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Here's a simple problem I need to solve, but it makes me feel my hair turning gray as all my attempts are returning me the same error:

"Attempted to read or write protected memory. This is often an indication that other memory is corrupt."

I have a sample app written in C++ which makes a call to the dll. Here is the relevant code:

    //function I need to call
bool convertHKID_Name(char *code,RECO_DATA *o_data);	//hkid 

//struct definition
struct RECO_DATA{
	wchar_t FirstName[200];
	wchar_t Surname[200];
};

//how it is used in C++ code
CString code;
RECO_DATA data;
GetDlgItemText(IDC_CODE,code);
char _code[200];
WideCharToMultiByte(CP_UTF8, 0, code, -1, (char *)_code, 200, NULL, NULL);
ocr->convertHKID_Name(_code,&data)

Now when I debug the C++ code, it does the proper thing - writes some Unicode data into the data struct.

Here is my attempt to do the same in C#

    //my C# wrapper class
public class cnOCRsdk
{
    [StructLayout(LayoutKind.Sequential, Size=400, CharSet=CharSet.Unicode), Serializable]
    public struct RECO_DATA
    {
        [MarshalAsAttribute(UnmanagedType.ByValTStr, SizeConst = 200)]
        public string FirstName;
        [MarshalAsAttribute(UnmanagedType.ByValTStr, SizeConst = 200)]
        public string Surname;
    };

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

    [DllImport("Kernel32.dll")]
    public static extern int WideCharToMultiByte(uint CodePage, uint dwFlags,
        [In, MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.LPWStr)]string lpWideCharStr,
        int cchWideChar,
        [Out, MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.LPStr)]StringBuilder lpMultiByteStr,
        int cbMultiByte,
        IntPtr lpDefaultChar, // Defined as IntPtr because in most cases is better to pass
        IntPtr lpUsedDefaultChar // NULL
        );
}

//my attempt to call the function from the dll
cnOCRsdk.RECO_DATA recoData = new cnOCRsdk.RECO_DATA();
string num = "262125355174";
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(200, 200);
cnOCRsdk.WideCharToMultiByte(65001, 0, num, -1, sb, 200, IntPtr.Zero, IntPtr.Zero);
string sbTostring = sb.ToString();
//the next line generates the 'Attempted to read or write protected memory' error
bool res = cnOCRsdk.convertHKID_Name(ref sbTostring, out recoData);

My guess is that I'm not marshaling the RECO_DATA structure properly, because it is this struct that gets written to by the convertHKID_Name function. But how should I fix it?

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2 Answers

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I believe it should work if you

  1. Change the declaration on convertHKID_Name to CharSet.Ansi
  2. Remove the "ref" from the string parameter
  3. Pass the string num directly to convertHKID_Name instead of calling WideCharToMultiByte
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Did not work yet, I still think there must be a problem with marshaling the structure. What is the reason by passing the string directly without ref, the function C++ declaration accepts char* code, and I assume a char pointer means the value has to be passed by reference? – Evgeny Mar 25 at 3:27
A string is always passed by address. "By reference" means that you're going to update the value and expect the modified value to be returned to the calling program. – Curt Hagenlocher Mar 25 at 3:28
Oh, and try declaring the RECO_DATA parameter as "out" instead of "ref" -- again, you only want it marshaled in one direction. – Curt Hagenlocher Mar 25 at 3:30
You may also need to specify CallingConvention = CallingConvention.Cdecl on the convertHKID_Name declaration – Curt Hagenlocher Mar 25 at 3:33
I just noticed the "ocr->convertHKID_Name(_code,&data)" in the original C++. If this is a member function, you're going to need to do this differently. – Curt Hagenlocher Mar 25 at 4:03
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I wrote a managed wrapper in C++ for my unmanaged dll, but got stuck a bit again.

Continued here

Passing C# data type parameters to dll written in C++?

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