Skip to content

AWilliams17/MonoJabber

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

28 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

MonoJabber - It's a Unity DLL Injector

This is an effort to produce my own DLL injector for usage with games using the Mono library.
At the moment, it only supports modern Unity games (that is, games which use mono-2.0-bdwgc.dll).

Usage

Note: The injector uses a separate library I've written called MemTools, so you'll have to go and compile that (make sure it's a release build you use). The initial release on the releases page includes the build of MemTools I used while developing that version, but it's unlikely I'll include that DLL in the next release (when/if it ever is made).

Download the currently released version from the releases page. Make sure MonoLoaderDLL.dll, MemTools.DLL, and MonoJabber.exe are in the same folder. At the moment, this tool has been written under & made with a 64 bit version of Windows in mind.
It does not support 32 bit processes.

I've tested this extensively using a hack I wrote for SCP: Secret Laboratory, and I've had much success. If you find any bugs please do open an issue, or contact me.

The program takes 5 arguments: {TargetProcess} {Path to Payload DLL} {PayloadNamespace} {PayloadClassname} {PayloadMethodname}

EG: MonoJabber.exe "SCPSL.exe" "D:\Source\SCP-Exposed-Establishment\SCPEE\bin\x64\Release\SCPEE.dll" "SCPEE.NotEvil" "EELoader" "Init"

How it works

It was a massive pain in the neck digging up the required resources to create this tool. Other Mono injectors I've seen all do things completely differently. SharpMonoInjector for example does really interesting voodoo with dynamically generating ASM and injecting it into the process.

But, the end result of all mono injectors is the same: getting into the target Mono application, and then calling native Mono functions to bootstrap and initialize the payload DLL.

The difference in the injector is just how they get to the whole "call native Mono functions" part. I think I struck a balance between voodoo and simplicity.

How mine works is: the frontend for the tool, MonoJabber.exe, simply takes the target, then injects a DLL, 'MonoLoaderDLL'. It is MonoLoaderDLL which does all the heavy lifting.
MonoLoaderDLL exports a single function: Inject, which takes one argument of type void*.

In MonoJabber.exe, a struct with information passed to the program is written to the memory of the target, and MonoJabber calls CreateRemoteThread passing the address of the struct to the Inject function. Then the Inject function calls LoadLibrary on mono-2.0-bdwgc.dll and then begins calling relevant functions from that DLL using information from the argument struct.

A pipe is used between the DLL and MonoJabber.exe with let's MonoJabber get the result of all the operations back so it can print it out. It used to use a messagebox for this,
but that was not very elegant and lead to instability in the target.
Update: Now that I've got pipes working I'm probably going to do away with the whole 'write parameter struct to the application' thing.

Resources Used

https://github.com/corngood/mono/blob/master/mono/metadata/image.h
http://docs.go-mono.com/index.aspx?link=xhtml%3Adeploy%2Fmono-api-class.html
http://docs.go-mono.com/index.aspx?link=xhtml%3Adeploy%2Fmono-api-domains.html
http://docs.go-mono.com/index.aspx?link=xhtml%3Adeploy%2Fmono-api-image.html
https://www.unknowncheats.me/forum/unity/268053-mono-unity-injector.html
https://www.unknowncheats.me/forum/general-programming-and-reversing/105244-accessing-c-mono.html

License

This library is licensed under version 3 of the General Public License. You are free to do whatever you wish the code in this application. No credit due.