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Home/ Questions/Q 399917
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T16:53:36+00:00 2026-05-12T16:53:36+00:00

I have a large C structure (about 40 members, int and char[]) which I

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I have a large C structure (about 40 members, int and char[]) which I have to pass through JNI to the Java side for further processing. This happens repeatedly. (I already put the GetMethodID() etc. into an init() function on the C side so I only have to call them once.)

What would be an efficient way to do this?

I can think of:

  1. Instantiating a Java class with the appropriate members through GetMethodID( ..., "<init>", ... ) and passing all members of the C structure through the constructor;
  2. Assigning a Java struct with the appropriate members, and initializing the (public) members through SetXYZField();
  3. …

Did I overlook something? (This is my first “close combat” with JNI.) Is there really no efficient way to “sync” a C structure and a Java structure?

What is the more efficient passing method, 1. or 2.? In case of 1., should I pass constructor parameters through CallXYZMethod() (parameter list) or CallXYZMethodA() (argument array)?

Thanks for your input.

Edit: Reworded slightly; 2. doesn’t need to be a class of course, and I don’t strictly need a struct on the Java side if there is some other solution to handle the C data on the Java side.

Edit 2: I do this in C++, but the struct itself stems from a C-linkage callback function, i.e. nothing C++-specific to the problem. Rephrased to read “C” instead of “C++”.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T16:53:36+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 4:53 pm

    For pure efficiency, it’s best to minimize calls that go through JNI, so your best bet is sending all the data in either through option 1 and creating a new object.

    You could also have a “recieveUpdate( … 40 params …)” method on the Java side if you wanted to avoid allocating a new object per update, though it’s cringeworthy design.

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