vote up 1 vote down star

Hi,

I'm trying to interface C# (.NET Compact Framework 3.5) with a Windows CE 6 R2 stream driver using P/Invoked DeviceIoControl() calls . For one of the IOCTL codes, the driver requires a DeviceIoControl input buffer that is the following unmanaged struct that contains an embedded pointer:

typedef struct {
    DWORD address;
    const void* pBuffer;
    DWORD size; // buffer size
} IOCTL_TWL_WRITEREGS_IN;

I defined the struct in C# as:

[StructLayout(LayoutKind.Sequential)]
public struct IoctlWriteRegsIn
{
    public uint Address;
    public byte[] Buffer;
    public uint Size;
}

and my P/Invoke signature as:

[DllImport("coredll.dll", CharSet = CharSet.Unicode, SetLastError = true)]
static extern bool DeviceIoControl(IntPtr hDevice,
                                    UInt32 dwIoControlCode,
                                    ref IoctlWriteRegsIn lpInBuffer,
                                    UInt32 nInBufferSize,
                                    UInt32[] lpOutBuffer,
                                    UInt32 nOutBufferSize,
                                    ref UInt32 lpBytesReturned,
                                    IntPtr lpOverlapped);

However, whenever I call DeviceIoControl() in C#, it always returns false, with a last Win32 error of ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER. Here's a source code snippet from the IOCTL switch statement in the driver that handles the IOCTL code and does error checking on the input buffer, where inSize is the nInBufferSize parameter:

    case IOCTL_TWL_WRITEREGS:
        if ((pInBuffer == NULL) || 
            (inSize < sizeof(IOCTL_TWL_WRITEREGS_IN)))
            {
            SetLastError(ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER);
            break;
            }
        address = ((IOCTL_TWL_WRITEREGS_IN*)pInBuffer)->address;
        pBuffer = ((IOCTL_TWL_WRITEREGS_IN*)pInBuffer)->pBuffer;
        size = ((IOCTL_TWL_WRITEREGS_IN*)pInBuffer)->size;
        if (inSize < (sizeof(IOCTL_TWL_WRITEREGS_IN) + size))
            {
            SetLastError(ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER);
            break;
            }
        rc = TWL_WriteRegs(context, address, pBuffer, size);

I tried hard coding sizes that should pass the driver's error checking with no success, suggesting that it's a marshalling problem. I probably did not define the embedded pointer in the C# struct correctly or have my P/Invoke signature wrong. Any ideas?

Thanks in advance, Ben

For reference, I can talk to the driver from C++ with no problems like this:

IOCTL_TWL_WRITEREGS_IN reg;
reg.address = 0x004B0014;
unsigned char data = 0xBE;
reg.pBuffer = &data;
reg.size = sizeof(char);

BOOL writeSuccess = DeviceIoControl(driver, IOCTL_TWL_WRITEREGS, &reg, sizeof(IOCTL_TWL_WRITEREGS_IN) + 1, NULL, 0, NULL, NULL);

Update: here's what worked! Used JaredPar's IntPtr suggestion and cleaned up my P/Invoke signature by SwDevMan81's suggestion:

    [StructLayout(LayoutKind.Sequential)]
    public struct IoctlWriteRegsIn
    {
        public uint Address;
        public IntPtr Buffer;
        public uint Size;
    }

    // elided

    byte regData = 0xFF;
    GCHandle pin = GCHandle.Alloc(regData, GCHandleType.Pinned);
    IoctlWriteRegsIn writeInBuffer = new IoctlWriteRegsIn{Address = twlBackupRegA, Buffer = pin.AddrOfPinnedObject(), Size = 1};
    bool writeSuccess = DeviceIoControl(driverHandle, IoctlTwlWriteRegs, ref writeInBuffer, (uint) Marshal.SizeOf(writeInBuffer) + 1, IntPtr.Zero, 0, ref numBytesReturned, IntPtr.Zero);

    // P/Invoke signature
    [DllImport("coredll.dll", CharSet = CharSet.Unicode, SetLastError = true)]
    static extern bool DeviceIoControl(IntPtr hDevice,
                                        UInt32 dwIoControlCode,
                                        ref IoctlWriteRegsIn lpInBuffer,
                                        UInt32 nInBufferSize,
                                        IntPtr lpOutBuffer,
                                        UInt32 nOutBufferSize,
                                        ref UInt32 lpBytesReturned,
                                        IntPtr lpOverlapped);
flag
You're putting the IntPtr at a random value in memory. You need to actually allocate the pointer to real memory – JaredPar Nov 5 at 17:14
Oops, good catch. It works now! Thanks so much, I really appreciate your help. – Ben Schoepke Nov 5 at 19:39

