I'm having some trouble with getting bytes of a C# struct sent over a TCP socket to a C++ client to read properly. Here are the structs...
Struct in C#
public struct TankBattleStateData
{
public int playerID;
public float currentHealth;
public Vector3 position;
public Vector3 forward;
public Vector3 cannonForward;
public int canFire;
public int tacticalCount;
}
Struct in C++
struct TankBattleStateData
{
int playerID;
float currentHealth;
float position[3];
float forward[3];
float cannonForward[3];
int canFire;
int tacticalCount;
};
The transmission process is as follows...
- Use
System.Runtime.InteropServices.Marshal
to get an array of C# bytes representing the struct - Feed array of bytes into Socket.Send to send to C++ client
- Client, upon receipt of bytes, does a memcpy of the bytes received to an
unsigned char
array on the heap, which is resized upon before copying if needed- There are some checks like verifying the number of bytes read, but nothing particularly robust in place.
- To read its contents, the client casts pointer to the char array as
TankBattleStateData *
and dereferences it to accesses its fields.
I find that consistently, the last field, tacticalCount
is not the same value on the C++ client as it was on the C# client. For example, I'll send 1
from the server and get 81742424
back on client.
Environment
OS: Windows 10 x64
Server: C# w/ .NET Framework 2.0 (Unity3D 5.3.2f1)
Client: C++ w/ MSVC++14
What I'd Like To Know
- What am I doing wrong? ;)
- More specifically, what am I doing wrong on the client? I set up a C# client and it seems to have no problem receiving the data, unlike the C++ client.
- Are there existing libraries that would make my life easier?
One hiccup I've had is that the C# bool
is marshaled as 4 bytes, rather than 1 byte, which is the size of a bool in MSVC++14. I'd like to use a bool
, but in an attempt to reduce the number of possible problems, I'm using an int
for now.
int
s? Are you sure they aren't 16-bit?int
s were 4-bytes according tosizeof(int)
, so that leads me to believe that they're 32-bit. (Thanks again!)