Passing a byte[] in Java to a function in C through JNI: how to use jarraybyte

blutech picture blutech · Aug 6, 2010 · Viewed 37.2k times · Source

This is the first time that I use the JNI and also the first time that I have to write some lines in C.

What I am trying to do is very simple. I'm just trying to switch the endiannes of a byte[] using a C routine.

In java it is done like this:

public void switchEndianness(byte[] array){

        byte byte1;
        byte byte2;

        for(int i = 0; i < array.length ; i+=2){
            byte1 = array[i];
            byte2 = array[i+1];

            array[i] = byte2;
            array[i+1] = byte1;
        }
}

So to do this using JNI, I've tried to imlpement the same routine in the JNICALL, but it doesn't compile. What I've written so far is this:

JNIEXPORT void JNICALL Java_CEndianness_switchEndianness(JNIEnv *env, jobject obj, jbyteArray array, jint offset, jint length){

    char byte1;
    char byte2;

    int i;
    for(i = offset; i  < length ; i+=2){
        byte1 = array[i];
        byte2 = array[i+1];

        array[i] = byte2;
        array[i+1] = byte1;
    }
}

I have no clue how to use the jbyteArray type of data. is it possible to store a jbyte in a char??? Another question is.. when this routine is over...will the byte[] in java be modified?? Or is it only modified inside the C call?

Any help???

Thanks to everybody!

Answer

qrtt1 picture qrtt1 · Nov 3, 2010

you can get jbyte* by GetByteArrayElements:

jbyte* bufferPtr = (*env)->GetByteArrayElements(env, array, NULL);

And it is important to know the length of your array:

jsize lengthOfArray = (*env)->GetArrayLength(env, array);

Having jbyte* and length, you can do all the things in c-array. Finally, releasing it:

(*env)->ReleaseByteArrayElements(env, array, bufferPtr, 0);