Using a Substitute MarshalerÂ
Once the marshaler is complete, it can be used as a custom wrapper for a particular type. The following example shows the managed interface definition IUserData
:
Public Interface IUserData
Sub DoSomeStuff(pINew As INew)
End Interface
public interface IUserData {
void DoSomeStuff(INew pINew);
}
In the following example, the IUserData
interface uses the NewOldMarshaler
to enable unmanaged clients to pass an IOld
interface to the DoSomeStuff
method. The managed description of the DoSomeStuff
method takes an INew
interface, as shown in the previous example, while the unmanaged version of DoSomeStuff
takes an IOld
interface pointer, as shown in the following example.
Type library representation
[uuid(9B2BAADA-0705-11D3-A0CD-00C04FA35826)]
library UserLib {
[uuid(9B2BABCD-0705-11D3-A0CD-00C04FA35826)]
interface IUserData : IUnknown
HRESULT DoSomeStuff(IUnknown* pIOld);
}
The type library generated by exporting the managed definition of IUserData
yields the unmanaged definition shown in this example rather than the standard definition. The MarshalAsAttribute attribute applied to the INew
argument in the managed definition of the DoSomeStuff
method indicates that the argument uses a custom marshaler, as the following example shows:
Imports System.Runtime.InteropServices
Public Interface IUserData
Public Sub DoSomeStuff( _
<MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.CustomMarshaler, _
MarshalType := "MyCompany.NewOldMarshaler")> pINew As INew)
End Sub
End Interface
using System.runtime.InteropServices;
public interface IUserData {
void DoSomeStuff(
[MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.CustomMarshaler,
MarshalType="MyCompany.NewOldMarshaler")]
INew pINew
);
}
When used to specify a custom marshaler, the MarshalAsAttribute takes the following two named parameters:
MarshalType (Required)
The assembly-qualified name of the custom marshaler. The name should include the namespace and class of the custom marshaler. If the custom marshaler is defined in a different assembly from the one it is used in, you must specify the name of the assembly in which it is defined.
Note You can use the MarshalTypeRef field instead of the MarshalType field. MarshalTypeRef takes a type that is easier to specify.
MarshalCookie (Optional)
A cookie passed to the custom marshaler. You can use the cookie to provide additional information to the marshaler. For example, the same marshaler could be used to provide a number of wrappers, for which the cookie identifies the specific wrapper. The cookie is passed to the GetInstance method of the marshaler.
See Also
Concepts
Defining the Marshaling Type
Implementing the ICustomMarshaler Interface