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Welcome to StealthInject

This is the source code page for the StealthInject. With the source code, you can modify the tool in any way imaginable and share your changes with others!

Source releases

We recommend you work with a versioned release. The master branch contains unstable and possibly untested code, but it should be a great reference for new developments, or for spot merging bug fixes. Use it at your own risk.

Getting up and running

Here is the fun part! This is a quick start guide to getting up and running with the source. The steps below will take you through cloning your own private fork, then compiling and running the editor yourself on Windows other platforms will be implemented at a later point in time. Okay, here we go!

  1. We recommend using Git in order to participate in the community, but you can download the source as a zip file if you prefer. See instructions for setting up Git, then fork our repository, clone it to your local machine.

  2. You should now have an StealthInject folder on your computer. All of the source and dependencies will go into this folder. The folder name might have a branch suffix, but that's fine.

  3. Okay, platform stuff comes next. Depending on whether you are on Windows or another platform, follow one of the sections below.

Windows

  1. Be sure to have Visual Studio 2013 installed. You can use any desktop version of Visual Studio 2013, including the free version: Visual Studio 2013 Express for Windows Desktop

  2. Load the project into Visual Studio by double-clicking on the StealthInject.sln file.

  3. It's time to compile the editor! In Visual Studio, make sure your solution configuration is set to Release, and your solution platform is set to x64 or Win32 depending on your needs. Locate and click Build in your toolbar. A new menu should open allowing you to click Build solution*

  4. After compiling finishes the program is ready to use!

Additional target platforms

Currently not supported.

Usage

The StealthInject program allows you to inject a DLL into a process without using library loading function calls. This also means that the DLL will remain unlisted in the module list.

Example

The following command will stealthily inject TestDll.dll into the program InterceptMe.exe. The full command is shown below:

StealthInject "C:\TestDll.dll" InterceptMe.exe

Additional Notes

Visual Studio 2013 is strongly recommended for compiling.

The first time you start the editor from a fresh source build, you may experience long load times. This only happens on the first run.

About

This tool allows you to stealthily inject a DLL into a process.

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