I have a c++ plus method that generates a value. i am calling this method from a c# application.
The C++ method is like this:
extern "C" REGISTRATION_API char * generate(char dIn[],char dOut[])
The generate method returns an array of chars (sOut[]=returnvalue; return sOut;)
Now I’m calling this method from my c# app:
[DllImport("mydll.dll")]
static extern string generate(string sIn, string sOut);
As you can see, the return type in c# is string. What is happening is that the returned value in c# is not correct and it is corrupted. (The value is correct inside the generate method, but whenever i call it from c# to extract it, i get some erroneous value.)
Is it OK that my method in C# has a string return value while in c++ it’s a char*?
Please share your comments, it is urgent, thanks.
This method cannot be called safely from a native C++ application either. It returns a pointer to an array on the stack frame. Any call to another function will overwrite that stack frame and corrupt the array.
This probably works by accident in a C++ program right now because there is no function call after obtaining the return value of this function. This kind of luck is no longer available when the P/Invoke marshaller sits in between.
You will have to redesign the C++ function. You should give it arguments that allows the caller to pass its own buffer to be filled with the result. For example:
Call this in C# code by passing a StringBuilder for the output argument, properly initialized with a sufficient Capacity to receive the string. The outputSize argument ensures that the C++ function can avoid writing past the end of the buffer and corrupt the garbage collected heap. Don’t ignore it.