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radkov

Escape From Tarkov radar. Check out my blog post on this project for more details:

https://joshfinley.github.io/game-hacking-writing-a-radar/

Alt Text

Disclaimer

This is not directly useable as a game cheat (and is not intended to be useable as one either). This is a hobby & curiosity project aimed to learn about how game cheats work and ways to write a code base around memory offset-based game hacking. The radar backend is written to directly read process memory using Windows APIs. Additionally, it's written for the SPT-AKI launcher, and its likely that the real game would require different offsets to access player info. Expect to be banned for trying to run this against the real game.

Project Layout


├───pkg     
│   ├───rkpb                -> protocol buffer definition
│   ├───tarkov              -> tarkov game utilities (e.g. read player pos)
│   │   └───tarkov_test     -> READ THESE FIRST to understand tarkov package
│   ├───unity               -> unity game utilities
│   │   └───unity_test      
│   └───winutil             -> utilities for reading process memory
│       └───winutil_test
├───radarsrv                -> radar web application backend 
│   ├───cmd                 -> contains main.go e.g. `go run radarsrv/cmd/main.go`
│   └───radarapp            -> radar web application backend library
│       └───static          -> HTML, CSS
└───tkovmon                 -> main.go for tarkov game memory monitor

Dependencies

  • go >= 1.17.6 (lower versions not tested but may work)
  • protocol buffers compiler 3.19.4 (only needed if you need to rebuild the rkpb package)
  • make (optional)
  • go packages/modules: run: go mod tidy

Running

  1. start the web server backend:
go run radarsrv/cmd/main.go

This will listen on port 1337 and 80. 1337 is the gRPC server, 80 is a temporary frontend REST API used to make requests for player positions in a web application.

  1. start the game memory monitor (tkovmon):
go run tkovmon/main.go`

This will start the game memory monitor. It will wait for the game to launch and the game session to become available.

Testing and Development

setting up a development environment

Go development with Vistual Studio Code is incredibly easy. If you haven't set up a development environment in VSCode for Go before, and you have Go installed, it should prompt you to install various tools. Click install for any of these and it will install plugins for code linting, auto-formatting, auto-completion, debugging, and more.

running tests

While you can run all tests for a given package using the go test command, if the Go tools are installed for VSCode, it is much easier to just open any test file in vscode and use the 'run test | deug test` options that the Go tools provide. Using these, you can set breakpoints and debug individual tests, line by line.

The test functions in these files make for perfect examples for using the packages they test. Additionally, if making changes or improvements to the Go code, you can drive your development using tests and the debugger instead of invoking go run <whatever> and scratching your head when the build or run fails.

Building

protocol buffer package (rkpb)

If changes are made to the rkpb.proto file, it will need to be recompiled:

make
# OR run the 'protoc' command listed inside the makefile

standalone binaries

Unless distributing actual binaries for radarsrv and tkovmon, there should be no reason to run a standalone build. If this is needed for some reason, however, use the go build command.

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Escape from Tarkov radar in Go

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