7

I want to bind a program to a specific computer, and for that I want to use the serial number of the motherboard as unique identifier.

Although I could find some examples for C# and Java, I couldn't find anything reliable for C++ (I read WMI can fail depending on the hardware), but surely there's a way to do this in C++ too?

Edit : What I want is, in other words, like a simple and rudimentary licensing system. To make it more clear, here's how it would look like :

#define USER_SERIAL 123456789

double GetMotherBoardSerialNumber();
// ...

double currentSerial = GetMotherBoardSerialNumber();

if(currentSerial != USER_SERIAL) {
    exit 1;
}

It is obviously not perfect, but I don't have any server atm to set up an account system so this could be a temporary solution.

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    Yeap, I read those already, but as mentioned in the first answer (about WMI) : "What I have found is that retrieving the serial number of the mother board can result in very different results depending on the manufacturer and the distribution channel. "
    – AlexAngc
    Apr 18, 2017 at 13:17
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    @Angry Club just generate GUID Apr 18, 2017 at 13:29
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    You might also want to consider that repairing the computer being a license violation will make some customers extremely frustrated.
    – Bo Persson
    Apr 18, 2017 at 13:38
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    @BoPersson makes a good point. And this questions is getting worse. Of course get the server up and running. And use the cpuid and mac address to track which computers your users have, and to detect hacked accounts.
    – Jeff
    Apr 18, 2017 at 14:04
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    "I want to compile once for a specific user only." - If you are serious about your software, you will have to keep debug symbols in your office for each and every release. It doesn't take an insane number of customers to require terabytes of storage for the debug symbols alone. This approach doesn't scale well. Apr 18, 2017 at 14:20

2 Answers 2

5

If you want real serial numbers I recommended parsing the SMBIOS table.

The first time I dived into getting reliable real hardware id's I ended up reading the SMBIOS directly from mapped Physical Memory (Windows XP). I had tried other approaches that many recommend before this but some were very unreliable and in deployment it was noted that there were duplicates across clients with some of the other methods. How could 20+ people have identical serials? It made no sense and seemed like OEM's had set fields.

From Windows Vista onwards the correct method to retrieve the table is through GetSystemFirmwareTable. This is because it is no longer possible to map Physical Memory on Windows Vista from user-mode (XP64 & Server 2003 were the same too)

GetSystemFirmwareTable can be used to get the SMBIOS data which you can then parse according to the SMBIOS spec. There's a fair amount of data in the table so generating a unique identifier shouldn't be too difficult. IIRC you generally even get serials for DRAM etc...

I would also recommend testing this thoroughly and having a backup plan if the call fails. There are instances where it just fails and having a good idea of the environment that causes failures will save you a lot of time. If my memory serves me right in the Vista days I had issues with UAC and elevated privileges, however MS may have have changed that since then!

2

You can look at this registry key: [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\HARDWARE\DESCRIPTION\System\BIOS]. You will see following:

"BiosMajorRelease"
"BiosMinorRelease"
"ECFirmwareMajorRelease"
"ECFirmwareMinorRelease"
"BaseBoardManufacturer"
"BaseBoardProduct"
"BaseBoardVersion"
"BIOSReleaseDate"
"BIOSVendor"
"BIOSVersion"
"SystemFamily"
"SystemManufacturer"
"SystemProductName"
"SystemSKU"
"SystemVersion"

If this doesn't satisfy you, you can still use GetSystemInfo function. I think this use of motherboard information wouldn't help you as unique id. If you want to get unique computer identifier, use GUID or something. To create GUID you need to just:

GUID gidReference;
HRESULT hCreateGuid = CoCreateGuid( &gidReference );
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    Good information, but the serial number is not included
    – Jeff
    Apr 18, 2017 at 13:27
  • @Jeff Do you want it to generate computer UID? Apr 18, 2017 at 13:28
  • @Joel Yes, the purpose of the serial number is to serve as unique identifier
    – AlexAngc
    Apr 18, 2017 at 13:30
  • @AngryCub so look at my edit, with this you can obtain Unique identifier, write to registry and read this uid from registry. Apr 18, 2017 at 13:31
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    @Jeff using some programs you can force OP's soft to think that computer's motherboard id is explicitly the same as OP passes in code (Remember, you can't hide anything from reverse-engineers) Apr 18, 2017 at 13:46

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