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Detours is a library for intercepting binary functions on ARM
, ARM64
, X86
, X64
,
and IA64
machines. Detours is most commonly used to intercept Win32
APIs calls within an application, such as to add debugging
instrumentation. Interception code is applied dynamically at runtime.
Detours replaces the first few instructions of the target function
with an unconditional jump to the user-provided detour function.
Instructions from the target function are placed in a trampoline. The
address of the trampoline is placed in a target pointer. The detour
function can either replace the target function or extend its semantics
by invoking the target function as a subroutine through the target
pointer to the trampoline.
Detours are inserted at execution time. The code of the target function is modified in memory, not on disk, thus enabling interception of binary functions at a very fine granularity. For example, the procedures in a DLL can be detoured in one execution of an application, while the original procedures are not detoured in another execution running at the same time. Unlike DLL re-linking or static redirection, the interception techniques used in the Detours library are guaranteed to work regardless of the method used by application or system code to locate the target function.
In addition to basic detour functionality, Detours also includes functions to edit the DLL import table of any binary, to attach arbitrary data segments to existing binaries, and to load a DLL into a new process. Once loaded into a process, the instrumentation DLL can detour any function in the process, whether in the application or the system libraries, such as the Windows APIs.
This technical overview of Detours is divided into four sections:
- Interception of Binary Functions
- Using Detours
- Payloads and DLL Import Editing
- Detouring 32-bit and 64-bit Processes
Developers new to Detours will find it very useful to read all four technical overview sections and the Simple sample program.
This documentation also contains the following information: