We had some (lots of) classes in .NET. We used protobuf-net to mark them up, and generate .proto wrappers for C++ code side via google original library.
So I have a message (C++ DebugString() on some EventBase class (in .NET EventCharacterMoved
inherits EventBase
while in C++ I just write to optional property)):
UserId: -2792
EventCharacterMoved {
Coordinates {
Position {
X: 196.41913
Y: 130
Z: 213
}
Rotation {
X: 207
Y: 130
Z: 213
}
}
OldCoordinates {
Position {
X: 196.41913
Y: 130
Z: 213
}
Rotation {
X: 207
Y: 130
Z: 213
}
}
}
(From such .proto file)
message Coordinates {
optional TreeFloat Position = 1;
optional TreeFloat Rotation = 2;
}
message EventBase {
optional int32 UserId = 10 [default = 0];
// the following represent sub-types; at most 1 should have a value
optional EventCharacterMoved EventCharacterMoved = 15;
}
message EventCharacterMoved {
optional Coordinates Coordinates = 100;
optional Coordinates OldCoordinates = 101;
}
message TreeFloat {
optional float X = 1 [default = 0];
optional float Y = 2 [default = 0];
optional float Z = 3 [default = 0];
}
In C++ I send this and we send the same message contents from .NET.
The C++ code can parse C++ encoded message as well as the .NET encoded one. The .NET code can only parse the .NET message.
Over the wire we get 87 bytes flying (same size from .Net file and C++ file) yet contents are different:
As you can see its similar yet not same. As a result of such difference CPP code can read .NET C# messages while .NET can not read CPP messages.
In code on deserialization we get:
An unhandled exception of type 'System.InvalidCastException' occurred in TestProto.exe
Additional information: Unable to cast object of type 'TestProto.EventBase' to type 'TestProto.EventCharacterMoved'.
in code like:
using (var inputStream = File.Open(@"./cpp_in.bin", FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read)) {
var ecm = Serializer.Deserialize<EventCharacterMoved>(inputStream);
}
Let's look at (as mentioned by jpa in his comment) protoc --decode_raw
option:
This can be related to the fact that my CPP wrapper uses latest google protobuf version while protobuf-net probably uses some older encoding format or something like this...
So I wonder how to make .NET protobuf read C++ messages (make tham capable of decoding same stuff)?
Or at least how to make original google protobuf encode same way .NET protobuf does?
And for those who are really interested and would like to get into it zipped bundle with simplified example (VS 2010 solutions for C++ and C# code included)
protoc --decode_raw
, I see that the only difference is whether field 10 (UserId) is written first or last. C++ emits it first, .NET for some reason last (usually they should be in numeric order by the tag). Not sure what would cause the actual problem though.