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Reliable UDP networking library extended for the .NET environment

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This is an independent ENet implementation with a modified protocol for C, C++, C#, and other languages.

Features:

  • Lightweight and straightforward
  • Low resource consumption
  • Dual-stack IPv4/IPv6 support
  • Connection management
  • Sequencing
  • Channels
  • Reliability
  • Fragmentation and reassembly
  • Aggregation
  • Adaptability
  • Portability

Please, read common mistakes to get an idea what can go wrong.

Building

To build the native library appropriate software is required:

For desktop platforms CMake with GNU Make or Visual Studio.

For mobile platforms NDK for Android and Xcode for iOS. Make sure that all compiled libraries are assigned to appropriate platforms and CPU architectures.

To build the library for Nintendo Switch, follow this guide.

A managed assembly can be built using any available compiling platform that supports C# 3.0 or higher.

Compiled libraries

You can grab compiled libraries from the release section or from NuGet:

ENet-CSharp contains compiled assembly with native libraries for the .NET environment (.NET Standard 2.1).

ENet-Unity contains script with native libraries for the Unity.

It's highly recommended to delete a folder with binaries instead of replacing it to upgrade.

These packages are provided only for traditional platforms: Windows, Linux, and macOS (x64).

Supported OS versions:

  • Windows 7 or higher
  • Linux 4.4 or higher
  • macOS 10.12 or higher

Usage

Before starting to work, the library should be initialized using ENet.Library.Initialize(); function.

After the work is done, deinitialize the library using ENet.Library.Deinitialize(); function.

.NET environment

Start a new server
using (Host server = new Host()) {
	Address address = new Address();

	address.Port = port;
	server.Create(address, maxClients);

	Event netEvent;

	while (!Console.KeyAvailable) {
		bool polled = false;

		while (!polled) {
			if (server.CheckEvents(out netEvent) <= 0) {
				if (server.Service(15, out netEvent) <= 0)
					break;

				polled = true;
			}

			switch (netEvent.Type) {
				case EventType.None:
					break;

				case EventType.Connect:
					Console.WriteLine("Client connected - ID: " + netEvent.Peer.ID + ", IP: " + netEvent.Peer.IP);
					break;

				case EventType.Disconnect:
					Console.WriteLine("Client disconnected - ID: " + netEvent.Peer.ID + ", IP: " + netEvent.Peer.IP);
					break;

				case EventType.Timeout:
					Console.WriteLine("Client timeout - ID: " + netEvent.Peer.ID + ", IP: " + netEvent.Peer.IP);
					break;

				case EventType.Receive:
					Console.WriteLine("Packet received from - ID: " + netEvent.Peer.ID + ", IP: " + netEvent.Peer.IP + ", Channel ID: " + netEvent.ChannelID + ", Data length: " + netEvent.Packet.Length);
					netEvent.Packet.Dispose();
					break;
			}
		}
	}

	server.Flush();
}
Start a new client
using (Host client = new Host()) {
	Address address = new Address();

	address.SetHost(ip);
	address.Port = port;
	client.Create();

	Peer peer = client.Connect(address);

	Event netEvent;

	while (!Console.KeyAvailable) {
		bool polled = false;

		while (!polled) {
			if (client.CheckEvents(out netEvent) <= 0) {
				if (client.Service(15, out netEvent) <= 0)
					break;

				polled = true;
			}

			switch (netEvent.Type) {
				case EventType.None:
					break;

				case EventType.Connect:
					Console.WriteLine("Client connected to server");
					break;

				case EventType.Disconnect:
					Console.WriteLine("Client disconnected from server");
					break;

				case EventType.Timeout:
					Console.WriteLine("Client connection timeout");
					break;

				case EventType.Receive:
					Console.WriteLine("Packet received from server - Channel ID: " + netEvent.ChannelID + ", Data length: " + netEvent.Packet.Length);
					netEvent.Packet.Dispose();
					break;
			}
		}
	}

	client.Flush();
}
Create and send a new packet
Packet packet = default(Packet);
byte[] data = new byte[64];

packet.Create(data);
peer.Send(channelID, ref packet);
Copy payload from a packet
byte[] buffer = new byte[1024];

netEvent.Packet.CopyTo(buffer);
Integrate with a custom memory allocator
AllocCallback OnMemoryAllocate = (size) => {
	return Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size);
};

