[ACCEPTED]-C# unsafe value type array to byte array conversions-unsafe

Accepted answer
Score: 17

You can use a really ugly hack to temporary 8 change your array to byte[] using memory 7 manipulation.

This is really fast and efficient 6 as it doesn't require cloning the data and 5 iterating on it.

I tested this hack in both 4 32 & 64 bit OS, so it should be portable.

The 3 source + sample usage is maintained at https://gist.github.com/1050703 , but 2 for your convenience I'll paste it here 1 as well:

public static unsafe class FastArraySerializer
{
    [StructLayout(LayoutKind.Explicit)]
    private struct Union
    {
        [FieldOffset(0)] public byte[] bytes;
        [FieldOffset(0)] public float[] floats;
    }

    [StructLayout(LayoutKind.Sequential, Pack = 1)]
    private struct ArrayHeader
    {
        public UIntPtr type;
        public UIntPtr length;
    }

    private static readonly UIntPtr BYTE_ARRAY_TYPE;
    private static readonly UIntPtr FLOAT_ARRAY_TYPE;

    static FastArraySerializer()
    {
        fixed (void* pBytes = new byte[1])
        fixed (void* pFloats = new float[1])
        {
            BYTE_ARRAY_TYPE = getHeader(pBytes)->type;
            FLOAT_ARRAY_TYPE = getHeader(pFloats)->type;
        }
    }

    public static void AsByteArray(this float[] floats, Action<byte[]> action)
    {
        if (floats.handleNullOrEmptyArray(action)) 
            return;

        var union = new Union {floats = floats};
        union.floats.toByteArray();
        try
        {
            action(union.bytes);
        }
        finally
        {
            union.bytes.toFloatArray();
        }
    }

    public static void AsFloatArray(this byte[] bytes, Action<float[]> action)
    {
        if (bytes.handleNullOrEmptyArray(action)) 
            return;

        var union = new Union {bytes = bytes};
        union.bytes.toFloatArray();
        try
        {
            action(union.floats);
        }
        finally
        {
            union.floats.toByteArray();
        }
    }

    public static bool handleNullOrEmptyArray<TSrc,TDst>(this TSrc[] array, Action<TDst[]> action)
    {
        if (array == null)
        {
            action(null);
            return true;
        }

        if (array.Length == 0)
        {
            action(new TDst[0]);
            return true;
        }

        return false;
    }

    private static ArrayHeader* getHeader(void* pBytes)
    {
        return (ArrayHeader*)pBytes - 1;
    }

    private static void toFloatArray(this byte[] bytes)
    {
        fixed (void* pArray = bytes)
        {
            var pHeader = getHeader(pArray);

            pHeader->type = FLOAT_ARRAY_TYPE;
            pHeader->length = (UIntPtr)(bytes.Length / sizeof(float));
        }
    }

    private static void toByteArray(this float[] floats)
    {
        fixed(void* pArray = floats)
        {
            var pHeader = getHeader(pArray);

            pHeader->type = BYTE_ARRAY_TYPE;
            pHeader->length = (UIntPtr)(floats.Length * sizeof(float));
        }
    }
}

And the usage is:

var floats = new float[] {0, 1, 0, 1};
floats.AsByteArray(bytes =>
{
    foreach (var b in bytes)
    {
        Console.WriteLine(b);
    }
});
Score: 2

Yes, the type information and data is in 7 the same memory block, so that is impossible 6 unless you overwrite the type information 5 in a float array to fool the system that 4 it's byte array. That would be a really 3 ugly hack, and could easily blow up...

Here's 2 how you can convert the floats without unsafe 1 code if you like:

public static byte[] ToByteArray(this float[] floatArray) {
    int len = floatArray.Length * 4;
    byte[] byteArray = new byte[len];
    int pos = 0;
    foreach (float f in floatArray) {
        byte[] data = BitConverter.GetBytes(f);
        Array.Copy(data, 0, byteArray, pos, 4);
        pos += 4;
    }
    return byteArray;
}
Score: 2

This question is the reverse of What is the fastest way to convert a float[] to a byte[]?.

