#read-write #memory #read-memory #reading #internal #external #function

easyrw

Easy Read and Write functions in rust, External and Internal

13 releases

0.2.2 Nov 15, 2023
0.2.1 Nov 14, 2023
0.1.9 Nov 13, 2023

#6 in #read-memory

Download history 2/week @ 2024-02-14 8/week @ 2024-02-21 2/week @ 2024-02-28 4/week @ 2024-03-13 41/week @ 2024-03-27 42/week @ 2024-04-03

83 downloads per month

MIT license

14KB
246 lines

EasyRW

Easy reading and writing memory on rust.

Installation

Run the following command in your project directory:

cargo add easyrw

OR

add the following line to your Cargo.toml:

easyrw = "0.2.2"

Assault Cube R/W Example:

use easyrw::memory::init;

fn main() {
    let proc = init("ac_client.exe", false).expect("Failed to attach to process"); //attach to process with false argument, means it will write memory externally, not internally, if ur making a dll then put it to true r/w internally
    let assault_cube = proc.get_assault_cube(proc.getbase("ac_client.exe")); // get assaultcube offsets, there is only 3 of them in this library just for example

    println!("HP: {}", proc.read::<i32>(assault_cube.hp)); // print hp
    println!("Nades: {}", proc.read::<i32>(assault_cube.nades)); // print grenades
    println!("Armor: {}", proc.read::<i32>(assault_cube.armor)); // print armor
}

Overall R/W Example:

use easyrw::memory::init;

fn main()  {
    let proc = init("ac_client.exe", false).expect("Failed to attach to process"); //attach to process with false argument, means it will write memory externally, not internally, if ur making a dll then put it to true r/w internally
    let base = proc.getbase("ac_client.exe"); // get module base
    proc.write(proc.get_ptr(base + 0x17E0A8, &[0xEC]), 104); // assault cube example: write 104 to hp address
}

a BAD Read Range Example:

use easyrw::memory::init;

fn main()  {
    let proc = init("ac_client.exe", false).expect("Failed to attach to process"); //attach to process with false argument, means it will write memory externally, not internally, if ur making a dll then put it to true r/w internally
    let base = proc.getbase("ac_client.exe"); // get module base
    if let Some(data) = proc.read_range::<i32>(
        proc.get_ptr(base + 0x17E0A8, &[0x108]),
        proc.get_ptr(base + 0x17E0A8, &[0x140]),
    ) {
        println!("data: {:?}", data);
    } else {
        println!("failed to read memory range");
    }
}

a BAD Write Range Example:

use easyrw::memory::init;

fn main()  {
    let proc = init("ac_client.exe", false).expect("Failed to attach to process"); //attach to process with false argument, means it will write memory externally, not internally, if ur making a dll then put it to true r/w internally
    let base = proc.getbase("ac_client.exe"); // get module base
    proc.write_range(proc.get_ptr(base + 0x17E0A8, &[0x108]), &[999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999, 999]); // this is cursed but it will write from base + 0x17E0A8, &[0x108] to base + 0x17E0A8, &[0x140]
}

Dependencies

~225KB