FreeCallback OnMemoryFree = (memory) => {
	Marshal.FreeHGlobal(memory);
};

NoMemoryCallback OnNoMemory = () => {
	throw new OutOfMemoryException();
};

Callbacks callbacks = new Callbacks(OnMemoryAllocate, OnMemoryFree, OnNoMemory);

if (ENet.Library.Initialize(callbacks))
	Console.WriteLine("ENet successfully initialized using a custom memory allocator");

Unity

Usage is almost the same as in the .NET environment, except that the console functions must be replaced with functions provided by Unity. If the Host.Service() will be called in a game loop, then make sure that the timeout parameter set to 0 which means non-blocking. Also, keep Unity run in background by enabling the appropriate option in the player settings.

Multi-threading

Strategy

The best-known strategy is to use ENet in an independent I/O thread and utilize inter-thread messaging techniques for transferring data across threads/tasks without any locks/mutexes. Non-blocking queues like Ring Buffer were designed for such purposes. High-level abstractions and logic can be parallelized using workers, then communicate with I/O thread and enqueue/dequeue messages to send/receive data across the network.

Functionality

In general, ENet is not thread-safe, but some of its functions can be used safely if the user is careful enough:

Packet structure and its functions are safe until a packet is only moving across threads by value and a custom memory allocator is not used.

Peer.ID as soon as a pointer to a peer was obtained from the native side, the ID will be cached in Peer structure for further actions with objects that assigned to that ID. Peer structure can be moved across threads by value, but its functions are not thread-safe because data in memory may change by the service in another thread.

Library.Time utilizes atomic primitives internally for managing local monotonic time.

API reference

Enumerations

PacketFlags

Definitions of a flags for Peer.Send() function:

PacketFlags.None unreliable sequenced, delivery of packet is not guaranteed.

PacketFlags.Reliable reliable sequenced, a packet must be received by the target peer and resend attempts should be made until the packet is delivered.

PacketFlags.Unsequenced a packet will not be sequenced with other packets and may be delivered out of order. This flag makes delivery unreliable.

PacketFlags.NoAllocate a packet will not allocate data, and the user must supply it instead. Packet lifetime should be tracked using the PacketFreeCallback callback.

PacketFlags.UnreliableFragmented a packet will be unreliably fragmented if it exceeds the MTU. By default, unreliable packets that exceed the MTU are fragmented and transmitted reliably. This flag should be used to explicitly indicate packets that should remain unreliable.

PacketFlags.Instant a packet will not be bundled with other packets at a next service iteration and sent instantly instead. This delivery type trades multiplexing efficiency in favor of latency. The same packet can't be used for multiple Peer.Send() calls.

PacketFlags.Unthrottled a packet that was enqueued for sending unreliably should not be dropped due to throttling and sent if possible.

PacketFlags.Sent a packet was sent from all queues it has entered.

EventType

Definitions of event types for Event.Type property:

EventType.None no event occurred within the specified time limit.

EventType.Connect a connection request initiated by Peer.Connect() function has completed. Event.Peer returns a peer which successfully connected. Event.Data returns the user-supplied data describing the connection or 0 if none is available.

EventType.Disconnect a peer has disconnected. This event is generated on a successful completion of a disconnect initiated by Peer.Disconnect() function. Event.Peer returns a peer which disconnected. Event.Data returns the user-supplied data describing the disconnection or 0 if none is available.

EventType.Receive a packet has been received from a peer. Event.Peer returns a peer which sent the packet. Event.ChannelID specifies the channel number upon which the packet was received. Event.Packet returns a packet that was received, and this packet must be destroyed using Event.Packet.Dispose() function after use.

EventType.Timeout a peer has timed out. This event occurs if a peer has timed out or if a connection request initialized by Peer.Connect() has timed out. Event.Peer returns a peer which timed out.

PeerState

Definitions of peer states for Peer.State property:

PeerState.Uninitialized a peer not initialized.

PeerState.Disconnected a peer disconnected or timed out.

PeerState.Connecting a peer connection in-progress.

