28

I have a dll which comes from a third party, which was written in C++. Here is some information that comes from the dll documentation:

//start documentation

RECO_DATA{
wchar_t Surname[200];
wchar_t Firstname[200];
}

Description: Data structure for receiving the function result. All function result will be stored as Unicode (UTF-8).

Method:

bool recoCHN_P_Name(char *imgPath,RECO_DATA *o_data);

Input:

char * imgPath

the full path of the image location for this function to recognize

RECO_DATA * o_data

data object for receiving the function result. Function return: True if Success, otherwise false will return.

//end documentation

I am trying to call the recoCHN_P_Name from my C# application. To this end, I came up with this code:

The code to import the dll:

    public class cnOCRsdk
{
    [StructLayout(LayoutKind.Sequential, CharSet = CharSet.Unicode)]
    public struct RECO_DATA{
        [MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.ByValTStr, SizeConst=200)]
        public string FirstName;
        [MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.ByValTStr, SizeConst = 200)]
        public string Surname;
        }

    [DllImport(@"cnOCRsdk.dll", EntryPoint="recoCHN_P_Name")]
    public static extern bool recoCHN_P_Name(byte[] imgPath, RECO_DATA o_data);
}

The code to call the function:

            cnOCRsdk.RECO_DATA recoData = new cnOCRsdk.RECO_DATA();

        string path = @"C:\WINDOWS\twain_32\twainrgb.bmp";

        System.Text.ASCIIEncoding encoding = new System.Text.ASCIIEncoding();
        byte[] bytes = encoding.GetBytes(path);

        bool res = cnOCRsdk.recoCHN_P_Name(bytes, recoData);

And the error I'm getting is ""Unable to find an entry point named 'recoCHN_P_Name' in DLL 'cnOCRsdk.dll'." I'm suspecting that I'm having an error in converting a type from C++ to C#. But where exactly ... ?

10 Answers 10

51

First make sure the function is actually exported:

In the Visual Studio Command Prompt, use dumpbin /exports whatever.dll

2
  • I have a line in the output which says "14 D 00007B40 ?recoCHN_P_Name@CcnOCRsdk@@QAE_NPADPAURECO_DATA@@@Z" what does that tell me?
    – Evgeny
    Mar 17, 2009 at 6:48
  • 3
    See kegel.com/mangle.html for a detailed explanation of how to decrypt it. Make sure you've got the datatypes correct.
    – i_am_jorf
    Mar 17, 2009 at 7:06
32

C# doesn't support C++ name mangling and you either need to declare the C++ functions with

extern "C" {...}

(may not an option if they're from a third party), or call the mangled name directly if you can get it to work. It may be easier to get the third party to provide a non-mangled interface to the functionality.

1
  • That was it in my case, thanks! Feb 10, 2022 at 13:54
19

Solved - at least to the point where the program does not break and actually returns me a bool value.

The key, I guess, was to specify the entry point as the 'mangled' name

    [DllImport(@"cnOCRsdk.dll", EntryPoint="?recoCHN_P_Name@CcnOCRsdk@@QAE_NPADPAURECO_DATA@@@Z")]
    public static extern bool recoCHN_P_Name(ref string imgPath, ref RECO_DATA o_data);

After that I got some other errors but the 'unable to find entry point' went away.

2
  • 1
    This will work but you'll have to change the mangled name if anything about the function (signature) changes. It's recommended to define them in the DLL with extern "C" as mentioned above.
    – adam_0
    Aug 27, 2018 at 16:11
  • @Goku, you can find it with a program called PE Explorer (heaventools.com/overview.htm) or the program called dumpbin.exe which comes with Visual Studio. Apr 30, 2019 at 21:02
7

I solved the same problem in these steps:

step 1) If you program your custom DLL in C++ using Visual studio,then at the property page of your project set the Common Language Runtime Support (/clr)parameter to Common Language Runtime Support (/clr).

step 2) To function deceleration in .h file use __declspec(dllexport) keyword like below:

__declspec(dllexport) double Sum(int a,int b);

step 3) Build and export DLL file, then use the Dependency Walker software to get your function EntryPoint.

step4) Import DLL file In the C# project and set EntryPoint and CallingConvention variable like below:

[DllImport("custom.dll", EntryPoint = "?Sum@@YAXHHHHHHNNN@Z", CallingConvention = CallingConvention.Cdecl)]

    public static extern double Sum(int a,int b);
2
  • __declspec(dllexport) was key for me, another answer has people marking them with extern "C"instead, and nothing was being exported, THANKS!
    – fartwhif
    Apr 5, 2020 at 23:31
  • Thanks! I've seen about 10 solutions that recommend using "extern C" as well as "__declspec(dllexport)". The C++ compiler wouldn't work with extern but I was unable to work out why. This worked first time for me. Jul 20, 2021 at 11:16
4

I'd write a wrapper using C++/CLI. This wrapper will be able to include the .h files and link to the .lib files you got from the third party vendor. Then it is both easy and safe to write a managed interface for your C# program.

2

Correct EntryPoint string could be found in ".lib" file that comes along with main unmanaged dll.

1

We had this problem when we want to access to DB and solved it by changing EF core to EF 6.4.4 It may be you have a problem like this and need to change or downgrade your version of EF (If you used EF)

1

you may get this error due to string marshalling mismatch between DLL and your application . for example, one is using ANSI and the other is unicode.

you can try something like this:

 [DllImport("yourDLL.dll", CharSet = CharSet.Unicode )]
 public static extern String YourFunction(String name);

checkout HERE for a list of other possible reasons.

0

We had this problem .we change EntityFramework.core to EntityFrameWork 6.4.4 and after that the program worked fine. you most change you're Framework Version.

0
-1

You could try using the unmangled name while specifying a CallingConvention in the DllImport

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.