I've answered 3 with a union kind of hack to skip the whole copying of the 2 data. You could easily reverse this (length 1 = length *sizeof(Double).

Score: 2

I've written something similar for quick 3 conversion between arrays. It's basically 2 an ugly proof-of-concept more than a handsome 1 solution. ;)

public static TDest[] ConvertArray<TSource, TDest>(TSource[] source)
    where TSource : struct
    where TDest : struct {

    if (source == null)
        throw new ArgumentNullException("source");

        var sourceType = typeof(TSource);
        var destType = typeof(TDest);

        if (sourceType == typeof(char) || destType == typeof(char))
            throw new NotSupportedException(
                "Can not convert from/to a char array. Char is special " +
                "in a somewhat unknown way (like enums can't be based on " +
                "char either), and Marshal.SizeOf returns 1 even when the " +
                "values held by a char can be above 255."
            );

        var sourceByteSize = Buffer.ByteLength(source);
        var destTypeSize = Marshal.SizeOf(destType);
        if (sourceByteSize % destTypeSize != 0)
            throw new Exception(
                "The source array is " + sourceByteSize + " bytes, which can " +
                "not be transfered to chunks of " + destTypeSize + ", the size " +
                "of type " + typeof(TDest).Name + ". Change destination type or " +
                "pad the source array with additional values."
            );

        var destCount = sourceByteSize / destTypeSize;
        var destArray = new TDest[destCount];

        Buffer.BlockCopy(source, 0, destArray, 0, sourceByteSize);

        return destArray;
    }
}
Score: 1
    public byte[] ToByteArray(object o)
    {
        int size = Marshal.SizeOf(o);
        byte[] buffer = new byte[size];
        IntPtr p = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size);
        try
        {
            Marshal.StructureToPtr(o, p, false);
            Marshal.Copy(p, buffer, 0, size);
        }
        finally
        {
            Marshal.FreeHGlobal(p);
        }
        return buffer;
    }

this may help you to convert an object to 1 a byte array.

Score: 1

You should check my answer to a similar 7 question: What is the fastest way to convert a float[] to a byte[]?.

In it you'll find portable code 6 (32/64 bit compatible) to let you view a 5 float array as a byte array or vice-versa, without 4 copying the data. It's the fastest way that 3 I know of to do such thing.

If you're just 2 interested in the code, it's maintained 1 at https://gist.github.com/1050703 .

Score: 0

Well - if you still interested in that hack 6 - check out this modified code - it works 5 like a charm and costs ~0 time, but it may 4 not work in future since it's a hack allowing 3 to gain full access to the whole process 2 address space without trust requirements 1 and unsafe marks.

    [StructLayout(LayoutKind.Explicit)]
    struct ArrayConvert
    {
        public static byte[] GetBytes(float[] floats)
        {
            ArrayConvert ar = new ArrayConvert();
            ar.floats = floats;
            ar.length.val = floats.Length * 4;
            return ar.bytes;
        }
        public static float[] GetFloats(byte[] bytes)
        {
            ArrayConvert ar = new ArrayConvert();
            ar.bytes = bytes;
            ar.length.val = bytes.Length / 4;
            return ar.floats;
        }

        public static byte[] GetTop4BytesFrom(object obj)
        {
            ArrayConvert ar = new ArrayConvert();
            ar.obj = obj;
            return new byte[]
            {
                ar.top4bytes.b0,
                ar.top4bytes.b1,
                ar.top4bytes.b2,
                ar.top4bytes.b3
            };
        }
        public static byte[] GetBytesFrom(object obj, int size)
        {
            ArrayConvert ar = new ArrayConvert();
            ar.obj = obj;
            ar.length.val = size;
            return ar.bytes;
        }

        class ArrayLength
        {
            public int val;
        }
        class Top4Bytes
        {
            public byte b0;
            public byte b1;
            public byte b2;
            public byte b3;
        }

        [FieldOffset(0)]
        private Byte[] bytes;
        [FieldOffset(0)]
        private object obj;
        [FieldOffset(0)]
        private float[] floats;

        [FieldOffset(0)]
        private ArrayLength length;

        [FieldOffset(0)]
        private Top4Bytes top4bytes;
    }

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