Delphi XE4 Indy compatibility issue between TBytes and TidBytes

江枫思渺然 提交于 2019-11-29 10:30:50

The reason TIdBytes was a simple alias for TBytes in earlier Indy 10 releases was primarily for compatibility with SysUtils.TEncoding, which uses TBytes. Indy's TIdTextEncoding type used to be a simple alias for SysUtils.TEncoding in D2009+, so TIdBytes needed to be a simple alias for TBytes to match.

However, TBytes caused quite a bit of trouble for Indy in XE3, mainly because of RTTI problems with Generics (TBytes is a simple alias for TArray<Byte> in recent Delphi releases). So, Indy 10.6 re-designed TIdTextEncoding to no longer rely on SysUtils.TEncoding at all (there were other reasons as well for doing so), which then allowed TIdBytes to change into its own array type in order to avoid the XE3 issues moving forward.

On the other hand, you were passing a TBytes where a TIdBytes was expected, so that is bad programming on your part for not following Indy's defined interface in the first place. All of Indy 10's byte-based operations, including ReadBytes(), have always operated on TIdBytes only. The fact that TIdBytes silently mapped to TBytes was an implementation detail that you should not have relied on in your code. Indy 10 expects TIdBytes, so use TIdBytes, then you would not have compiler errors about incompatible types.

The following two declarations are not the same, even though they appear to be. They're not assignment compatible, even though they're both based on array of string.

type
  TStringArrayOne = array of string;
  TStringArrayTwo = array of string;

var
  AVar1, AVar2: TStringArrayOne;
  AVar3, AVar4: TStringArrayTwo;
begin
  AVar1 := TStringArrayOne.Create('a', 'b', 'c');   // Compiles
  AVar2 := TStringArrayTwo.Create('a', 'b', 'c');   // Won't compile

  AVar3 := TStringArrayTwo.Create('a', 'b', 'c');   // Compiles
  AVar4 := TStringArrayOne.Create('a', 'b', 'c');   // Won't compile
end;

So TBytes and TIdBytes are not the same type, even if they're both defined as being array of Byte.

With regard to your question 2: It's a common problem with some third-party code. Indy in particular is known for making changes that breaks backward compatibility because they decide to reorganize or rewrite things between versions. Indy 10 was a major change from Indy 9, IIRC, and pretty much required a rewrite of most code that used it if you updated to the later version of Indy (even without updating Delphi at the same time). If you don't want to deal with those changes, you might want to look at using a more stable IP communications package. There are several available that are also free, open source packages.

In Indy 10.5.9 the type TIdBytes was defined differently depending on the presence of an existing TBytes type - see unit IdGlobal:

  {$IFDEF HAS_TBytes}
  TIdBytes = TBytes;
  {$ELSE}
  TIdBytes = array of Byte;
  {$ENDIF}

In Indy 10.6 (included in XE4), the declaration changed to unconditionally

  TIdBytes = array of Byte;

which means that starting with Indy 10.6, IdGlobal.TIdBytes is different from SysUtils.TBytes.

The second question is hard to answer, it is more a question of your priorities - other libraries are not immune against changes either, for example to improve performance or type-safety. Also changes in the Delphi language can always affect existing code.

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