PointerToolkit 1.0.0-preview7
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package PointerToolkit --version 1.0.0-preview7
NuGet\Install-Package PointerToolkit -Version 1.0.0-preview7
<PackageReference Include="PointerToolkit" Version="1.0.0-preview7" />
paket add PointerToolkit --version 1.0.0-preview7
#r "nuget: PointerToolkit, 1.0.0-preview7"
// Install PointerToolkit as a Cake Addin #addin nuget:?package=PointerToolkit&version=1.0.0-preview7&prerelease // Install PointerToolkit as a Cake Tool #tool nuget:?package=PointerToolkit&version=1.0.0-preview7&prerelease
PointerToolkit
Provides structs that wrap pointers, as well as Unsafe
, Interlocked
, and Volatile
operations on ref pointers.
All of the functionality contained within is being used for the work in my upcoming Paint.NET v4.4 release. I'm porting 50,000 lines of C++/CLI, almost all classes that wrap native COM objects, to C#. This package, along with TerraFX.Interop.Windows, are the foundation for this work.
The Ptr
and Ptr<T>
structs are straightforward enough, they simply wrap a pointer and provide all the casting operators you will need. Pointers up to 3 levels of indirection are supported, e.g. void***
and T***
, viaPtrPtr
and PtrPtrPtr
and their generic versions.
The UnsafePtr
, InterlockedPtr
, and VolatilePtr
classes provided methods similar to what is available with Unsafe
, Interlocked
, and Volatile
, except that they work on ref
pointers (ref void*
, ref T*
, as well as **
and ***
variants). Refs to pointers are otherwise impossible to work well with in C# without these methods. You can't break them out of their "jail"; refs to pointers just don't work with generics or other attempted tricks employing combinations of &
, *
, ref
, in
, Unsafe
, etc.
public static unsafe class UnsafePtr
{
public static ref T As<T>(ref void* source) where T : unmanaged;
public static ref U As<T, U>(ref T* source) where T : unmanaged where U : unmanaged;
// etc.
}
public static unsafe class InterlockedPtr
{
public static void* Exchange(ref void* location1, void* value);
public static T* Exchange<T>(ref T* location1, T* value) where T : unmanaged;
// etc.
}
public static unsafe class VolatilePtr
{
public static void* Read(ref void* location);
public static T* Read<T>(ref T* location) where T : unmanaged;
public static void Write(ref void* location, void* value);
public static void Write<T>(ref T* location, T* value) where T : unmanaged;
// etc.
}
These structs are supported by the PtrOperators
class, which contains __ptr()
methods meant to be used in conjunction with a global using static PointerToolkit.PtrOperators;
statement. They make it easy to pass pointers into places where they normally can't be used, such as in generics and generic delegates. The name __ptr()
was chosen to be similar to vendor-specific additions in various C++ compilers, such as how Microsoft has __uuidof()
for working with COM interface identifiers.
For instance, let's say you want to call a method on a COM object inside the delegate passed to String.Create()
. Without PointerToolkit or your own struct wrappers, you'd have to pass it in as an IntPtr
and cast it back yourself because you can't specify a pointer type for the T
in SpanAction<T>
. Ptr<IFoo>
helps with that. In addition, the __ptr()
"operator methods" help reduce the typing and duplication of types even further:
(an example from my wrapper for Direct2D's ID2D1Properties
)
public string? TryGetPropertyName(int index)
{
using var @lock = EnterFactoryLock();
uint dwNameLength = this.pD2D1Properties->GetPropertyNameLength(unchecked((uint)index));
if (dwNameLength == 0)
{
return null;
}
return string.Create(
checked((int)dwNameLength),
// without __ptr(), I'd have to type (Ptr<ID2D1Properties>)
(__ptr(this.pD2D1Properties), index),
static (Span<char> dst, (Ptr<ID2D1Properties> pD2D1Properties, int index) e) =>
{
fixed (char* pDst = dst)
{
HRESULT hr = e.pD2D1Properties.Get()->GetPropertyName(
unchecked((uint)e.index),
(ushort*)pDst,
(uint)(dst.Length + 1));
hr.ThrowOnError();
}
});
}
CastPtr<...>
is also provided, which can be used to generate static __cast()
"method operators." This solves the problem where you have (e.g.) an ID2D1SolidColorBrush*
that you need to pass to a method that takes a pointer to a base interface, such as ID2D1Brush*
or even IUnknown*
. C# does not have struct inheritance, so all of the COM interface structs in TerraFX.Interop.Windows are unrelated as far as it can tell.
Instead of forcing a pointer cast with (ID2D1Brush*)
, which denies the compiler a chance to verify that the cast is safe, you can use __cast(p)
(along with an appropriate using static
declaration). A temporary CastPtr<ID2D1SolidColorBrush, ID2D1Brush, ID2D1Resource, IUnknown>
will be created which will implicitly cast to pointers of all of those base interface pointer types. (Note that "interface" in this case refers to a COM interface, not a managed interface.) The generation of these __cast()
operators is not yet provided by this package, but is currently prototyped in the Paint.NET codebase to help with my use of TerraFX.Interop.Windows.
Product | Versions Compatible and additional computed target framework versions. |
---|---|
.NET | net6.0 is compatible. net6.0-android was computed. net6.0-ios was computed. net6.0-maccatalyst was computed. net6.0-macos was computed. net6.0-tvos was computed. net6.0-windows was computed. net7.0 was computed. net7.0-android was computed. net7.0-ios was computed. net7.0-maccatalyst was computed. net7.0-macos was computed. net7.0-tvos was computed. net7.0-windows was computed. net8.0 was computed. net8.0-android was computed. net8.0-browser was computed. net8.0-ios was computed. net8.0-maccatalyst was computed. net8.0-macos was computed. net8.0-tvos was computed. net8.0-windows was computed. |
-
net6.0
- No dependencies.
NuGet packages
This package is not used by any NuGet packages.
GitHub repositories
This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.
Version | Downloads | Last updated |
---|---|---|
1.0.1 | 278 | 12/30/2023 |
1.0.0 | 452 | 11/29/2022 |
1.0.0-preview8 | 159 | 11/9/2022 |
1.0.0-preview7 | 233 | 1/26/2022 |
1.0.0-preview6 | 178 | 1/3/2022 |
1.0.0-preview5 | 168 | 12/7/2021 |
1.0.0-preview4 | 187 | 12/7/2021 |
1.0.0-preview3 | 462 | 12/4/2021 |
1.0.0-preview2 | 420 | 12/4/2021 |
1.0.0-preview1 | 420 | 12/4/2021 |