Skip to content

jackr276/Simple-Memory-Examiner

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

18 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Simple Memory Examiner

Author: Jack Robbins

Introduction

This program contains a simple memory examiner/dumper that prints the addresses and contents of argv onto the console. For presentation purposes, all memory addresses are 8-byte aligned, meaning that the address ends in an 8 or 0. This creates a consistent look for the printed contents, but does have the side effect of printing out some of the surrounding memory contents that are not related to the program. This is a very simple program, written 100% in C, with no provided runner script since running this program is so easy.

Running this program & interpreting its output

To run this program, download the examine.c source code and navigate to the directory where it is.

Compile the program by running:

example@bash:~$ gcc examine.c -o examine

Following this, run the program by entering ./examine, followed by the arguments that you would like to examine.

Here is an example run and output:

example@bash:~$ ./examine Examine these argument strings

argv    | 00 00 7f fc a0 e7 4d d8 | 0x7ffca0e74ca0

argv[0] | 00 00 7f fc a0 e7 69 8f | 0x7ffca0e74dd8

argv[1] | 00 00 7f fc a0 e7 69 99 | 0x7ffca0e74de0

argv[2] | 00 00 7f fc a0 e7 69 a1 | 0x7ffca0e74de8

argv[3] | 00 00 7f fc a0 e7 69 a7 | 0x7ffca0e74df0

argv[4] | 00 00 7f fc a0 e7 69 b0 | 0x7ffca0e74df8

|2e(.) 00(\0) 00(\0) 00(\0) 00(\0) 00(\0) 00(\0) 00(\0)  | 0x7ffca0e76988

|65(e) 6e(n) 69(i) 6d(m) 61(a) 78(x) 65(e) 2f(/)  | 0x7ffca0e76990

|65(e) 6e(n) 69(i) 6d(m) 61(a) 78(x) 45(E) 00(\0)  | 0x7ffca0e76998

|61(a) 00(\0) 65(e) 73(s) 65(e) 68(h) 74(t) 00(\0)  | 0x7ffca0e769a0

|00(\0) 74(t) 6e(n) 65(e) 6d(m) 75(u) 67(g) 72(r)  | 0x7ffca0e769a8

|00(\0) 73(s) 67(g) 6e(n) 69(i) 72(r) 74(t) 73(s)  | 0x7ffca0e769b0

example@bash:~$

To explain this output, lets walk through from top to bottom examining what each printed line is. The first printed line is argv, followed by the contents in stored in argv, followed by the address of argv in memory. From this line, we can see that argv is storing 00 00 7f fc a0 e7 4d d8 at address 0x7ffca0e74ca0 in memory. Since argv is of type char**, it stores the address of a pointer, that being the argv[0] pointer. Moving down to the line labeled argv[0], we can see that its address of 0x7ffca0e74dd8 is what argv was storing. The address of each argument pointer, argv[#], are printed out by the program in order. Since there are 4 command line arguments passed to the program, and since the name of the program(./examine) is itself considered to be an argument pointer, we have five argv items printed out.

Below all of the argv[#] printing is the command line arguments themselves printed out in memory. Since the program makes all memory addresses 8-byte aligned by default, some extra \0s are printed out before the first argument. If you look closely at the letters enclosed in () in the third and final block, you will see that they spell out ./examine Examine these argument strings in sequential order. Since each row must be 8-bytes long, some extra bytes are printed out at the very end.

About

A simple program that examines the memory addresses of passed through command line arguments

Topics

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages