3

I am working on a Cryptographic project, where several 1024 bit numbers (using GMP in C) are generated. These numbers are communicated via a Java program (the C file is called through JNI). I need those large numbers to be returned to the Java program. Now, data types are different mpz_t and BigInteger, so which native data type should be used?

3
  • 2
    Sounds like you should convert your mpz_t value into a string, then into a jstring, and pass that result to the BigInteger constructor. Is that was you were asking?
    – Samhain
    Nov 8, 2013 at 18:22
  • @Samhain That may be one way to solve this! Thank you.
    – hola
    Nov 8, 2013 at 18:25
  • Another approach is through byte arrays if GMP supports that.
    – ntoskrnl
    Nov 8, 2013 at 18:28

2 Answers 2

2

jbyteArray because BigInteger can be serialized and deserialized to/from Java byte[] and mpz_t can be serialized and deserialized to/from a structure that—without the header—seems like it would be same sequences of bytes.

1

C part.

#include <jni.h>

jbyteArray array(mpz_t *m) {
  const size_t size = sizeof (mpz_t);
  jbyteArray jbytes = (*env)->NewByteArray(env, (jsize) size);
  if (result != NULL) {
    jbyte *cbytes = (*env)->GetByteArrayElements(env, result, NULL);
    if (cbytes != NULL) {
      int i;
      for (i = (int) (size - 1); i >= 0; i--) {
        cbytes[i] = (jbyte) (*m & 0xFF);
        *m >>= 8;
      }
      (*env)->ReleaseByteArrayElements(env, result, cbytes, 0);
    }
  }
  return result;
}

JNIEXPORT jbyteArray JNICALL Java_Test_bytes(JNIEnv *env, jclass cls) {
  mpz_t *m = getSome();
  return array(m);
}

Java part.

static native byte[] bytes();

static BigInteger bigInteger() {
    final byte[] bytes = bytes();
    return bytes == null ? null : new BigInteger(1, bytes);
}

Note that the first argument 1 means a positive signum.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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