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How to read a .NET Guid into a Java UUID

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-02-28 02:26 出处:网络
I need to communicate a Guid that was generated in .NET to a Java application. I use Guid.ToByteArray() to store it on disk as a byte[], then read it into Java and convert it to a UUID. For this purpo

I need to communicate a Guid that was generated in .NET to a Java application. I use Guid.ToByteArray() to store it on disk as a byte[], then read it into Java and convert it to a UUID. For this purpose I copied the implementation of the (private) constructor of UUID that takes a byte[]:

private UUID(byte[] data) {
    long msb = 0;
    long ls开发者_运维技巧b = 0;
    assert data.length == 16;
    for (int i=0; i<8; i++)
        msb = (msb << 8) | (data[i] & 0xff);
    for (int i=8; i<16; i++)
        lsb = (lsb << 8) | (data[i] & 0xff);
    this.mostSigBits = msb;
    this.leastSigBits = lsb;
}

However, when I inspect the UUID using toString(), the Java UUID is different from the .NET Guid.

For example, the .NET Guid

888794c2-65ce-4de1-aa15-75a11342bc63

turns into the Java UUID

c2948788-ce65-e14d-aa15-75a11342bc63

It seems that the byte ordering of the first three groups is reversed, while the ordering in the last two groups is the same.

Since I would expect the toString() of both the Guid and the UUID to yield the same result, does anyone know how I should correctly read the .NET Guid into a Java UUID?

Edit: To clarify, the implementation is not my own. It is the private constructor of the java.util.UUID class that takes a byte[], which I copied to use for the purpose of reading a byte[] from disk into a UUID.

I do not want to use strings to store the Guids as I'm storing a lot of them and it seems like a waste of space.

Russell Troywest's link at least clarifies why the first couple of groups of the Guid come out reversed, while the second half stays in the same order. The question is, can I depend on .NET always generating these bytes in the same order?


Could you not just store the .Net Guid as a string and read it into Java? That way you don't need to worry about byte order or anything.

If not then This explains how the bytes are laid out in C#

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/fx22893a.aspx


Edit 2017-08-30: Swapped array elements 6 and 7 per comments.

I have to read & write Guids from/to MySQL (stored as binary(16)) in a C# app, but the database is also used by Java apps. Here are the extension methods I use for converting between .NET little-endian and Java big-endian byte order:

public static class GuidExtensions
{
    /// <summary>
    /// A CLSCompliant method to convert a Java big-endian Guid to a .NET 
    /// little-endian Guid.
    /// The Guid Constructor (UInt32, UInt16, UInt16, Byte, Byte, Byte, Byte,
    ///  Byte, Byte, Byte, Byte) is not CLSCompliant.
    /// </summary>
    [CLSCompliant(true)]
    public static Guid ToLittleEndian(this Guid javaGuid) {
        byte[] net = new byte[16];
        byte[] java = javaGuid.ToByteArray();
        for (int i = 8; i < 16; i++) {
            net[i] = java[i];
        }
        net[3] = java[0];
        net[2] = java[1];
        net[1] = java[2];
        net[0] = java[3];
        net[5] = java[4];
        net[4] = java[5];
        net[6] = java[7];
        net[7] = java[6];
        return new Guid(net);
    }

    /// <summary>
    /// Converts little-endian .NET guids to big-endian Java guids:
    /// </summary>
    [CLSCompliant(true)]
    public static Guid ToBigEndian(this Guid netGuid) {
        byte[] java = new byte[16];
        byte[] net = netGuid.ToByteArray();
        for (int i = 8; i < 16; i++) {
            java[i] = net[i];
        }
        java[0] = net[3];
        java[1] = net[2];
        java[2] = net[1];
        java[3] = net[0];
        java[4] = net[5];
        java[5] = net[4];
        java[6] = net[7];
        java[7] = net[6];
        return new Guid(java);
    }
}


As already noted, the binary encoding of GUID in .NET has bytes in the first three groups placed in the little-endian order (reversed) – see Guid.ToByteArray Method. To create java.util.UUID from it you can use the following code:

import java.nio.ByteBuffer;
import java.nio.ByteOrder;
import java.util.UUID;

public UUID toUUID(byte[] binaryEncoding) {
    ByteBuffer source = ByteBuffer.wrap(binaryEncoding);
    ByteBuffer target = ByteBuffer.allocate(16).
        order(ByteOrder.LITTLE_ENDIAN).
        putInt(source.getInt()).
        putShort(source.getShort()).
        putShort(source.getShort()).
        order(ByteOrder.BIG_ENDIAN).
        putLong(source.getLong());
    target.rewind();
    return new UUID(target.getLong(), target.getLong());
}


In response to your edit, no, you cannot consistently depend on the bytes being generated in the same order. The runtime determines the endianness. C# does however offer BitConverter.isLittleEndian for this very reason.

I know you can't change the endianness of the Java implementation and the bit shifting. But you can shift the bits on the C# end after storing and before sending them to Java.

Update:

MSDN Article on IsLittleEndian

Edit: To be practical, you can PROBABLY count on it always being little endian in its layout of the first chunk of bytes, but technically you can't.


The GUID.toByteArray is pretty odd in C#. The first half are in little-endian and the second half are in big-endia.

A comment on this page notes this fact: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.guid.tobytearray.aspx

the order of bytes in the returned byte array is different from the string representation of a Guid value. The order of the beginning four-byte group and the next two two-byte groups is reversed, whereas the order of the last two-byte group and the closing six-byte group is the same.


I think your problem here is that .NET is little-endian but JAVA is big-endian, so when you read a 128 bits integer (a GUID) written by a C# app from a JAVA app you have to do de conversion from little-endian to big-endian.


The codecs DotNetGuid1Codec and DotNetGuid4Codec can encode UUIDs to .Net Guids.

// Convert time-based (version 1) to .Net Guid
UuidCodec<UUID> codec = new DotNetGuid1Codec();
UUID guid = codec.encode(timeUuid);
// Convert random-based (version 4) to .Net Guid
UuidCodec<UUID> codec = new DotNetGuid4Codec();
UUID guid = codec.encode(randomUuid);

See: uuid-creator


This code works for me.

var msb: Long = 0
var lsb: Long = 0
for(i <- Seq(3, 2, 1, 0, 5, 4, 7, 6)) {
  msb = (msb << 8) | (data(i) & 0xFF)
}
for(i <- 8 until 16) {
  lsb = (lsb << 8) | (data(i) & 0xFF)
}
new UUID(msb, lsb)
0

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