PeerState.Connected a peer successfully connected.

PeerState.Disconnecting a peer disconnection in-progress.

PeerState.Zombie a peer not properly disconnected.

Delegates

Memory callbacks

Provides per application events.

AllocCallback(IntPtr size) notifies when a memory is requested for allocation. Expects pointer to the newly allocated memory. A reference to the delegate should be preserved from being garbage collected.

FreeCallback(IntPtr memory) notifies when the memory can be freed. A reference to the delegate should be preserved from being garbage collected.

NoMemoryCallback() notifies when memory is not enough. A reference to the delegate should be preserved from being garbage collected.

Packet callbacks

Provides per packet events.

PacketFreeCallback(Packet packet) notifies when a packet is being destroyed. A reference to the delegate should be preserved from being garbage collected.

Host callbacks

Provides per host events.

InterceptCallback(ref Event @event, ref Address address, IntPtr receivedData, int receivedDataLength) notifies when a raw UDP packet is intercepted. Status code returned from this callback instructs ENet how the set event should be handled. Returning 1 indicates dispatching of the set event by the service. Returning 0 indicates that ENet subsystems should handle received data. Returning -1 indicates an error. A reference to the delegate should be preserved from being garbage collected.

ChecksumCallback(IntPtr buffers, int bufferCount) notifies when a checksum should be computed for buffers at sending and receiving. A value returned from this callback is a 64-bit checksum. ENet automatically handles integrity verification of packets if a checksum mechanism is enabled at both ends. Can be used with ENet.Library.CRC64() function. A reference to the delegate should be preserved from being garbage collected.

Structures

Address

Contains structure with anonymous host data and port number.

Address.Port gets or sets a port number.

Address.GetIP() gets an IP address.

Address.SetIP(string ip) sets an IP address. To use IPv4 broadcast in the local network the address can be set to 255.255.255.255 for a client. ENet will automatically respond to the broadcast and update the address to a server's actual IP.

Address.GetHost() attempts to do a reverse lookup from the address. Returns a string with a resolved name or an IP address.

Address.SetHost(string hostName) sets host name or an IP address. Should be used for binding to a network interface or for connection to a foreign host. Returns true on success or false on failure.

Event

Contains structure with the event type, managed pointer to the peer, channel ID, the user-supplied data, and managed pointer to the packet.

Event.Type returns a type of the event.

Event.Peer returns a peer that generated a connect, disconnect, receive or a timeout event.

Event.ChannelID returns a channel ID on the peer that generated the event, if appropriate.

Event.Data returns the user-supplied data, if appropriate.

Event.Packet returns a packet associated with the event, if appropriate.

Packet

Contains a managed pointer to the packet.

Packet.Dispose() destroys the packet. Should be called only when the packet was obtained from EventType.Receive event.

Packet.IsSet returns a state of the managed pointer.

Packet.Data returns a managed pointer to the packet data.

Packet.UserData gets or sets the user-supplied data.

Packet.Length returns a length of payload in the packet.

Packet.HasReferences checks references to the packet.

Packet.SetFreeCallback(PacketFreeCallback callback) sets the callback to notify when an appropriate packet is being destroyed. A pointer IntPtr to a callback can be used instead of a reference to a delegate.

Packet.Create(byte[] data, int offset, int length, PacketFlags flags) creates a packet that may be sent to a peer. The offset parameter indicates the starting point of data in an array, the length is the ending point of data in an array. All parameters are optional. Multiple packet flags can be specified at once. A pointer IntPtr to a native buffer can be used instead of a reference to a byte array.

Packet.CopyTo(byte[] destination) copies payload from the packet to the destination array.

Peer

Contains a managed pointer to the peer and cached ID.

Peer.IsSet returns a state of the managed pointer.

Peer.ID returns a peer ID. It's always zero on the client side.

Peer.IP returns an IP address in a printable form.

Peer.Port returns a port number.

Peer.MTU returns an MTU.

Peer.State returns a peer state described in the PeerState enumeration.

Peer.RoundTripTime returns a round-trip time in milliseconds.

Peer.LastRoundTripTime returns a round-trip time since the last acknowledgment in milliseconds.

