Chapter 25. Native and COM Interoperability
This chapter describes how to integrate with native
(unmanaged) DLLs and COM components. Unless otherwise stated, the types
mentioned in this chapter exist in either the System or the System.Runtime.InteropServices namespace.
Calling into Native DLLs
P/Invoke, short for Platform
Invocation Services, allows you to access functions, structs,
and callbacks in unmanaged DLLs. For example, consider the MessageBox function, defined in the Windows DLL
user32.dll as follows:
int MessageBox (HWND hWnd, LPCTSTR lpText, LPCTSTR lpCation, UINT uType);
You can call this function directly by declaring a static method of
the same name, applying the extern keyword, and
adding the DllImport attribute:
using System;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
class MsgBoxTest
{
[DllImport("user32.dll")]
static extern int MessageBox (IntPtr hWnd, string text, string caption,
int type);
public static void Main()
{
MessageBox (IntPtr.Zero,
"Please do not press this again.", "Attention", 0);
}
}The MessageBox classes in the
System.Windows and
System.Windows.Forms namespaces
themselves call similar unmanaged methods.
The CLR includes a marshaler that knows how to convert parameters
and return values between .NET types and unmanaged types. In this example,
the int parameters translate directly
to 4-byte integers that the function expects, and the string parameters
are converted into null-terminated arrays of 2-byte Unicode characters.
IntPtr is a struct designed to encapsulate ...
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