Referencing How to get IntPtr from byte[] in C#
I am attempting to read the data that an IntPtr is referencing into a byte [] and then back into another IntPtr. The pointer is referencing an image captured from a scanner device so I have also made the assumption that capturing this information should be placed into a byte array.
I am also not sure if the Marshal.SizeOf() method will return the size of the data the IntPtr is referencing or the size of the pointer itself.
My issue is I am receiving the error "Type 'System.Byte[]' cannot be marshaled as an unmanaged structure; no meaningful size or offset can be computed"
IntPtr bmpptr = Twain.GlobalLock (hImage);
try
{
byte[] _imageTemp = new byte[Marshal.SizeOf(bmpptr)];
Marshal.Copy(bmpptr, _imageTemp, 0, Marshal.SizeOf(bmpptr));
IntPtr unmanagedPointer = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(
Marshal.SizeOf(_imageTemp));
try
{
Marshal.Copy(_imageTemp, 0, unmanagedPointer,
Marshal.SizeOf(_imageTemp));
Gdip.SaveDIBAs(
string.Format("{0}\\{1}.{2}", CaptureFolder, "Test", "jpg"),
unmanagedPointer, false);
}
finally
{
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(unmanagedPointer);
}
}
catch (Exception e)
{
Scanner.control.Test = e.Message;
}
The exception thrown by the call to SizeOf
is correct; the method has no way of knowing what the length of the array that you are passing to it is, it just has a pointer.
To that end, the easiest way to get the data is to call the static Copy
method on the Marshal class, passing the pointer to the unmanaged data, the index and number of bytes to read, as well as a pre-allocated buffer of bytes to marshal the data into.
As for getting the size of the array, as Anton Tykhyy pointed out in the comments, it appears (be very careful here) that the call to Twain.GlobalLock(hImage)
is using memory allocated by GlobalAlloc
, which means that you can make a call to the GlobalSize
API function through the P/Invoke layer to get the size.
If it is not a handle to something allocated by a call to GlobalAlloc
then you need to find out how the Twain
module is allocating the memory and use the appropriate mechanism to determine the length of the memory pointed to by the IntPtr
.
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