Here's a quick and dirty version that searches for data in itself. If you open up Notepad++, type "SomeDataToFind", replace the pid with the correct value, and run it, it should find the data as well. It might give you something to start with and embellish to suit your needs.
Your code was searching for the wrong length, returning the wrong offset, leaking memory like a sieve, and not always returning a value which is undefined behavior.
#include <Windows.h>
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <vector>
char* GetAddressOfData(DWORD pid, const char *data, size_t len)
{
HANDLE process = OpenProcess(PROCESS_VM_READ | PROCESS_QUERY_INFORMATION, FALSE, pid);
if(process)
{
SYSTEM_INFO si;
GetSystemInfo(&si);
MEMORY_BASIC_INFORMATION info;
std::vector<char> chunk;
char* p = 0;
while(p < si.lpMaximumApplicationAddress)
{
if(VirtualQueryEx(process, p, &info, sizeof(info)) == sizeof(info))
{
p = (char*)info.BaseAddress;
chunk.resize(info.RegionSize);
SIZE_T bytesRead;
if(ReadProcessMemory(process, p, &chunk[0], info.RegionSize, &bytesRead))
{
for(size_t i = 0; i < (bytesRead - len); ++i)
{
if(memcmp(data, &chunk[i], len) == 0)
{
return (char*)p + i;
}
}
}
p += info.RegionSize;
}
}
}
return 0;
}
int main()
{
const char someData[] = "SomeDataToFind";
std::cout << "Local data address: " << (void*)someData << "
";
//Pass whatever process id you like here instead.
DWORD pid = GetCurrentProcessId();
char* ret = GetAddressOfData(pid, someData, sizeof(someData));
if(ret)
{
std::cout << "Found: " << (void*)ret << "
";
}
else
{
std::cout << "Not found
";
}
return 0;
}
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