Tell me more ×
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It's 100% free, no registration required.

Project

I've developed a remoting class which is used to replace a subset of WCF. This has been done because we are targeting a mobile Plattform with Unity3D and need to keep the Memory consumption as small as possible. ( So we don't need to include System.ServiceModel which actually has a size of 2.7MB which is a lot for a small mobile RAM )

It's working fine right now for all types ( including complex types which will be serialized using my own serializer written years ago ) and it's also capable to handle complex situations ( A calls B, B calls A, A returns something, B returns something ).

Method invokation

For invoking methods on the target site i'm using Type.InvokeMember which actually works for the most cases except for nullable-types. And this is the problem i've faced. In my interface definition the method looks like this:

public interface IServerContract 
{
    void SetUsageID(Int32? id);
}

The ServerProxy ( A object which handles the call to the remote method ) i'm doing the following:

public class ServerProxy : ProxyBase
{
    public void SetUsageID(Int32? id)
    {
         RemoteCall("SetUsageID", id);
    }
}

As usual the parameter id is boxed because the definition of RemoteCall looks like this:

public void RemoteCall(String methodName, params Object[] arguments) { ... }

At this point i got only a System.Int32 and not a nullable anymore. I'm serializing the arguments and deserializing them on the target machine. At this point i'm calling Type.InvokeMethod which causes a exception because he can't find a method which takes a Int32 as first parameter ( second when not ignoring this ).

What is the best solution for this issue? There are serval ways but all would cause a performance impact.

share|improve this question

1 Answer

up vote 2 down vote accepted

The boxing rules for int? indeed mean that once you have it as an object you see:

  • empty values are null, and nothing more can be discerned
  • non-empty values are known only as the non-nullable type
    • so specifically, passing (int)5 and (int?)5 have exactly the same appearance within object

As such, the options available:

  • ensure method names are unique, so you can uniquely resolve by name to a MethodInfo, then use MethodInfo.Invoke (this ensures no ambiguity in the parameters)
  • try to resolve a method accepting the non-nullable type(s), then look for nullable type(s) instead (gets complex for multi-parameter methods)
  • pass more metadata about what method you are calling (increases size)

Personally, though, I have a very simplistic view on such things... rather than trying to encode a vague multi-parameter method, another option is to simplify to always passing a single, DTO-based, parameter - i.e. instead of SetUsageID(int?) you could have SetUsage(SetUsageArgs) (or something similar), where SetUsageArgs happens to have a single property. The point being: you're now just encoding a single DTO, and once you have deserialized that DTO there is no ambiguity.

share|improve this answer
Thank you for your help, i'm creating unique id's for each of the methods when the connection is established and save them in a table, then i just have to send a 7bit encoded int over the network to find the correct method. – Felix K. May 8 '12 at 15:28

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.