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01:10
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Q: How to get values from C structs in c#

Dark KnightThese are the structs in C public struct den_processing_result { public enum1 state; public ulong bytesRead; public ulong bytesWritten; public unsafe den_context* context; <-----how to acquire this value } public struct den_conte...

Please do not tagspam, [c] and [c++] are not related to this question.
Pulling the C tag because that's definitely NOT C code, leaving c++ for now, though I think c++-cli would be more appropriate.
user585968
@Dash "Please do not tagspam, [c] and [c++] are not related to this question" - incorrect. extern "C" __declspec(dllexport) is clearly c++. learn.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/build/…
If I send IntPtr.Zero to C dll that would be null in this case?
user19858830
Ah sorry, i misread your question and subsequently your code. My apologies. Makes sense, i just couldn't pay attention...
user585968
01:10
If you have access to both the c++ and C# code, you might want to consider using C++/CLI for it's easier path for managed-to-unmanaged interop. Also, rather than expose everything to .NET, only expose what is needed. Try to encapsulate as much as you can on the c++/CLI side. e.g. is it really necessary to expose all the struct's contents? The raw memory blocks? etc
user19858830
public unsafe den_context* context; <-----how to acquire this value Who knows. You have only shown a native function that frees a context object. The DLL should also a have a function that allocates and provides a context object, no?
@MySkullCaveIsADarkPlace Ha that's ok but are the field offsets correct? I'm most probably making mistake there
The structs on the C# side make some assumptions about the sizes and layout of the fields which I think won't be true, but it depends on how exactly the C++ side struct works, which is not clear: most of those types are non-standard. Normally fields are aligned to their natural alignment (which your C# struct assumes they aren't), and long (in C++, unlike in C#) is 4 bytes on windows. E: you're usually better off with sequential layout (typically does the right thing), unless you really need explicit layout and you know what you're doing
@MySkullCaveIsADarkPlace this is the function extern "C" __declspec(dllexport) void free_context(den_context *const context, void (*mem_free)(void *)) { if(mem_free == NULL) mem_free = free; if(!context->dictionary_type) mem_free(context->dictionary); mem_free(context); }
@harold Okay you're right. I tried with sequential (as default) I get the proper values of den_processing_result struct. But how can I get the values from den_context then?
@MySkullCaveIsADarkPlace Note that in source dll it says typedef unsigned long long which I believe it's 8-bytes if I'm not mistaken hence I used ulong which is 8 bytes
user19858830
But free_context frees an existing den_context, it doesn't create one. My previous comment was more in the direction: Since the DLL has a function for freeing a den_context, does it also have a function for creating some den_context?
01:10
@DarkKnight what do you mean by "get the values" exactly? You have some pointer _result.den_context and you can use it, right? Does the address look plausible?
@harold yes _result.den_context is the pointer to den_context. Now using that pointer how I can retrieve the data from the same struct? If that makes sense..
You should be able to use _result.den_context->algorithm for example (in unsafe code)
@MySkullCaveIsADarkPlace ah I didn't know that I read somewhere it said ulong takes 8 bytes. Does it matter if dll is compiled and targeted only for x64? Does it's value change?
@harold _result.den_context->algorithm in c#? How?
@DarkKnight -> is an operator in C# too, you can use it in unsafe contexts
@MySkullCaveIsADarkPlace "does it also have a function for creating some den_context?" Yes it does. It returns den_make_result(STATE_OK, 0, 0, den_allocate_context(algorithm, custom_dictionary, mem_alloc));
01:10
Your example is completely misleading, it's not even valid C, there's no unsafe keyword.
@aybe those are normal enums like public enum DEN_ALGORITHM : byte {algo1 =1, algo=2, algo=3}
@harold in in unsafe I tried free_context(Result.context->enum1.ALGO1, IntPtr.Zero); but it says it cannot resolve hmm
enum1.ALGO1 is not part of the struct, it's just one of members of that enum. It doesn't make sense to pass that to free_context either, it expects a pointer (as IntPtr) to a context, so (IntPtr)Result.den_context
@harold so should I change the parameter of C dll from den_context *const context to IntPtr context ? Edit: I tried both ways console app still crashes. Hmph
No, IntPtr is a C# thing so you wouldn't be able to do that anyway. You could change the parameter to den_context *context on the C# side, then you can pass the pointer directly without casting it to IntPtr, doesn't really matter though.
@harold console app still crashes? Well at least how we can retrieve the data from both structs when one of their field is pointing to the second struct? I can get human readable data from den_processing_result dunno about den_context struct
01:10
IDK about that crash, but does for example result.context->dictionary_size give you any reasonable value? Even if it does though, dictionary is a void pointer so you can't really do much with it. The actual contents of the dictionary aren't directly usable.
Not particularly interested in dictionary value but after trying den_context context = (den_context)Marshal.PtrToStructure(new IntPtr(Result.context), typeof(den_context)); I get the values for den_context struct :D Well that's about getting the values from struct I don't understand why the console crashes when I use free_context in debug mode? and in release mode it doesn't execute next lines from the same method. Mystery

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