I am able to connect to the pipe (I can see the connection), but WriteFile always yields a result of 0 and bytesWritten is 0. What is going on?
let pipeName = "\\\\.\\pipe\\xxx.pipe";
let hFile = createFile(pipeName, pipeMode, 0, null, OPEN_EXISTING, 0, null);
let hFileInt = ctypes.cast(hFile, ctypes.intptr_t);
if (ctypes.Int64.compare(hFileInt.value, INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) == 0) {
throw new Error("CreateFile failed for " + pipeName + ", error " +
ctypes.winLastError);
}
let bytesWritten = ctypes.uint32_t(88);
let msg = "hello world\n";
let result = writeFile(hFile, msg, 12, bytesWritten.address(), null);
result = flushFileBuffer(hFile);
the result of writeFile is 0 as is flushFileBuffer, and bytesWritten changes from 88 to 0. :( Here are the declarations:
let writeFile = kernel32.declare(
"WriteFile",
ctypes.winapi_abi,
ctypes.int32_t, //bool // return type: 1 indicates success, 0 failure
ctypes.voidptr_t, // in: hObject
ctypes.jschar.ptr, // in: lpBuffer
ctypes.uint32_t, // in: nNumberOfBytesToWrite
ctypes.uint32_t.ptr, // out: lpNumberOfBytesWritten
ctypes.voidptr_t.ptr // inout: lpOverlapped
);
let flushFileBuffer = kernel32.declare(
"FlushFileBuffers",
ctypes.winapi_abi,
ctypes.int32_t, //bool // return type: 1 indicates success, 0 failure
ctypes.voidptr_t // in: hObject
);
Update. I changed pipeMode to GENERIC_WRITE and got a successful write. But this is confusing. I have
var GENERIC_READ = ctypes.uint32_t(0x80000000);
var GENERIC_WRITE = ctypes.uint32_t(0x40000000);
and
let pipeMode = GENERIC_WRITE;
but
let pipeMode = GENERIC_READ | GENERIC_WRITE;
doesn't. Why doesn't it work? Am I doing the bitwise comparison wrong?
Update 2. pipeMode is fixed using >>> 0
var GENERIC_READ = 0x80000000;
var GENERIC_WRITE = 0x40000000;
let pipeMode = ctypes.uint32_t((GENERIC_READ | GENERIC_WRITE) >>> 0);
However, it does not look like the pipe is written to (even with flush) until I close using
closeHandle(hFile);
and when the handle is closed, my receiving application gets the message, but it is strange. From my C# app, I see
h\0e\0l\0l\0l\0o \0
Update 3. From the C# line, I was waiting for a whole line, so waiting for the \n. I increased the buffer length to 24 and it now triggers at the right time. The only remaining problem (for this question) is why I get \0 after each letter.
Update 4. This is probably the problem
jschar A 16-bit unsigned character. This is different from uint16_t in that C jschar values are automatically converted into 1-character JavaScript strings. These are Unicode characters.
I just want a regular character.
Update 5. Yup that's it. Changing to
ctypes.char.ptr, // in: lpBuffer
makes it work. Or we should account for the 16-byte char on the other side.
CreateFile
yourdwFlagsAndAttributes
value is0
is this allowed?