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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T23:40:37+00:00 2026-05-10T23:40:37+00:00

I have a byte array that represents a complete TCP/IP packet. For clarification, the

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I have a byte array that represents a complete TCP/IP packet. For clarification, the byte array is ordered like this:

(IP Header – 20 bytes)(TCP Header – 20 bytes)(Payload – X bytes)

I have a Parse function that accepts a byte array and returns a TCPHeader object. It looks like this:

TCPHeader Parse( byte[] buffer ); 

Given the original byte array, here is the way I’m calling this function right now.

byte[] tcpbuffer = new byte[ 20 ]; System.Buffer.BlockCopy( packet, 20, tcpbuffer, 0, 20 ); TCPHeader tcp = Parse( tcpbuffer ); 

Is there a convenient way to pass the TCP byte array, i.e., bytes 20-39 of the complete TCP/IP packet, to the Parse function without extracting it to a new byte array first?

In C++, I could do the following:

TCPHeader tcp = Parse( &packet[ 20 ] ); 

Is there anything similar in C#? I want to avoid the creation and subsequent garbage collection of the temporary byte array if possible.

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  1. 2026-05-10T23:40:37+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 11:40 pm

    A common practice you can see in the .NET framework, and that I recommend using here, is specifying the offset and length. So make your Parse function also accept the offset in the passed array, and the number of elements to use.

    Of course, the same rules apply as if you were to pass a pointer like in C++ – the array shouldn’t be modified or else it may result in undefined behavior if you are not sure when exactly the data will be used. But this is no problem if you are no longer going to be modifying the array.

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