I have a dll that I injected in a process. It searches 'file://' until it finds invalid symbol. After a few mins it crashes the main process. Why is that? How can I check? I found that with smaller stack size on CreateThread it crashes faster, so it can be somehow stack overflow, but I'm not allocating nothing, but a single struct.

BOOL APIENTRY DllMain(HINSTANCE hInstDLL, DWORD fdwReason, LPVOID lpvReserved)
{
    switch (fdwReason)
    {
        case DLL_PROCESS_ATTACH:

        CreateThread(NULL, 500, SampleFunction, 0, 0, NULL);            
            break;

        case DLL_THREAD_ATTACH:

            break;

        case DLL_THREAD_DETACH:
            break;

        case DLL_PROCESS_DETACH:
            break;
    }

    /* Return success */
    return TRUE;
}



int Send(char* strDataToSend) {
    HWND hWnd = FindWindow(NULL, "Test");
    if (hWnd) {
        COPYDATASTRUCT cpd;
        cpd.dwData = 0;
        cpd.cbData = (strlen(strDataToSend) + 1) * 2;
        cpd.lpData = (PVOID)strDataToSend;
        SendMessage(hWnd, WM_COPYDATA, (WPARAM) hWnd, (LPARAM)&cpd);
    }
}

int isurl(char c) {
    char* chars = "-._~:/?#[]@!$&'()*+,;=%";
    for(int i = 0; i < strlen(chars); i++) {
        if (chars[i] == c || isalnum(c)) {
            return 1;
        }           
    }

    return 0;
}

TESTDLLMAPI void WINAPI SampleFunction(void) {
    MessageBox(0,"LOADED !",0,0);
    MEMORY_BASIC_INFORMATION info;  
    MEMORY_BASIC_INFORMATION* pinfo = &info;

    while(1) {


    int cnt = 0;
    unsigned long addr = 0;
    do {
        ZeroMemory(&info, sizeof(info));

        if (!VirtualQueryEx(GetCurrentProcess(), (LPCVOID) addr, pinfo, sizeof(info))) {
            //MessageBox(0,"FAILED",0,0);
        }       

            if (info.State == 0x1000) {
            if (info.Protect == PAGE_READONLY || info.Protect == PAGE_READWRITE) {
                __try {

                if (info.RegionSize < 128) continue;

                for(long i = 0; i < info.RegionSize - 10; i+=7) {

                char* buff = info.BaseAddress;
                    if (buff[i] == 'f' && buff[i+1] == 'i' && buff[i+2] == 'l' && buff[i+3] == 'e' && buff[i+4] == ':' && buff[i+5] == '/' && buff[i+6] == '/') {

                        long start = i;
                        long end   = start+7;

                        while(end < info.RegionSize - 10 && isurl(buff[end])) end++; 

                        int len = end - start + 1;
                        char* test = (char*) calloc(len, 1);
                        //memcpy(test, buff+start, len);
                        int k = 0;
                        for (int j = start; j <= end; j++, k++) {
                            test[k] = buff[j];
                        }


                            Send(test);
                                                    free(test); 
                            cnt++;      
                        }

                    }
                } __finally {}
            }
        }

        addr = (unsigned long) info.BaseAddress + (unsigned long) info.RegionSize;
    } while (addr != 0 && addr < 0x7FFF0000);

    Sleep(1000);

}
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68% accept rate
You can always log to a file to check where the crash is happening. After all, as you say, this does not seem to be stack-related, as you are not using recursion or large local buffers. – Niklas B. Sep 1 '11 at 11:30
Don't use pastie. Paste the source and make sure it is formatted fine. – David Heffernan Sep 1 '11 at 11:30
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2 Answers

up vote 3 down vote accepted

In your Send function you're setting the buffer size to the length of the string x2 but you are passing the data in a pointer to a char, which is one byte.


