handle); I end up with NULL value in module, while handle wasn't NULL.
    – Omikr0n
    Nov 13, 2010 at 18:58
  • @Omikr0n I would be very surprised if that were the case, although it is possible. I would expect both of those to work. I have seen behavior like this with certain optimizations (the compiler is free to assume no aliasing between unrelated types) but that was with gcc and not MSVC. How are you determining that module is NULL and handle isn't? Are you sure that is correct? Have you tried disassembling DllMain? If it is the case that the code gen is indeed the problem you can work around it by punning with a union (or disabling that class of optimization). I would still be surprised though. Nov 13, 2010 at 20:19
  • I'm with Logan. I'd just direct cast it, and I've never seen that fail.
    – ctacke
    Nov 13, 2010 at 20:39

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