There is a Bitmap constructor overload, which requires everything you have (plus PixelFormat):
public Bitmap(int width, int height, int stride, PixelFormat format, IntPtr scan0);
This might work (if args.Buffer is an array of blittable type, like byte for example):
Bitmap bitmap;
var gch = System.Runtime.InteropServices.GCHandle.Alloc(args.Buffer, GCHandleType.Pinned);
try
{
bitmap = new Bitmap(
args.Width, args.Height, args.Stride,
System.Drawing.Imaging.PixelFormat.Format24bppRgb,
gch.AddrOfPinnedObject());
}
finally
{
gch.Free();
}
Update:
Probably it's better to copy image bytes to newly created Bitmap manually, because it seems like that constructors doesn't do that, and if byte[] array of image data gets garbage collected all sorts of bad things can happen.
var bitmap = new Bitmap(args.Width, args.Height, System.Drawing.Imaging.PixelFormat.Format24bppRgb);
var data = bitmap.LockBits(
new Rectangle(0, 0, args.Width, args.Height),
System.Drawing.Imaging.ImageLockMode.WriteOnly,
System.Drawing.Imaging.PixelFormat.Format24bppRgb);
if(data.Stride == args.Stride)
{
Marshal.Copy(args.Buffer, 0, data.Scan0, args.Stride * args.Height);
}
else
{
int arrayOffset = 0;
int imageOffset = 0;
for(int y = 0; y < args.Height; ++y)
{
Marshal.Copy(args.Buffer, arrayOffset, (IntPtr)(((long)data.Scan0) + imageOffset), data.Stride);
arrayOffset += args.Stride;
imageOffset += data.Stride;
}
}
bitmap.UnlockBits(data);