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c - memory alignment within gcc structs

I am porting an application to an ARM platform in C, the application also runs on an x86 processor, and must be backward compatible.

I am now having some issues with variable alignment. I have read the gcc manual for __attribute__((aligned(4),packed)) I interpret what is being said as the start of the struct is aligned to the 4 byte boundry and the inside remains untouched because of the packed statement.

originally I had this but occasionally it gets placed unaligned with the 4 byte boundary.

typedef struct  
{  
 unsigned int code;  
 unsigned int length;  
 unsigned int seq;  
 unsigned int request;  
 unsigned char nonce[16];  
 unsigned short  crc;  
} __attribute__((packed)) CHALLENGE;

so I change it to this.

typedef struct  
{  
 unsigned int code;  
 unsigned int length;  
 unsigned int seq;  
 unsigned int request;  
 unsigned char nonce[16];  
 unsigned short  crc;  
} __attribute__((aligned(4),packed)) CHALLENGE;

The understand I stated earlier seems to be incorrect as both the struct is now aligned to a 4 byte boundary, and and the inside data is now aligned to a four byte boundary, but because of the endianess, the size of the struct has increased in size from 42 to 44 bytes. This size is critical as we have other applications that depend on the struct being 42 bytes.

Could some describe to me how to perform the operation that I require. Any help is much appreciated.

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If you're depending on sizeof(yourstruct) being 42 bytes, you're about to be bitten by a world of non-portable assumptions. You haven't said what this is for, but it seems likely that the endianness of the struct contents matters as well, so you may also have a mismatch with the x86 there too.

In this situation I think the only sure-fire way to cope is to use unsigned char[42] in the parts where it matters. Start by writing a precise specification of exactly what fields are where in this 42-byte block, and what endian, then use that definition to write some code to translate between that and a struct you can interact with. The code will likely be either all-at-once serialisation code (aka marshalling), or a bunch of getters and setters.


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