A few more tips:

  • You're reading memory in increments of 7 at a time. There are two problems with this:
    • as an example, what if the end of info.RegionSize - 10 is at 500000, and i = 499999? You'll read 6 bytes past which will cause a crash.
    • "file://" isn't necessarily going to be found at a place in memory with an address that is a multiple of 7. If you happen to be testing "123file://...." then you'll simply miss it, because you'll find "123file" and "://...."
  • VirtualQueryEx(GetCurrentProcess(), ... is redundant. Just use VirtualQuery.
  • You're calling VirtualQuery with the address 0.
  • There is a much easier way to perform the string-comparison you are trying to accomplish - strstr.
  • Is it just me or is that do/while an infinite loop?
  • Your function isn't even closed.
  • I can't see what purpose cnt is supposed to serve.
  • You created a thread in DllMain. you should close handles to threads with CloseHandle once you're no longer going to use them (in this case, i.e. right after you've created it)

I rewrote your SampleFunction for you. I wrote the on the go and it probably won't compile, but you should get the general idea.

#include <windows.h>

BOOL IsPageReaable(PMEMORY_BASIC_INFORMATION pmbi)
{
  if (pmbi->Protect & PAGE_GUARD)
    return FALSE;

  if (pmbi->Protect &
    (PAGE_EXECUTE_READ | PAGE_EXECUTE_READWRITE
    | PAGE_EXECUTE_WRITECOPY | PAGE_READONLY
    | PAGE_READWRITE | PAGE_WRITECOPY))
    return TRUE;

  return FALSE;
}

#define POLL_INTERVAL 1000

TESTDLLMAPI VOID WINAPI SampleFunction(VOID)
{
  MEMORY_BASIC_INFO mbi;
  ULONG_PTR         ulAddress = GetModuleHandle(NULL); // base address
  LPSTR             lpszBase;

  ZeroMemory(&mbi, sizeof(mbi));
  if (!VirtualQuery(ulAddress, &mbi, sizeof(mbi)))
    return;

  if (!IsPageReadable(&mbi))
    return;

  lpszBase = info.BaseAddress;
  for (;; Sleep(POLL_INTERVAL))
  {
    for (ULONG_PTR i = 0; i < info.RegionSize; i++)
    {
      int   j;
      LPSTR lpszBuffer;

      if (strstr(&lpszBase[i], "file://") == NULL)
        continue;

      j = i + 1;
      do {
        j++;
      } while (j < info.RegionSize && isurl(lpszBase[j])

      lpszBuffer = (LPSTR)HeapAlloc(GetProcessHeap, HEAP_ZERO_MEMORY, sizeof(CHAR) * (j - i + 1));
      if (lpszBuffer != NULL)
      {
        CopyMemory(lpszBuffer, &lpszBase[i], j - i);
        Send(lpszBuffer);
        HeapFree(GetProcessHeap(), 0, lpszbuffer);
      }
    }
  }
}
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Thanks, the problem was in using calloc(). With HeapAlloc and HeapFree it's OK. And I fixed i+=7 with i++, I did that mistake cause I was on a hurry. – blez Sep 3 '11 at 13:03
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without test it's hard to say where problem occurd but you can debug your process with Ollydbg or Windbg to find the bug, here is step you must do:

1 - Attach to your process (for example with Ollydbg form File->Atach)

2 - Depend on injection method, remote thread or SetWindowsHookEx :

  • remote thread(LoadLibrary): breakpoint on LoadLibrary then use olly to break on new dll load and follow entry of dll

  • SetWindowsHookEx: I don't test this but I think previous ways work here too except 'breakpoint on LoadLibrary' part

3 - Then debug to find problem

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1  
You know you can debug DLLs in Visual Studio? – Mike Kwan Sep 1 '11 at 13:06
@Mike Kwan: yes, I know but not when you inject dll to another process – Arash Sep 1 '11 at 17:32
How do you think it allows you to debug without loading it first? – Mike Kwan Sep 2 '11 at 7:35
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