3 Answers

vote up 1 vote down check

When marshaling a struct which has an inline pointer, you need to define the value as an IntPtr and not an array

[StructLayout(LayoutKind.Sequential)]
public struct IoctlWriteRegsIn
{
    public uint Address;
    public IntPtr Buffer;
    public uint Size;
}
link|flag
Tried this without success. I defined the struct as you suggested and then made these calls: IoctlWriteRegsIn writeInBuffer = new IoctlWriteRegsIn { Address = twlBackupRegA, Data = new IntPtr(0xFF), Size = 1 }; bool writeSuccess = DeviceIoControlWrite(driverHandle, IoctlTwlWriteRegs, ref writeInBuffer,(uint)Marshal.SizeOf(IoctlTwlWriteRegs)+1, new uint[0], 0, ref numBytesReturned, IntPtr.Zero); The size and (uint)Marshal.SizeOf(IoctlTwlWriteRegs)+1 stuff matches my working C++ code so I don't think that's the cause. – Ben Schoepke Nov 5 at 16:52
Also tried pinning the IntPtr before hand without success. – Ben Schoepke Nov 5 at 16:55
@Ben, can you post this into your question? It's really hard to follow in the commets – JaredPar Nov 5 at 16:56
I updated the question, didn't realize the comments wouldn't have formatting, sorry about that! – Ben Schoepke Nov 5 at 17:06
vote up 1 vote down

Give it a shot by replacing the byte[] array with an IntPtr..

link|flag
1  
And make sure you pin the memory that the IntPtr references and unpin it when you're done. – Peter Tate Nov 5 at 16:37
And show that GC how it's done :) ie. that you'll be gentle/infrequent and quick in giving-back/unpinning it :) – rama-jka toti Nov 5 at 16:43
vote up 0 vote down

You might have to specify the size of the byte[] (replace 64 with the actual size)

[StructLayout(LayoutKind.Sequential, Pack=1)]
public struct IoctlWriteRegsIn
{    
   public uint Address; 
   [MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.ByValArray, SizeConst = 1)] 
   public byte[] Buffer; 
   public uint Size;
}

Then you should be able to set the size like this:

IoctlWriteRegsIn io_struct = new IoctlWriteRegsIn();
io_struct.Address = 5;
io_struct.Buffer = new byte[1] { 0xBE };
// size of buffer, not struct
io_struct.Size = 1;//Marshal.SizeOf(io_struct);

I would change the P/Invoke call to this:

[DllImport("coredll.dll", CharSet = CharSet.Unicode, SetLastError = true)]
static extern bool DeviceIoControl(IntPtr hDevice,  
   UInt32 dwIoControlCode,
   ref IoctlWriteRegsIn lpInBuffer, 
   UInt32 nInBufferSize,
   IntPtr lpOutBuffer,
   UInt32 nOutBufferSize,
   ref UInt32 lpBytesReturned,
   IntPtr lpOverlapped);

and call it using this:

uint num_bytes = (uint)Marshal.SizeOf(writeInBuffer);
bool writeSuccess = DeviceIoControl(driverHandle, IoctlTwlWriteRegs, ref writeInBuffer, num_bytes, IntPtr.Zero, 0, ref numBytesReturned, IntPtr.Zero);
link|flag
I tried this and it didn't work. I can get by by just passing a single byte--don't need a whole buffer since I only need to write one 8-bit register at a time--so I tried this with SizeConst = 1 with no luck. – Ben Schoepke Nov 5 at 16:46
Same error? Can you change the lpOutBuffer to IntPtr lpOutBuffer and try again – SwDevMan81 Nov 5 at 16:52
Could you also post your call to DeviceIoControl – SwDevMan81 Nov 5 at 16:55
I updated the question with the DeviceIoControl call. The size of lpInBuffer looks suspect but its the same as what gets passed in my working C++ code (nInBufferSize = 13) and should pass the driver's input validation. – Ben Schoepke Nov 5 at 17:09
I updated my example. Let me know if that still doesnt work – SwDevMan81 Nov 5 at 17:27
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