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How can I create a window (HWND) without using CreateWindow(Ex)?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-03-07 03:04 出处:网络
I\'m using a proxy DLL to intercept calls to CreateWindowExA/CreateWindowExW. This works quit nicely, except that some applications (most notably some Visual Basic 6 applications) seem to be able to c

I'm using a proxy DLL to intercept calls to CreateWindowExA/CreateWindowExW. This works quit nicely, except that some applications (most notably some Visual Basic 6 applications) seem to be able to create windows without going through either of the two functions. Tools like Spy++ are able to show the Window, but my hooked functions didn't notice them.

My first suspicion was that maybe these (old) applications use CreateWindowA/CreateWindowW for creating windows, but at least with my compilers (MSVC6 up to MSVC10), CreateWindow is just a #define; the remarks section of the documentation confirms this.

My second idea was that I could maybe install a CBT hook using SetWindowsHookEx to detect creations of windows. However, the result is the same: this hook notices the 开发者_JAVA百科same windows as my hooked API functions, but it doesn't notice all the windows which are visible in Spy++.

So my question is: was there maybe a time when CreateWindowA/CreateWindowW was not a #define, but a real function? Is this function still exported by user32.dll, maybe for compatibility reasons? How can I get a handle on this function to hook it?

Or is there maybe some other, possibly undocumented, function which can be used to create functions, much like e.g. NtCreateProcess can be used instead of CreateProcess?


Three simple guesses:

1) Is it possible that VB apps are really calling a "DialogBox" API (e.g. DialogBoxParam, CreateDialogIndirect, etc...) underneath the hood?

2) You are running a 64-bit OS and are hooking the 64-bit user32.dll. 32-bit apps aren't getting hooked as a result. There's a 32-bit copy of user32.dll in c:\windows\syswow64

3) You aren't hooking the user32.dll that the apps are using. Many older apps may be getting some DLL redirection. From a command prompt, do "dir /s user32.dll" from the c:\windows\winsxs directory. You'll see at least one other copy of user32.dll here. Forget when this happens, but you can Bing for "winsxs" and get some pages discussion how the side by side directory solves compat issues on newer windows OS releases.

I suspect #3 is the reason for your issue.


I think your issue might be that the VB app is using GetProcAddress() to call the CreateWindow**() function. If you hook GetProcAddress you should be able to confirm this.

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