I have a class that each time it receives buffer and it should append to a bigger byte array but it do the block copy only the first time, and then it does not copy anything
the first time buffer enters the class it copy the content in allData. but the second time it is all zero although buffer contains data.
This is my code:
public Boolean WriteBlobsToDB(byte[] buffer, int offset, int fileSize, string fileName, string fileType, string user, int count, int NChunks, string md5Src,int id)
{
bool ret = false;
int l = buffer.Length; // The buffer length is almost 2 MB
var allData = new byte[fileSize];
int offst = count * offset; // count is 0 the first timethen each time a new buffer comes, the value of count in count++
Buffer.BlockCopy(buffer, 0, allData, offst, fileSize);
if (count == NChunks-1 ) // NChunks is the number of how many time the buffer would be passed here
{ // the meaning of this if is that, when all the buffer of a file is passed then move to the database and upload the table
File_List fl = new File_List();
fl.FileName = fileName;
fl.Id = id;
fl.FileType = fileType;
fl.MD5 = md5Src;
fl.Data = new Binary(allData);
try
{
dc.SubmitChanges();
}
catch (Exception e)
{
Console.WriteLine(e);
}
}
return ret;
}
Buffer.BlockCopy
works just fine. The problem is in how you are using it, but we don't have enough from the context to properly assess this; a trivial reproducible example would be awesome, but: this isn't it.