I want to grab part of the data inside some C structs to partially serialize/deserialize them, writing the bytes from memory to disk, and viceversa.
The structs are not known in advance, they are dynamically built with my own C code generator (as well as the code that will serialize it). The serializable fields will be placed at the beginning of the struct.
Let's say a have a struct with 4 fields, and the first two are to be serialized:
typedef struct {
int8_t x1;
int32_t x2; /* 1 + 4 = 5 bytes (if packed) */
int8_t y1;
int32_t y2; /* 1 + 4 +1 + 4 = 10 bytes (if packed) */
} st;
I plan to grab the pointer to the struct variable and write/read the n
bytes that cover those two first fields (x1, x2
). I don't think I need to worry about alignment/packing because I don't intend the serialization to survive different compilations (only a unique executable is expected to read/write the data). And, as I'm targeting a wide scope of compilers-architectures, I don't want to place assumptions on alignment-packing or compiler specific tricks.
Then, I need to count bytes. And I can't just do sizeof(st.x1)+sizeof(st.x2)
because of alingment-padding. So, I'm planning to substract pointers, from the start of the struct to the first "non persistent" field:
st myst;
int partsize = (char*)&myst.y1 - (char*)(&myst);
printf("partial size=%d (total size=%d)\n",partsize,sizeof(myst));
This seems to work. And it can be placed in a macro.
(For the record: I tried also to write another macro that does not requrire an instance of the struct, something like this, but it doesnt seem possible here - but this does not matter me much).
My question: Is this correct and safe? Can you see any potential pitfall, or some better approach?
Among other things: Does C standard (and de-facto compilers) assume that the structs fields lay in memory in the same order as they are defined in source? This probably is a stupid question, but I'd want to be sure...
UPDATE: Some conclusions from the answers and my own findings:
There seems to be no problem with my approach. In particular, C dictates that struct fields will never change order.
One could also (as suggested by an aswer) count from the last persistent field and add its size :
(char*)&myst.x2 + sizeof(&myst.x2) - (char*)(&myst)
. That would be equivalent, except that it would include not the padding bytes (if present) for the last field. A very small advantage - and a very small disadvantage, in being less simple.But the accepted answer, with
offsetof
, seems to be preferable than my proposal. It's clear-expressive and pure compile-time, it does not require an instance of the struct. It further seems to be standard, available in any compiler. If one does not need a compile-time construct, and has an instance of the struct available (as is my scenario) both solutions are esentially equivalent.