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I need to deliver a string via p/invoke, it's just a filename, something like "desc.xml". I don't care if it would be std::string or char* or probably something else (i can convert to appropiate type). How should I declare signatures?

On c# side I expect for something like that:

    [DllImport("Native.dll"), SuppressUnmanagedCodeSecurity]
    public static extern void Initialize(/*TODO: how to pass string?*/);

On c++ side I expect something like that:

__declspec(dllexport) void Initialize(char* fileName);

or std::string instead of char*

__declspec(dllexport) void Initialize(std::string& fileName);

I expect it to use like that:

Initialize("desc.xml");

The question is how exactly should I declare parameters.

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2 Answers 2

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public static extern void Initialize(string filename);

Also add a CharSet to your DllImport("Native.dll") to match what you have on the C++ side (CharSet.Ansi for char*, CharSet.Unicode for wchar*).

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Assuming that you want to receive ANSI encoded text, you should declare the C++ code like this:

__declspec(dllexport) void Initialize(const char* fileName);

This will use the default calling convention of __cdecl. The text will be passed as a pointer to a null-terminated array of char.

On the C# side you declare it like this:

[DllImport("Native.dll", CallingConvention=CallingConvention.Cdecl)]
public static extern void Initialize(string fileName);

There's no need to specify the character set since the default is `ANSI. If you want to be explicit (not a bad idea in my view) then you can write it like this:

[DllImport("Native.dll", CallingConvention=CallingConvention.Cdecl, 
    CharSet=CharSet.Ansi)]
public static extern void Initialize(string fileName);

If you compile the C++ code as is the function's name will be mangled. You'd have to use the EntryPoint parameter of the DllImport attribute to specify the mangled name. As an alternative you could wrap up the native code's declaration of the function in an extern "C" block to suppress mangling.

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