C# Read/Write another Process’ Memory

Today’s tutorial is about…processes’ memory! In this article I’ll show you how to read/write a process’ memory using C#. This is a good way to learn a part of WinAPI and also understand the basics of memory allocation.
Before starting, we need a “target” – I choose notepad.exe.

1.Finding the Memory Address

As you might probably know, applications store each variable’s value at a specific memory address, we need to know that memory adress in order to edit anything. We’ll search for the actual value and see where it’s stored.
To get that memory address, I used OllyDbg – don’t worry, all the steps are written below.
First, open notepad.exe, type some text (like “hello world”) and attach OllyDbg (File->Attach). Press F9 and then ALT+M to open the Memory Map.
It should look like this:
Memory Map

Press CTRL+B and it will open the Binary Search Window. Now, because the value is stored in memory as Unicode, you have to type the string you’re looking for in the 2nd textbox:
Binary Search

Once you hit Ok another window will pop up – the Memory Dump. Here, look at the very first memory address (on the left) – from that address we’ll start reading. In the image below, the highlighted part contains the message I typed in Notepad.
Note: don’t use the memory address from the image – it’s not the same memory address every time
Memory Dump

We got the memory address, now…don’t close/restart the application. If you restart it, the memory for the text will be reallocated, so the address will most likely be changed.

2.Read Process’ Memory

In order to read the value from that memory address, we need to import 2 functions into C#: OpenProcess() and ReadProcessMemory() from kernel32.dll.

When a process is opened, you must also specify the desired access (this time, you request access for reading the memory), so this constant is needed:

Since the code is self explanatory, I’ll just add short comments where they’re needed:


3.Write Process’ Memory

Writing to a memory address is a little bit different: you’ll need OpenProcess() and WriteProcessMemory().

However, special permissions are required: while opening the process request the following access: PROCESS_VM_WRITE | PROCESS_VM_OPERATION.

Note: notepad’s textbox is storing the number of bytes it has to read from the memory – that value is updated only when the text is changed by user. If you write to the memory address a longer string, it will be truncated.
The whole code is available below:
C#

using System;
using System.Diagnostics;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
using System.Text;
 
public class MemoryRead
{
    const int PROCESS_VM_WRITE = 0x0020;
    const int PROCESS_VM_OPERATION = 0x0008;
 
    [DllImport("kernel32.dll")]
    public static extern IntPtr OpenProcess(int dwDesiredAccess, bool bInheritHandle, int dwProcessId);
 
    [DllImport("kernel32.dll", SetLastError = true)]
    static extern bool WriteProcessMemory(int hProcess, int lpBaseAddress, byte[] lpBuffer, int dwSize, ref int lpNumberOfBytesWritten);
 
 
 
    public static void Main()
    {
 
        Process process = Process.GetProcessesByName("notepad")[0];
        IntPtr processHandle = OpenProcess(0x1F0FFF, false, process.Id);
 
        int bytesWritten = 0;
        byte[] buffer = Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes("It works!\0"); // '\0' marks the end of string
 
        // replace 0x0046A3B8 with your address
        WriteProcessMemory((int)processHandle, 0x0046A3B8, buffer, buffer.Length, ref bytesWritten);
        Console.ReadLine();
    }
}
 
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