vote up 2 vote down star

Hello,

In C#,I'm using Blowfish.NET 2.1.3's BlowfishECB.cs file(can be found here)

In C++,It's unknown,but it is similiar.

In C++,the Initialize(blowfish) procedure is the following:

void cBlowFish::Initialize(BYTE key[], int keybytes)

In C#,the Initialize(blowfish) procedure is the same

public void Initialize(byte[] key, int ofs, int len)

This is the problem:

This is how the key is initialized in C++

DWORD keyArray[2] = {0}; //declaration
...some code
blowfish.Initialize((LPBYTE)keyArray, 8);

As you see,the key is an array of two DWORDS,which is 8 bytes total.

In C# I declare it like that,but I get an error

BlowfishECB blowfish = new BlowfishECB();
UInt32[] keyarray = new UInt32[2];
..some code
blowfish.Initialize(keyarray, 0, 8);

The error is:

Argument '1': cannot convert from 'uint[]' to 'byte[]'

What am I doing wrong?

Thanks in advance!

flag

This question is interesting not only for apps that use Blowfish, but for any app that needs to do data manipulation to convert between types of arrays. – Cheeso Mar 28 at 22:22

2 Answers

vote up 4 vote down check

You can use BitConverter to get the bytes from a UInt32.


To do this, you'll need to convert each element in a loop. I would do something like:

private byte[] ConvertFromUInt32Array(UInt32[] array)
{
    List<byte> results = new List<byte>();
    foreach(UInt32 value in array)
    {
        byte[] converted = BitConverter.GetBytes(value);
        results.AddRange(converted);
    }
    return results.ToArray();
}

To go back:

private UInt32[] ConvertFromByteArray(byte[] array)
{
    List<UInt32> results = new List<UInt32>();
    for(int i=0;i<array.Length;i += 4)
    {
        byte[] temp = new byte[4];
        for (int j=0;j<4;++j)
            temp[j] = array[i+j];
        results.Add(BitConverter.ToUInt32(temp);
    }
    return results.ToArray();
}

link|flag
@Reed Copsey,I tried it,but It gets even worse: Argument '1': cannot convert from 'uint[]' to 'double' It's an array of UInt,not Uint. – John Mar 28 at 14:21
JaredPar's option is a nice option if you're using C# 3 and linq. – Reed Copsey Mar 28 at 14:26
I'm using C# with C# 2008 Express SP1 ,but I get error there too. – John Mar 28 at 14:28
@John: The code in my edit should work... what error are you receiving? – Reed Copsey Mar 28 at 14:29
@Reed Copsey, Thanks! I'm trying it right now,but can you add a function that converts from byte[] to Uint[] aswell? The same 8 bytes should be converted into a UInt[] array with 2 members as its in the source code. – John Mar 28 at 14:36
show 1 more comment
vote up 4 vote down

If you are using VS2008 or C# 3.5, try the following LINQ + BitConverter solution

var converted = 
  keyArray
    .Select(x => BitConverter.GetBytes(x))
    .SelectMany(x => x)
    .ToArray();

Breaking this down

  • The Select converts every UInt32 into a byte[]. The result is an IEnumerable<byte[]>
  • The SelectMany calls flattes the IEnumerable<byte[]> to IEnumerable<byte>
  • ToArray() simply converts the enumerable into an array

EDIT Non LINQ solution

List<byte> list = new List<byte>();
foreach ( uint32 k in keyArray) {
  list.AddRange(BitConverter.GetBytes(k));
}
return list.ToArray();
link|flag
Nice, elegant version of the code I pasted. – Reed Copsey Mar 28 at 14:26
@JaredPar I get this error: 'System.Array' does not contain a definition for 'Select' and no extension method 'Select' accepting a first argument of type 'System.Array' could be found (are you missing a using directive or an assembly reference?) //end error – John Mar 28 at 14:26
@John, are you using VS2005 or VS2008? If 2008, make sure you add using System.Linq to the top of the file. If not, I'll update for a VS2005 solution – JaredPar Mar 28 at 14:27
@John: You can use my code (which does the same), or reference System.Linq and use C# 3 / VS 2008. – Reed Copsey Mar 28 at 14:27
@Reed Copsey,I'll try your code,but I might need a function that converts byte[] to Uint32[] ,because below this code I call blowfish.Encode @JaredPar,I'm very new to C#,my previous language is Delphi and I cannot get used to C#.I'm using C# Express 2008.Could you explain step by step what to do. – John Mar 28 at 14:33
show 5 more comments

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.