Peer.LastSendTime returns a last packet send time in milliseconds.

Peer.LastReceiveTime returns a last packet receive time in milliseconds.

Peer.PacketsSent returns a total number of packets sent during the connection.

Peer.PacketsLost returns a total number of packets that considered lost during the connection based on retransmission logic.

Peer.PacketsThrottle returns a ratio of packets throttle depending on conditions of the connection to the peer.

Peer.BytesSent returns a total number of bytes sent during the connection.

Peer.BytesReceived returns a total number of bytes received during the connection.

Peer.Data gets or sets the user-supplied data. Should be used with an explicit cast to appropriate data type.

Peer.ConfigureThrottle(uint interval, uint acceleration, uint deceleration, uint threshold) configures throttle parameter for a peer. Unreliable packets are dropped by ENet in response to the varying conditions of the connection to the peer. The throttle represents a probability that an unreliable packet should not be dropped and thus sent by ENet to the peer. The lowest mean round-trip time from the sending of a reliable packet to the receipt of its acknowledgment is measured over an amount of time specified by the interval parameter in milliseconds. If a measured round-trip time happens to be significantly less than the mean round-trip time measured over the interval, then the throttle probability is increased to allow more traffic by an amount specified in the acceleration parameter, which is a ratio to the Library.throttleScale constant. If a measured round-trip time happens to be significantly greater than the mean round-trip time measured over the interval, then the throttle probability is decreased to limit traffic by an amount specified in the deceleration parameter, which is a ratio to the Library.throttleScale constant. When the throttle has a value of Library.throttleScale, no unreliable packets are dropped by ENet, and so 100% of all unreliable packets will be sent. When the throttle has a value of 0, all unreliable packets are dropped by ENet, and so 0% of all unreliable packets will be sent. Intermediate values for the throttle represent intermediate probabilities between 0% and 100% of unreliable packets being sent. The bandwidth limits of the local and foreign hosts are taken into account to determine a sensible limit for the throttle probability above which it should not raise even in the best of conditions. To disable throttling the deceleration parameter should be set to zero. The threshold parameter can be used to reduce packet throttling relative to measured round-trip time in unstable network environments with high jitter and low average latency which is a common condition for Wi-Fi networks in crowded places. By default the threshold parameter set to Library.throttleThreshold in milliseconds.

Peer.Send(byte channelID, ref Packet packet) queues a packet to be sent. Returns true on success or false on failure.

Peer.Receive(out byte channelID, out Packet packet) attempts to dequeue any incoming queued packet. Returns true if a packet was dequeued or false if no packets available.

Peer.Ping() sends a ping request to a peer. ENet automatically pings all connected peers at regular intervals, however, this function may be called to ensure more frequent ping requests.

Peer.PingInterval(uint interval) sets an interval at which pings will be sent to a peer. Pings are used both to monitor the liveness of the connection and also to dynamically adjust the throttle during periods of low traffic so that the throttle has reasonable responsiveness during traffic spikes.

Peer.Timeout(uint timeoutLimit, uint timeoutMinimum, uint timeoutMaximum) sets a timeout parameters for a peer. The timeout parameters control how and when a peer will timeout from a failure to acknowledge reliable traffic. Timeout values used in the semi-linear mechanism, where if a reliable packet is not acknowledged within an average round-trip time plus a variance tolerance until timeout reaches a set limit. If the timeout is thus at this limit and reliable packets have been sent but not acknowledged within a certain minimum time period, the peer will be disconnected. Alternatively, if reliable packets have been sent but not acknowledged for a certain maximum time period, the peer will be disconnected regardless of the current timeout limit value.

Peer.Disconnect(uint data) requests a disconnection from a peer.

Peer.DisconnectNow(uint data) forces an immediate disconnection from a peer.

Peer.DisconnectLater(uint data) requests a disconnection from a peer, but only after all queued outgoing packets are sent.

Peer.Reset() forcefully disconnects a peer. The foreign host represented by the peer is not notified of the disconnection and will timeout on its connection to the local host.

Classes

Host

Contains a managed pointer to the host.

Host.Dispose() destroys the host.

Host.IsSet returns a state of the managed pointer.

Host.PeersCount returns a number of connected peers.

