The purpose of this sys-module is to allow users to remote control their switch via wifi connection as well as to read and write to a games memory. This can be used to create bots for games and other fun automation projects.
Don't even think of blaming me if anything goes wrong with you using this. It's supposed to help you in the development of bot automation, but I am not liable for any damages or bans you might get in the process. Use at your own risk and all that.
- simulate button press
- simulate button hold
- set complete controller state
- simulate touchscreen press
- simulate touchscreen hold
- simulate touchscreen drawing
- read x bytes of consecutive memory from RAM based on absolute memory address
- read x bytes of consecutive memory from RAM based on address relative to main nso base
- read x bytes of consecutive memory from RAM based on address relative to heap base
- write x bytes of consecutive memory to RAM based on absolute memory address
- write x bytes of consecutive memory to RAM based on address relative to main nso base
- write x bytes of consecutive memory to RAM based on address relative to heap base
- capture current screen and send it (only as shitty jpeg at this time)
Download the .zip file and extract it to your sd card. The zip file contains the necessary folder structure and flag files. Restart your switch.
Copy the sys-botbase.nsp file to sdmc://atmosphere/contents/430000000000000B and rename it to exefs.nsp. Create a new folder in sdmc://atmosphere/contents/430000000000000B names "flags". Create a empty file called boot2.flag inside this folder. Restart your switch.
The sysmodule opens a socket connection on port 6000. See the python example on how to talk to the sysmodule and what commands are available.
big thank you to jakibaki for a great sysmodule base to learn and work with, as well as being helpful on the Reswitched discord! also thanks to RTNX on discord for bringing to my attention a nasty little bug that would very randomly cause RAM poking to go bad and the switch (sometimes) crashing as a result. thanks to Anubis for stress testing!