in my next project I want to implement a GUI for already existing code in C++. My plan is to wrap the C++ part in a DLL and to implement the GUI in C#. My problem is that I don't know how to implement a callback from the unmanaged DLL into the manged C# code. I've already done some development in C# but the interfacing between managed and unmanaged code is new to me. Can anybody give me some hints or reading tips or a simple example to start from? Unfortunatly I could not find anything helpful.
|
|
|
You don't need to use Marshal.GetFunctionPointerForDelegate(), the P/Invoke marshaller does it automatically. You'll need to declare a delegate on the C# side whose signature is compatible with the function pointer declaration on the C++ side. For example:
And the corresponding C++ code used to create the unmanaged DLL:
That's enough to get you started with it. There are a million details that can get you into trouble, you are bound to run into some of them. The much more productive way to get this kind of code going is writing a wrapper in the C++/CLI language. That also lets you wrap a C++ class, something you can't do with P/Invoke. A decent tutorial is available here. |
|||
|
P/Invoke can handle marshaling a managed delegate to a function pointer. So if you expose API's that register a call back function from your DLL and in C# pass a delegate to that function. There is an example on MSDN of doing this with the EnumWindows function. In that article be careful to pay attention to the line in point 4 that states:
What that is saying is that you need to make sure that your delegate isn't garbage collected until after the managed code is done calling it by either keeping a reference to it in your code, or pinning it. |
|||
|
|
See Marshal.GetFunctionPointerForDelegate, which will give you a function pointer for calling managed (i.e. C# code) from unmanaged code. |
|||
|
|
|
Have a look at this, Marshal.GetDelegateForFunctionPointer? |
||||
|
|