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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;
}
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  • i don't see any loop here Sep 8, 2015 at 8:07
  • there is no loop this is the class that is called from a handler every time it recieves a chunk
    – laila
    Sep 8, 2015 at 8:10
  • What are the input and outputs? You are copying data in a local variable called 'allData'. Sep 8, 2015 at 8:32
  • The variable "fl" isn't defined anywhere. Is that "wfl" a typo?
    – Nyerguds
    Sep 8, 2015 at 8:47
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    I assure you: 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. Sep 8, 2015 at 9:01

2 Answers 2

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var allData = new byte[fileSize];
int offst = count * offset;
Buffer.BlockCopy(buffer, 0, allData, offst, fileSize);

Here, allData is of length fileSize. You say it works when count is 0 (the first time); let's consider the case when count is non-zero, then. You are telling it to copy fileSize bytes from buffer to allData, starting reading from offset 0 in buffer, and starting writing at offset offset in allData. We know that when count is non-zero, offst is non-zero. Since allData is fileSize bytes long, this will always overflow the bounds (the end of the writing position will be fileSize+offst, with offst non-zero and the array being of length fileSize). I expect it is raising an ArgumentOutOfRangeException that you aren't telling us about.

Edit: actually, it is an ArgumentException:

System.ArgumentException: Offset and length were out of bounds for the array or count is greater than the number of elements from index the end of the source collection.

Basically: either you have your parameters the wrong way around, or you're telling it to do something that will never work.

It is possible (likely?) that you intended:

Buffer.BlockCopy(buffer, offst, allData, 0, fileSize);
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  • filesize is just the name of the variable. we are not sure how that variable is used. I think OP is using it as a length, for example. I agree with you we have little info to answer this question. Sep 8, 2015 at 9:37
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    @sam yup; I'm not reading any meaning into it except that which is present in the code. If you create an array of length fileSize, and try to write fileSize bytes into it starting at a non-zero offset, things aren't going to work well. It doesn't matter what fileSize means for that statement to be true. Sep 8, 2015 at 9:38
  • This is the story. on my handler each time I receive a chunk that is part of a file. and here I want to append all the received chunks(that I call them buffer which is byte[] type) in a byte array that is the same size as my filesize. and buffer size is 2 MB each time. so I have buffer that when you sum up their sizes is going to be equal to the filesize.
    – laila
    Sep 9, 2015 at 7:24
  • @laila that doesn't change the logic of what the code written does, though; essentially you're saying: "create an array of length 10, now write 10 values into it starting at 5, so positions... 5-14" - there is no position 10-14. Note also that your code isn't appending anything; it is splitting a single large buffer into multiple fragments. Sep 9, 2015 at 8:45
  • @laila as a side note: unless it is the very last fragment, the data is actually discarded anyway Sep 9, 2015 at 8:56
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You receive a chunk of bytes in buffer[] and you copy it in a local variable. You are copying bytes in a local variable called allData that is newly created every time.

You should pass the receiver bufferallData to the function too.

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  • It could be entirely valid and correct for allData to be local to the method, especially since this is used in the constructor for Binary - it would be correct for those to be independent. Sorry, but I don't think this is a helpful answer. In your defense: the question doesn't give enough information for a helpful answer, IMO. Sep 8, 2015 at 9:03
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    @MarcGravell Well, laila said that function is called in a loop that's somewhere else, so the full buffer being a local var and thus recreated every loop iteration does seem dodgy to me.
    – Nyerguds
    Sep 8, 2015 at 9:17
  • but even if it's the problem of initializing every time(allData) bt anyway it should copy the daya. but it does not and also I updated to explain more
    – laila
    Sep 8, 2015 at 9:17
  • i expect a variable called alldata not to be recreated locally. Sep 8, 2015 at 9:43
  • @sam as long as allData is referring to "all the data that makes up the logical file we know as fileName", then it isn't an unreasonable name; fileContents might be better, but... meh Sep 8, 2015 at 9:45

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