How can I insert my own C++/ASM code into an executable? I read that I need something like a section. I reverse engineered a bit and know addresses of interest
On top of that I know that I perhaps need the windows api func Memory or process Write ?
@stringExchange processWrite is for writing into the memory of a running process, not for writing to the executable file
so the changes you make would be gone after the process stops
I think most common approach is to hook a common OS function, load your code as dynamic library, and then modify some existing code with process write to jump to your code
@stringExchange note that rewriting executables may not behave the way you expect. There are a lot of things you need to get right. Also some executables actively fight this, and most modern OSes will prevent it by using No Execute flags
yeah, you just point to the start of the stack memory that your function uses. Then you always address everything relative to it
if you want to save and restore some registers, you make room on the stack for them, save them, call the function, read back the register values you stored on the stock
push ebp ; save old call frame : Why do you need to save the old call frame ?
@PeterT "We’ve decided that the callee is responsible for stack restoration. It can do this, as it knows how many parameters have to be removed." Can you plase tell me one more what does the stack restoration means?
I mean, I have a player position (x, y) and it's id. I want to embed all the 3 values into one, so there's less copy/assignments and reduced memory for storing those objects