I need to parse a TCP data stream that contains protocol-defined binary-formatted messages that may or may not be multipart. Headers in the message indicate if the message has more than one part (part 1 of 4, etc). I am parsing single-part messages successfully with a message class that decodes the byte data into the class members - this accounts for about 95% of all traffic.
I'm new to c#-dotNet with most of my experience in C++, and the old way of managing this is to have an array of field endpoints that can store a reference to a data structure that I can grow as needed while the message is being rebuilt on the receiving end. I've researched possible methods for a C# equivalent, but they seem to be HTTP oriented and use the file system for temporary storage, but I'm looking for a method for message building in memory. My grasp of C# classes, persistence, garbage collection, etc, are limited to the point that I'm not sure of an approach.
My TCP handler has a callback message handler that parses messages for 'abc' protocol:
void processTcpPacket(StateObject tcpControl)
{
abcMessage abc = new abcMessage();
abc.parse(tcpControl.buffer,tcpControl.size)
if(abc.complete)
{
do something with this message()
}else if abc.multipart{
hold this message somewhere until the next part shows up... ?
}else{
discard unparseable message()
}
}
processTcpPacket() is asynchronous, and delivers messages from many endpoints; the headers in each message have full source and destination addresses. This protocol will divide a long message into segments of roughly 200 bytes that are sent to the receiver and reassembled - the largest payload can be up to ~5000 bytes.
In the C++ world, I would create a storage container for multipart messages that has the source address of the sendee, so I can find the right container and keep adding message parts until the message is complete, then process the message and delete the temporary container. Is there a similar process I can follow with C#?