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I have a DLL file from which I need the memory address of a class procedure. I am getting the handle to the DLL file, but when I use GetProcAddress, I can't get the address of the procedure. I have tried the following strings for the process name parameter:

"ProcName"
"ProcClass.ProcName"
"ProcClass::ProcName"
"ProcInterface::ProcName"
"ProcInterface.ProcName"

In none of the cases have I gotten the memory address of the procedure. I am mostly certain that the procedure is public.

What is the string format for doing this? Would it be easier to declare a function pointing to the external procedure and get the address later? Like this:

procedure ProcName(); stdcall; far; external 'Example.DLL';

ProcPointer := @ProcName;
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    By the way, you've asked quite a few questions on this topic recently, which is good. However, you haven't accepted many answers. I think you could accept some answers which is a good way to show your appreciation! Mar 18, 2011 at 14:01
  • Did you write this DLL? How do you know it has a class procedure in it and not a regular procedure?
    – Warren P
    Mar 19, 2011 at 2:58

3 Answers 3

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GetProcAddress only gives you the address for exported functions. Your DLL surely doesn't export the methods of a class!

Use an PE explorer to look for the exported names. For example, use the PE explorer available in GExperts. I've got a "PE Information" menu entry under the GExperts menu.

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  • Dependency walker is the other obvious tool for exports, but this method is not likely to be exported as you say Mar 18, 2011 at 17:00
  • PE Explorer from heaventools.com is another tool for viewing the exported names. It'll show you function prototypes in Delphi syntax!
    – Wylder
    Mar 19, 2011 at 15:37
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You are into reverse engineering territory here.

I think that if I were you I would just step through in the CPU view of the debugger, following a call to the method of interest, and find the entry point address. I'd subtract it from the base address of the DLL and that would be the offset. Then to calculate the address at runtime you just add the offset it to the base address of the DLL in memory at that time. You can find out the base address with calls to LoadLibrary or GetModuleHandle.

Why hard code the offset? Well, since you can't modify your DLL it doesn't seem to be too limiting. If hard coding the offset is not viable then there are other means of locating entry points, but I must admit I'm not the world's greatest expert on that.

Finally, when you implement the replacement method, you will need to replace it with a global function/procedure with an extra parameter, the first parameter, which takes the place of Self.

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  • @David, can you post code for doing this from a simple class function in a DLL? Since you can't export class members from Delphi (AFAIK, anyway), I'm not sure how you'd get the address of the class function. This is the first of your answers I've felt the urge to downvote, so I'm interested in being proven wrong here. :)
    – Ken White
    Mar 18, 2011 at 16:06
  • @Ken There's no code. You just step through the debugger and see where it takes you, reading the disassembly. The goal is to find the entry point of the function that you wish to replace. It's probably quite tricky with IDispatch, or whatever this is, and there will likely be a couple of layers of indirection to navigate. Mar 18, 2011 at 16:08
  • @Ken What I'd probably do is generate my own simple IDispatch (if that is indeed what we are talking about) and then see how a method call on one of those is implemented in assembler. I'd then map that onto the real DLL and work out the entry point. Once I've got the entry point address I'd use my code from the previous question to overwrite that code with a JMP to the new code. Mar 18, 2011 at 16:10
  • @Ken I've tried to clarify the answer a little. I'd not explained it well. It's clear in my head, but that doesn't help you. I've explicitly stated that I am talking about stepping in the CPU view of the debugger. Mar 18, 2011 at 16:18
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    @mnuzzo, do you have any source code for the DLL? Do you, at least, know what language was used to build it? If you feel the need to add a jump "somewhere in the middle", I'm afraid you've got a rough track ahead, because you'll need to not only jump out of the procedure, but you'll need to jump back in, without messing the stack! If you need to do that, unless you dream in assembler, you should think twice, and maybe three times, if that DLL is worth it. Mar 18, 2011 at 17:58
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I might be reading this wrong. But it seems to me you wrote the DLL.

You should write a function that is NOT a member of any class, and export it from your DLL. Inside that function, call your class method.

If you didn't write the DLL, you still need to find out what functions it exports, and it is very unlikely any of them were class methods, at least not in Pascal.

If someone wrote a dll in C++ and exported its methods, then you would have to investigate C++ name mangling rules.

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  • OP did not write the DLL as far as I can tell Mar 19, 2011 at 23:20

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