Host.PacketsSent returns a total number of packets sent during the session.

Host.PacketsReceived returns a total number of packets received during the session.

Host.BytesSent returns a total number of bytes sent during the session.

Host.BytesReceived returns a total number of bytes received during the session.

Host.Create(Address? address, int peerLimit, int channelLimit, uint incomingBandwidth, uint outgoingBandwidth, int bufferSize) creates a host for communicating with peers. The bandwidth parameters determine the window size of a connection which limits the number of reliable packets that may be in transit at any given time. ENet will strategically drop packets on specific sides of a connection between hosts to ensure the host's bandwidth is not overwhelmed. The buffer size parameter is used to set the socket buffer size for sending and receiving datagrams. All the parameters are optional except the address and peer limit in cases where the function is used to create a host which will listen for incoming connections.

Host.PreventConnections(bool state) prevents access to the host for new incoming connections. This function makes the host completely invisible in network, any peer that attempts to connect to it will be timed out.

Host.Broadcast(byte channelID, ref Packet packet, Peer[] peers) queues a packet to be sent to a range of peers or to all peers associated with the host if the optional peers parameter is not used. Any zeroed Peer structure in an array will be excluded from the broadcast. Instead of an array, a single Peer can be passed to function which will be excluded from the broadcast.

Host.CheckEvents(out Event @event) checks for any queued events on the host and dispatches one if available. Returns > 0 if an event was dispatched, 0 if no events are available, < 0 on failure.

Host.Connect(Address address, int channelLimit, uint data) initiates a connection to a foreign host. Returns a peer representing the foreign host on success or throws an exception on failure. The peer returned will not have completed the connection until Host.Service() notifies of an EventType.Connect event. The channel limit and the user-supplied data parameters are optional.

Host.Service(int timeout, out Event @event) waits for events on the specified host and shuttles packets between the host and its peers. ENet uses a polled event model to notify the user of significant events. ENet hosts are polled for events with this function, where an optional timeout value in milliseconds may be specified to control how long ENet will poll. If a timeout of 0 is specified, this function will return immediately if there are no events to dispatch. Otherwise, it will return 1 if an event was dispatched within the specified timeout. This function should be regularly called to ensure packets are sent and received, otherwise, traffic spikes will occur leading to increased latency. The timeout parameter set to 0 means non-blocking which required for cases where the function is called in a game loop.

Host.SetBandwidthLimit(uint incomingBandwidth, uint outgoingBandwidth) adjusts the bandwidth limits of a host in bytes per second.

Host.SetChannelLimit(int channelLimit) limits the maximum allowed channels of future incoming connections.

Host.SetMaxDuplicatePeers(ushort number) limits the maximum allowed duplicate peers from the same host and prevents connection if exceeded. By default set to Library.maxPeers, can't be less than one.

Host.SetInterceptCallback(InterceptCallback callback) sets the callback to notify when a raw UDP packet is intercepted. A pointer IntPtr to a callback can be used instead of a reference to a delegate.

Host.SetChecksumCallback(ChecksumCallback callback) sets the callback to notify when a checksum should be computed. A pointer IntPtr to a callback can be used instead of a reference to a delegate.

Host.Flush() sends any queued packets on the specified host to its designated peers.

Library

Contains constant fields.

Library.maxChannelCount the maximum possible number of channels.

Library.maxPeers the maximum possible number of peers.

Library.maxPacketSize the maximum size of a packet.

Library.version the current compatibility version relative to the native library.

Library.Time returns a current local monotonic time in milliseconds. It never reset while the application remains alive.

Library.Initialize(Callbacks callbacks) initializes the native library. Callbacks parameter is optional and should be used only with a custom memory allocator. Should be called before starting the work. Returns true on success or false on failure.

Library.Deinitialize() deinitializes the native library. Should be called after the work is done.

Library.CRC64(IntPtr buffers, int bufferCount) computes a checksum for unmanaged buffers.

Supporters

This project is sponsored by:

Flying Squirrel Entertainment
Flying Squirrel Entertainment

Square Root Studios
Square Root Studios

Strange Loop Games
Strange Loop Games

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Reliable UDP networking library extended for the .NET environment

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