Pergunta

In JavaScript, doing this:

var numbers = new Array(1042147201, -1682263442, -1463053899, 1834416100)
sjcl.codec.base64.fromBits(numbers)

Return "Ph3ngZu6sm6oy5G1bVb35A==", but doing this in C#:

var numbers = new[] { 1042147201, -1682263442, -1463053899, 1834416100 };
var byteNumbers = new byte[numbers.Length * sizeof(int)];
Buffer.BlockCopy(numbers, 0, byteNumbers, 0, byteNumbers.Length);
Convert.ToBase64String(byteNumbers);

Return "gecdPm6yupu1kcuo5PdWbQ=="
Why is the result different and what do I have to do to get the same result like in JavaScript?

Foi útil?

Solução

Looking at output of the 2 two pieces of code you have issue with endianness of ints

1834416100 - > 6D 56 F7 E4
Ph3ngZu6sm6oy5G1bVb35A==  -> 3E 1D E7 81 9B BA B2 6E A8 CB 91 B5 6D 56 F7 E4
gecdPm6yupu1kcuo5PdWbQ==  -> 81 E7 1D 3E 6E B2 BA 9B B5 91 CB A8 E4 F7 56 6D

Possible fix: reverse each integer when adding to array as shown in BitConverter class

  int value = 12345678;
  byte[] bytes = BitConverter.GetBytes(value);
  if (BitConverter.IsLittleEndian)
     Array.Reverse(bytes); 
Licenciado em: CC-BY-SA com atribuição
Não afiliado a StackOverflow
scroll top