7

I've got a C++/CLI DLL I plan to use as an adapter between my C# DLL and native C++ clients. I need to pass strings in both directions. The adapter is compiled with VS2013 but needs to support clients built with VS2008 so I'm using const char* in the API. But what I've got isn't working even when both are VS2013-built.

Elsewhere, I found advice to use msclr\marshal.h, so I created:

using namespace msclr::interop;
System::String^ ToCliString(const char* s)
{
    System::String ^result = marshal_as<System::String^>(s);
    return result;
}    
const char* ToCppString(System::String^ s)
{
    msclr::interop::marshal_context context;
    const char* result = context.marshal_as<const char*>(s);
    return result;
}

To test these, I created a round-trip conversion method in my C++/CLI DLL:

const char* Foo(const char *cstar)
{
    System::String^ cli = ::ToCliString(cstar);

    if (cli == "abc")
    {
        MessageBox::Show("const char* -> CLI: OK");
    }

    const char* cstar2 = ::ToCppString(cli);

    if (std::strcmp(cstar2, "abc") == 0)
    {
        MessageBox::Show("CLI -> const char*: OK");
    }
    else if (std::strcmp(cstar2, "") == 0)
    {
        MessageBox::Show("ToCppString returned empty string");
    }
    else
    {
        MessageBox::Show("ToCppString returned something else");
    }

    return cstar2;
}

When the native C++ client calls Foo("abc"), the 1st message gets displayed, the "returned something else" message gets displayed and the client receives junk (îþîþîþîþîþîþîþîþîþîþîþîþîþîþîþîþÞ›vÚ§). So it would seem my 2nd conversion is not working.

UPDATE

Here's the final solution I used.

I used zneaks' advice to marshall to std::string and PaulMcKenzie's advice to pass a caller-allocated char* instead of returning const char*. Thank you both.

void ToCppString(System::String^ input, char* output)
{
    std::string temp= marshal_as<std::string>(input);
    strcpy(output, temp.c_str());
}

void Foo(const char* input, char* output)
{
    System::String^ cli = ::ToCliString(input);
    ::ToCppString(cli, output);
}
5
  • You're returning a pointer to a local variable cstar2, which is undefined behavior. Jan 14, 2016 at 22:32
  • @PaulMcKenzie So to pass a string from C# to the native C++ client, the client needs to pass a char * that the adapter "fills"?
    – Jim C
    Jan 14, 2016 at 22:34
  • That is the usual way it's done. The client provides the buffer and the C++ code fills the buffer with the data. Jan 14, 2016 at 22:54
  • @PaulMcKenzie Does the client need to call delete to prevent a memory leak then? I guess they can allocate buffer once, call many functions in my API,and delete when they're finished. So my API should include another parm so they can tell me the max size message I can return? Or more appropriate to have a property client can query to determine my max message length?
    – Jim C
    Jan 14, 2016 at 23:11
  • The client is responsible for maintaining the buffer correctly. It may have been allocated with new[] / delete[], it could even be a std::vector<char> and you're passing std::vector<char>::data(), etc. Jan 14, 2016 at 23:20

2 Answers 2

3

The problem is that the marshal_context owns the char pointer that you got, so it is deallocated when your function returns:

This example creates a context for marshaling from a System::String to a const char * variable type.The converted data will not be valid after the line that deletes the context.

Consider using marshal_as<std::string> instead, since the string is allowed to outlive the marshal_context.

5
  • I just tried replacing the last 2 lines of ToCppString with std::string result = context.marshal_as<std::string>(s); return result.c_str(); But same result. I wonder, since the local std::string goes out of scope, will the value returned by its c_str() function still be valid?
    – Jim C
    Jan 14, 2016 at 23:10
  • Got it, now using strcpy into a new parameter. Will post my solution shortly.
    – Jim C
    Jan 14, 2016 at 23:38
  • @JimC, yes, the pointer returned by c_str() is owned by the string and deallocated when the function returns, so you were essentially back with the same problem. You can return a std::string, though.
    – zneak
    Jan 15, 2016 at 1:04
  • I could but it would be just kicking the can because I can't return the std::string all the way to the app (I have to support apps built with a different version of Visual Studio.)
    – Jim C
    Jan 15, 2016 at 14:18
  • Careful to delete the strings yourself then.
    – zneak
    Jan 15, 2016 at 16:29
0

Additionally, please be aware that VC++ 2008 express does not contains marshal header files (marshal.h and others), so you have to use VC++ 2008 pro or onwards. Looks like those header files are included in express edition since VS2010.

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