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I have the source code for a DLL. The compiled DLL gets loaded by an application. The application loads several other DLL's, too. I have disassembled asm code from the application and all DLL's, but I have only the source code from the one DLL. The app and all DLL's are one process.

I want to program a function hook inside the DLL I have the source code from. I want to hook functions from the other DLL's. The hooked functions should be called by all other DLL's and the application and my compiled DLL(the original functions shouldn't be called).

The problem is, I cannot hook one DLL directly, because it's not an own process. Somehow I have to hook the DLL's, which are loaded to the application. How to do that?

For reference, I cannot hook a function with an offset from one DLL, because the function is inside the memory of the app and not in the memory of the DLL process itself!

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  • Can you please give a valid reason for wanting to do this, function hooking tends to mean you want to do some kind of hacking :\ Jul 10, 2011 at 9:26
  • Jesus, why would microsoft provide something like detours? To append the API for more possibilities. I'm an administrator of a server and I get hacked. I have to handle incoming connect packages better. Jul 10, 2011 at 9:29
  • There's a reason that hacking is easy on windows it gives you all the functions you need to do it :P WinHook API is what you might want to read up on but I hope you're doing something legit. Jul 10, 2011 at 9:30
  • I know all that stuff. I only nned to know the answer of my question :/ Jul 10, 2011 at 9:32
  • SetWindowsHook returns an HHOOK, use handles to get the handle of the process which is running the library and you're in. Jul 10, 2011 at 9:34

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For reference, I cannot hook a function with an offset from one DLL, because the function is inside the memory of the app and not in the memory of the DLL process itself!

When a DLL is loaded by a process, it gets loaded into that process's address space. The DLL does not have its own process. If you would like to hook a function in a DLL running in a remote process, you could inject a DLL of your own into the remote process. Now your injected DLL shares the address space of the target process, and your target DLL. From within your own DLL code, you can make calls to API's such as GetModuleHandle to get the base address of your target DLL, and handle all hooking code from within your DLL, because your code is running not in "your" app, but in theirs, as if they loaded it themselves.

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