As you already mentioned you will use the uint[]
for encryption.
Because of some reasons, you copy arrays with BlockCopy
. But you want to access byte[]
like an uint[]
, without converting or casting the entire array.
Then, what's something not enough? Is there something in C# can do this?
After think for one more hour, I guess what you want it for, should be the indexer
.
Here's the code. It's simple.
public partial class UIntIndexer {
static int ComputeElementCount(int size, int bytesCount) {
var r=~0;
return Math.DivRem(bytesCount, size, out r)+(r>0?1:0);
}
static int ComputeIndex(int index) {
return sizeof(uint)*index;
}
public UIntIndexer(byte[] array) {
m_Length=ComputeElementCount(sizeof(uint), (m_Array=array).Length);
}
public uint this[int index] {
set {
var startIndex=ComputeIndex(index);
var bytes=BitConverter.GetBytes(value);
var count=m_Length>1+index?sizeof(uint):m_Array.Length-startIndex;
Buffer.BlockCopy(bytes, 0, m_Array, startIndex, count);
}
get {
var startIndex=ComputeIndex(index);
if(m_Length>1+index)
return BitConverter.ToUInt32(m_Array, startIndex);
else {
var bytes=new byte[sizeof(uint)];
Buffer.BlockCopy(m_Array, startIndex, bytes, 0, m_Array.Length-startIndex);
return BitConverter.ToUInt32(bytes, 0);
}
}
}
public int Length {
get {
return m_Length;
}
}
byte[] m_Array;
int m_Length;
}
If thread safety should be concerned, you might need to keep the the source array synchronized. Following is the code for test it:
var alldata=new byte[] { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 };
var block32=new byte[alldata.Length];
var uintIndexer=new UIntIndexer(block32);
Buffer.BlockCopy(alldata, 0, block32, 0, alldata.Length);
Debug.Print("uintIndexer.Length={0}", uintIndexer.Length);
for(var i=uintIndexer.Length; i-->0; )
Debug.Print("uintIndexer[{0}]={1}", i, uintIndexer[i]);
byte*
?UInt32
array as an input. However, once encrypted I need to convert it back to byte array to send it over serial port.BlockCopy
,...) is that they use native endianness, and thus produce different results on different systems. If that's not a problem, just useBlockCopy
or pointers. Don't try using a byte array as an integer array.crypto
function needs to take aUInt32*
, just like in C. Reinterpret-castingbyte[]
toUInt32[]
in C# is similar to reinterpret castingVector<byte>
toVector<UInt32>
i.e. a really bad idea.