Jul 5 20:15
Of course.
Jul 5 20:15
I'm signing off for the day.
Jul 5 20:15
I'm happy to be wrong - your question is still open, and someone else may correct me, but I'm fairly confident in this. Good luck.
Jul 5 20:14
You might review a windbg tutorial to get acquainted.
Jul 5 20:14
sxe ld:sfc will set a breakpoint on the load of sfc.dll. You would have to launch the exe under the debugger for that to hit.
Jul 5 20:09
It's really not because of the name of the exe. The address space layout may be cached by the name of the exe, but there is never a guarantee (with ASLR, and without very careful control of the entrypoint code). I have no evidence of it, but you might try clearing prefetch to see if that is where it is cached. It **will** break again in the future though, just maybe not today.

No idea why SFC is loading. You can break on load with `sxe ld:sfc` then print the stack with `k` to get an idea.
Jul 5 20:01
There's no "easy fix" for this. Modern OS's do not guarantee in any appreciable way that a particular address will always be available.
Jul 5 20:00
If you run !address 00000001`80000000 it will say what was allocated.
Jul 5 20:00
Yeah. Like I said, a lot of things run before your first line of code.
Jul 5 20:00
Since you are asking for 00000001`00000000 through 00000003`00000000, it is conflicting.
Jul 5 19:59
Yeah. So that is saying that there is something allocated at 00000001`80000000
Jul 5 19:57
Yeah. Nothing notable there. You should have a prompt at the bottom. Enter lm or !address 00000001`00000000
Jul 5 19:55
👍
Jul 5 19:54
That was before you said you would load the dump. When you are launching a process, g starts it running, and Ctrl+Break pauses it running.
Jul 5 19:52
(e.g.: g = start running, Ctrl+Break = pause execution)
Jul 5 19:52
Otherwise you will need to learn the full debugger.
Jul 5 19:51
Dump is probably easier.
Jul 5 19:51
Did you load the dump or did you launch your exe?
Jul 5 19:49
It's not a separate executable.
Jul 5 19:49
Did you run lm in windbg?
Jul 5 19:48
(or open the Modules window)
Jul 5 19:48
Run lm in the command line
Jul 5 19:47
Ensure you opened the matching bitness of your process, then open the dump.
Jul 5 19:46
The winget error you gave earlier is Access Denied. Was the install run as administrator?
Jul 5 19:45
You don't have to install the entire SDK to install windbg
Jul 5 19:44
I don't think it is available separately.
Jul 5 19:44
windbg is installed as part of the Windows SDK developer.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/downloads/windows-sdk
Jul 5 19:44
*windbg
Jul 5 19:43
You should be able to load a dump in widngb
Jul 5 19:37
Probably something to do with prefetch.
Jul 5 19:36
Looks like process explorer can show the start address. It's not clear if you can show the end address with process explorer.
Jul 5 19:35
Windbg is lm and it will print the list of modules and their address space.
Jul 5 19:34
Depends on the debugger.
Jul 5 19:34
It is still broken.
Jul 5 19:34
Random means it can work 99% of the time.
Jul 5 19:33
Use a debugger to inspect the address space to see what is loaded at that address.
Jul 5 19:33
You may not be loading any dll's, but there are certainly ones being loaded. E.g.: your compiler's standard library, windows libraries, graphics drivers, etc...
Jul 5 19:31
Address space is normally randomized as a security mechanism. While it is "vast", conflicts will and do happen. There is no guarantee a particular address is available unless ASLR is disabled and you control all the DLL's loaded in the process prior to your call to VirtualAlloc
Jul 5 19:29
What is the call you are making to VirtualAlloc that is failing?
Jul 5 19:28
I still don't understand your question, though. Do you mean you are specifying lpAddress = 1 << 32 instead of nullptr? That's going to be very challenging to ensure the address space is free. It's also quite an odd requirement to have a specific address for an allocation. ASLR and any DLL that loads before you is going to potentially break a call with a non-0 lpAddress.
Jul 5 19:26
I just tested PCT on a command line app, it runs fine. I can't speak to whether it would be suggested automatically. I'd still recommend checking IFEO and AppCompatFlags just to be sure.

HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\AppCompatFlags\Layers
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\AppCompatFlags\Layers
HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Image File Execution Options\
Jul 5 19:25
AppCompat can come into play because it will be applied automatically (with a prompt) if the program crashes in a particular way that suggests a compatibility issue. You can unapply compatibility caused by the Program Compatibility Troubleshooter. AppCompat has hundreds of fixes that could have been applied. Fixes are applied for an exe name.
Jul 5 19:25
Image File Execution Options is another feature which applies to a particular exe name. There are many IFEOs which influence the heap. Not sure any apply to your scenario, but maybe. Debuggers sometimes set IFEO's.
Jul 5 19:25
Manifests are a windows feature which allow an app developer to influence how the OS will run an exe. They can be embedded into the exe, or they can be a separate file in the pattern appname.exe.manifest. If they are embedded in the exe, renaming has no effect. If a separate file, then the manifest would not apply if only the exe was renamed.
Jul 5 19:25
Possibly related: Image File Execution Options. Also could be appcompat. If you have a manifest or config in the same folder, and are not renaming the manifest/config, then that could also be relevant.
 
Aug 17, 2018 10:15
I appreciate the difficulty in getting assistance with an intricate problem, but you may get better results by rewording your question to better match the Code of Conduct. As it stands, it comes across as hostile. Further, you have several levels of questions rather than one single "How can I X using Y". Simpler questions do not preclude you from asking additional questions later, and makes it far simpler to answer in many cases.
 
Mar 11, 2018 21:12
ILDASM is your friend.
Mar 11, 2018 21:12
@markzzz, it may be helpful to see the IL that C# generates. (It was, at least for me).
 
Jan 25, 2018 20:36
(same sort of loop)