writefile (kernel32)
Last changed: 68.12.43.92

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Summary

C# Signature:

[DllImport("kernel32.dll")]
static extern bool WriteFile(IntPtr hFile, byte [] lpBuffer,
   uint nNumberOfBytesToWrite, out uint lpNumberOfBytesWritten,
   [In] ref System.Threading.NativeOverlapped lpOverlapped);

or

[DllImport("kernel32.dll", SetLastError=true)]
static extern unsafe int WriteFile(IntPtr handle, IntPtr buffer,
  int numBytesToWrite, IntPtr numBytesWritten, NativeOverlapped* lpOverlapped);

or

[DllImport("kernel32.dll", BestFitMapping=true, CharSet= CharSet.Ansi)]
    static extern bool WriteFile(IntPtr hFile, System.Text.StringBuilder lpBuffer,
     uint nNumberOfBytesToWrite, out uint lpNumberOfBytesWritten,
     [In] ref System.Threading.NativeOverlapped lpOverlapped);

Important

If you use:

    static extern bool WriteFile(IntPtr hFile, System.Text.StringBuilder lpBuffer,
     uint nNumberOfBytesToWrite, out uint lpNumberOfBytesWritten,
     [In] ref System.Threading.NativeOverlapped lpOverlapped);

for Hooking into a process and see what an application want's to write using windows APIs, remember to clean up the System.Text.StringBuilder lpBuffer by deleting the junk data that remains concatenated.

You can do it using:

string text = lpBuffer.ToString().Substring(0, (int)nNumberOfBytesToWrite).Replace("\r\n", " ")

...and this will remove the junk data from lpBuffer

VB Signature:

<DllImport("kernel32.dll", SetlastError:=True)> _
  Private Shared Function WriteFile(ByVal hFile As IntPtr, ByVal Buffer As IntPtr,
    ByVal nNumberOfBytesToWrite As Integer, ByRef lpNumberOfBytesWritten As Integer,
    ByRef lpOverlapped As OVERLAPPED) As <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.Bool)> Boolean
  End Function

or

  "File" = The SafeFileHandle to the file to write to. The file must have at least write-level access.
  "Buffer" = The variable, array, or string holding the data to write to the file.
  "NumberOfBytesToWrite" = The number of bytes of data to write to the file.
  "NumberOfBytesWritten" = Receives the number of bytes of data actually written to the file.
  "Overlapped" = If the file is asynchronous (overlapped), this is an threading.NativeOverlappedStructure specifying where to begin writing at. If the file is synchronous (not overlapped), this must be 0.

<DllImport("kernel32.dll", SetlastError:=True)> Friend Shared Function WriteFile( _
    ByVal File As SafeFileHandle, _
    ByVal Buffer As System.Text.StringBuilder, _
    ByVal NumberOfBytesToWrite As Integer, _
    ByRef NumberOfBytesWritten As Integer, _
    ByRef Overlapped As System.Threading.NativeOverlapped) As <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.Bool)> Boolean
  End Function

or

    <DllImport("kernel32.dll")> _
    Public Shared Function WriteFile( _
    ByVal hFile As IntPtr, _
    ByVal Buffer As Byte(), _
    ByVal nNumberOfBytesToWrite As Integer, _
    ByRef lpNumberOfBytesWritten As Integer, _
    ByRef lpOverlapped As OVERLAPPED) _
    As <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.Bool)> Boolean
    End Function

User-Defined Types:

None.

Notes:

The documentation states that if using unbuffered IO, the memory must be "storage aligned" (aligned to the sector size of the storage device). Either this is not enforced, or managed allocations (specifically byte arrays) are automatically storage aligned because there seems to be no problem using it. Note that storage aligned and page aligned are not the same, and managed allocations are not in general page aligned (required for WriteFileScatter).

In fact the buffer must be aligned to the granularity of the SCSI/IDE adapter's DMA alignment (PDEVICE_OBJECT->AlignmentRequirement). The MSDN documentation is written for the lamers and probably it seemed safe to restrict them using the sector size (which is >= 512 byte, while most modern SCSI cards use <=4 byte requirement).

For more information on unbuffered IO in .NET see:

http://arxiv.org/abs/cs.PF/0502012

Warning! GetOverlappedResult writes to the address of the buffer specified in the ORIGINAL OPERATION (ie/ ReadFile or WriteFile). .NET may move the address of the buffer before GetOverlappedResult returns, resulting in a buffer overflow. Use AllocHGlobal and FreeHGlobal or otherwise ensure the buffer is pinned between the two calls.

Tips & Tricks:

NET 2.0 use the SafeFileHandle version

If you are passing a System.Threading.NativeOverlapped struct in (for lpOverlapped) then there's no need to also call SetFilePointer or SetFilePointerEx. The offset in the OVERLAPPED structure trumps wherever the file position was previouly set to.

Sample Code:

  Public Sub Write(ByVal Packet As stArcnetPacket, ByVal DataLength As Int16)
    Dim dwErrorCode As FarcConstants
    Dim dwBytesWritten As Int32
    Dim ip As IntPtr = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(Marshal.SizeOf(Packet))
    Marshal.StructureToPtr(Packet, ip, True)
    If WriteFile(hDriver, ip, DataLength + 6, dwBytesWritten, Nothing) Then
      Marshal.FreeHGlobal(ip)
    Else
      dwErrorCode = Marshal.GetLastWin32Error
      Marshal.FreeHGlobal(ip)
      Throw New System.IO.IOException("Write fails. Errorcode: " & dwErrorCode.ToString, _
        New System.ComponentModel.Win32Exception(dwErrorCode))
    End If
  End Sub

Alternative Managed API:

System.IO.FileStream

See Also

ReadFile, WriteFileGather, ReadFileScatter

Documentation
WriteFile on MSDN