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Home/ Questions/Q 979655
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T04:15:13+00:00 2026-05-16T04:15:13+00:00

Could the own heap space be readed? could the software be self modified in

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Could the own heap space be readed? could the software be self modified in memory?

I write some code to show the subject,

am I reading own code at memory?
how (if possible) to write it and change instruction on runtime?

#include<stdio.h>
#include<stdint.h>

volatile int addressBase;
uint8_t read(int address);


int main(void) {

    printf("Helium word");

    addressBase=(int)&main;        
    printf("[%X]", read( 0 ));         
    getchar();

    return 0;
}


uint8_t read(int address)
{

       const uint8_t *addr;                        
       addr=(const unsigned char *)(addressBase+(int)address);
       return (*addr);
}
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T04:15:13+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 4:15 am

    You can read and write heap space at your own risk.

    Self-modifiying code might be a useful trick in restricted, small environments like small embedded systems. Modern desktop or server CPUs however do not like self-modifying code at all because it breaks instruction caching, prefetching and pipelining. One anecdote: TI-Scheme ran blazingly fast on 386 CPUs. It used self-modifying code. 486 CPUs introduced instruction caching and TI-Scheme crashed.

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