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.net - Is there a way to hook a managed function in C# like I would a unmanaged function in C++?

In C++ I would get the address of the function and overwrite the first few bytes to a jmp to my function, do some stuff, restore the original bytes, and call the original function.

Can I do something like this in C#?

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The .NET Profiler API is the closest "Microsoft-approved" way of intercepting methods at runtime. As already mentioned, this is somewhat difficult to implement and I am not aware of a library that makes this easy to implement using purely managed code.

While researching options for this myself a few months ago, I stumbled on CLR Method Injection, which is an article with source code explaining how to intercept methods at runtime. I considered using this myself, and even had the sample project working, but ultimately concluded that I needed more than method interception and would need a different solution. However, this approach directly answers your question.

Lastly, what I ended up doing was developing Afterthought as an open source alternative to PostSharp, which runs as a post-compile step and allows you to modify existing methods to call other code, or replace the method implementations altogether. I am working right now on a new fluid syntax, which I will include a sample of now to provide an example to help you see how this AOP approach would meet your needs:

Methods
    .Named("Sum")
    .WithParams<int[]>()
    .Before((T instance, ref int[] values)
        => { var s = new Stopwatch(); s.Start(); return s; })
    .After((instance, stopwatch, values)
        => instance.Result = (int)stopwatch.ElapsedMilliseconds);   

In this case while amending an existing type with a Sum method I am introducing code before and after the method to measure the execution time. After running Afterthought against the original compiled class, the resulting Sum method would have calls to these lambda expressions (the C# compiler just turns them into static methods) before and after the method body. I could have just as easily called Implement and replaced the entire method implementation.

I hope one of these approaches meets your needs. In my case, I went the AOP route because I wanted to do more than interception, such as implementing interfaces, adding new methods/properties, etc. I also wanted something that would not introduce dependencies at runtime or concerns about stability or performance in the runtime environment--compile-time processing is just safer and easier to test.


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