0

I have a struct in my program for which I need to use the size to allocate managed memory for an instance of the struct. I've tried using sizeof(), but I get the following errors:

Cannot take the address of, get the size of, or declare a pointer to a managed type('StatusType')

'StatusType' does not have a predefined size, therefore sizeof can only be used in an unsafe context (consider using System.RunTime.InteropServices.Marshal.SizeOf)

Why is this happening? I'm using sizeof() correctly (on a type name). Using Marshal.SizeOf() would be incorrect because I'm not working with unmanaged code. What is the correct approach?

My struct is as follows:

[StructLayout(LayoutKind.Sequential)]
struct StatusType 
{
    ushort VehID;         
    ushort Location;        
    ushort Destination;     

    // Note: the way Intel Byte-swaps, the 16-bit definition below is "backwards" from the way a human may view things
    [FlagsAttribute]
    enum firstByte : uint
    {
        Battery = 2,           
        Reverse = 1,           
        LiveDINO = 1,         
        ActuallyCharging = 1,  
        BothLoads = 2,         
        AttemptingToCharge = 1 
    };

    [FlagsAttribute]
    enum secondByte : uint
    {
        Manual = 1,             
        AutoReady = 1,
        Released = 1,
        Unused1 = 1,           
        CVS = 3,              
        RequestStop = 1         
    };
    // End byte-swap note

    [FlagsAttribute]
    enum thirdByte : ushort { CmdParsingError = 8 }; 
    [FlagsAttribute]
    enum fourthByte : ushort { Error = 8 };       

    [FlagsAttribute]
    enum fifthByte : ushort
    {
        TagReadCycles = 4,                           
        Unused = 4
    };

    [FlagsAttribute]
    enum sixthByte : ushort { Condition = 8 };       

    byte[] Tag;
    ushort CCUInputs;

    [StructLayout(LayoutKind.Sequential)]
    struct union
    {
        ushort ShortCheckSum;   
        ushort DestParam;       
    }

    ushort CurrentLiftHeight;
    ushort PCLInputs;

    [FlagsAttribute]
    enum seventhByte : ushort
    {
        Unused2 = 8             
    };

    [FlagsAttribute]
    enum eigthByte : ushort
    {
        BatteryVoltage = 6,    
        Unused3 = 2
    };

    ushort LongCheckSum;       
}
1

1 Answer 1

3

I guess byte[] Tag; is your problem. Take a look at this MSDN article.

Especially this sentence:

One-dimensional arrays of blittable types, such as an array of integers. However, a type that contains a variable array of blittable types is not itself blittable.

5
  • Ah, I think I understand. So how would I still use byte[] Tag in my struct? I'm not allowed to initialize an instance, which was what I originally wanted to do. C++ would allow something like unsigned char Tag[6];, but I changed it to byte[] Tag; because it wouldn't allow the first option. Mar 18, 2015 at 20:05
  • Which data originally do you want to marshal to .net? Mar 18, 2015 at 20:29
  • As far as Tag goes, I want to marshal an unsigned char array of 6 elements. I've tried this answer (stackoverflow.com/questions/16065110/…), but sizeof() still gives me the same issues. Mar 18, 2015 at 20:42
  • Does it have to be a struct? Have you tried to make a class out of it? And use [MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.ByValArray, SizeConst = 6)] public char[] Tag; Mar 18, 2015 at 21:16
  • I'm still using a struct, but implementing the above ^ strategy seems to do the trick for now. I'm also using Marshal.SizeOf(). I'm hoping that it will still work okay with C# .Net Mar 23, 2015 at 17:51

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.