1.0.2 • Published 2 days ago

nullbyte v1.0.2

Weekly downloads
-
License
Unlicensed
Repository
-
Last release
2 days ago

Usage

import { patch } from 'nullbyte';

/**
 * @param {Number} pid - Process ID to attach to
 * @param {string[]} patterns - Array of memory patterns to null out
 * @param {boolean=false} matchOne - Whether to consider the patch successful if atleast one of the patterns match
 */

// Requires both patterns to be patched to consider the patch successful
patch(process.pid, ['D3 FT 55 ? 29', 'pattern2']);

// Requires only one of the patterns to be patched to consider the patch successful
patch(process.pid, ['D3 FT 55 ? 29', 'pattern2'], true);

Installation

Any node package manager works.

  • npm i nullbyte
  • pnpm i nullbyte
  • yarn add nullbyte

Platform specific:

  • npm i nullbyte@win32
  • npm i nullbyte@linux

How it works

You may see what nullbyte is up to behind the scenes. When patch is called, nullbyte will attempt to null out the bytes of the patterns you provided (will freeze the javascript thread, so nothing else will work until its done, this is more useful for patching out bytes before an app launches).

How will I know if it was successful

If all of the conditions listed below are met, nullbyte's patch will return a boolean indicating whether or not the patch was successful.

Successful conditions

nullbyte is very strict on what "success" means. nullbyte will need the following conditions to be met for the patch to be successful:

  • Process ID is a number
  • Patterns is an array
  • Process ID is a valid running process

If matchOne is not specified or is false, the following is also required:

  • All patterns are successfuly found in memory (if one doesn't get found, nullbyte will deem the patch unsuccessful, even if one pattern was patched)