I'm trying to serialize a struct that contains a number of members, including a couple of strings of Unicode text (wchar_t, coded as Windows TCHARs), to save to a file later. I want to serialize it as a unit rather than write the individual members of the struct separately because there are a number of different structs that need to be saved (each one will have its own serialization function), and I want to be able to pass a struct, once serialized, to a generic function that will wrap it with some metadata before actually writing it to the file (and adding it to the accompanying index I am also creating).
However, while the integers serialize and deserialize just fine, the strings, once unserialized, appear as essentially random text (changing each time).
Here is my serialization function:
PBYTE SerializeLanguage(language *Language){
PBYTE SerializedLanguage;
SIZE_T LanguageLen;
UINT CurrentIndex = 0;
LanguageLen = GetSerializedLanguageLength(Language);
SerializedLanguage = (PBYTE)HeapAlloc(GetProcessHeap(), HEAP_ZERO_MEMORY, LanguageLen);
CopyMemory(&SerializedLanguage[CurrentIndex], &(Language->name_length), sizeof(Language->name_length));
CurrentIndex += sizeof(Language->name_length);
CopyMemory(&SerializedLanguage[CurrentIndex], &(Language->name), (lstrlen(Language->name) + 1) * sizeof(TCHAR));
return SerializedLanguage;
}
And my de-serialization function:
VOID DeserializeLanguage(language *Out, PBYTE SerializedLanguage){
UINT CurrentIndex = 0;
CopyMemory(&(Out->name_length), &SerializedLanguage[CurrentIndex], sizeof(Out->name_length));
CurrentIndex += sizeof(Out->name_length);
Out->name = (PTCHAR)HeapAlloc(GetProcessHeap(), HEAP_ZERO_MEMORY, Out->name_length);
CopyMemory(Out->name, &SerializedLanguage[CurrentIndex], Out->name_length);
MessageBox(NULL, Out->name, NULL, MB_OK);
return;
}
And, finally, the language struct:
typedef struct language {
UINT name_length;
PTCHAR name;
UINT script_name_length; /* Serialization for this and the following elements not yet implemented */
PTCHAR script_name;
BYTE min_level;
} language;
I've checked with a debugger, and language.name is allocated and has already been assigned correctly in the function that calls SerializeLanguage.
UNICODE is defined so all the wide-character versions of the relevant functions are being called; this is not the issue.