2 releases
0.1.2 | Oct 22, 2021 |
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0.1.1 | Oct 20, 2021 |
0.1.0 |
|
#4 in #injector
37 downloads per month
21KB
460 lines
Install
Go to releases page download the latest binary.
Or if you have rust installed, use cargo to install:
cargo install injrs
Install rust if you don't have.
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh
Usage
At most time, you can use injrs
as a simple tool.
USAGE:
injrs PROCESS_NAME/PID [Libraies...]
EXAMPLES:
1. Inject test.dll to process Calc.exe
$ injrs Calc.exe test.dll
2. Inject test.dll and demo.dll to process with PID: 1888
$ injrs 1888 test.dll demo.dll
DLL Demo
The code in examples/hellobox is a simple message box dll for testing injector.
You can build with command:
cargo build --release --example hellobox
Build target will locate in:
target/i686-pc-windows-msvc/release/examples/hellobox.dll
Try to inject the demo dll to your target process:
injrs PID/PNAME target/i686-pc-windows-msvc/release/examples/hellobox.dll
Usage as library
You also can write a injector project using injrs
as a library.
use injrs::process_windows::*;
use injrs::inject_windows::*;
fn main() {
let name = "Calc.exe";
let dll = "./my-demo-dll.dll";
let p = Process::find_first_by_name(name).unwrap();
print!("inject dll to process => ");
match process.inject(dll) {
Err(e) => {
println!("error: {}", e);
},
Ok(_) => {
println!("success");
}
}
}
for more detail you can check src/main.rs.
Dependencies
~225KB