Introduction
Recently I was working on a small application that was dealing with active dial-up connections. Dial-up networking is provided by the Windows Remote Access Service (RAS) and primarily used for connecting to the Internet by a modem. I tried to use the RasEnumConnections
function to enumerate the active dial-up connections to obtain a connection handle for further processing. Unfortunately, no matter what my compiler settings were, on Win2k Professional, the function persistently returned 632, which means “Invalid size of the RASCONN
structure”. Searching through the Internet and CodeProject pages I figured out that many people noticed the same effect and so far no solution has been published. The focus of this article is to provide a fix for this annoying error.
In order to figure out why the function always failed, I went step-by-step through the internals of this function and noticed that the function expects different sizes of the RASCONN
structure (i.e. versions of the structure) but there was nothing like the value provided by sizeof(RASCONN)
. The closest match was 0x53c. I tried to cheat the function by supplying 0x53c as the size of the RASCONN
structure. It worked! The code shown below represents a program that enumerates a live dial-up connection and hangs it up.
#include "stdafx.h"
int APIENTRY WinMain(HINSTANCE hInstance,
HINSTANCE hPrevInstance,
LPSTR lpCmdLine,
int nCmdShow)
{
DWORD iNumBytes = 0x53c;
DWORD iRcvd;
RASCONN rsc[1];
rsc[0].dwSize = 0x53c;
int iErr = RasEnumConnections(rsc, &iNumBytes, &iRcvd);
if(!iErr && iRcvd)
RasHangUp(rsc[0].hrasconn);
return 0;
}
The trick is to make dwSize
equal to 0x53c. Note that 0x53c is smaller than sizeof(RASCONN)
, therefore the function will not corrupt the memory.
Enjoy RAS.
I was born in Moscow, USSR. In 1998, I earned Master’s degree in Chemistry from the Moscow State University. In 2000, I moved to Germany to pursue a PhD degree in Genetics. Currently I live with my family in the United States.
I have been always involved is a multidisciplinary research side-by-side with biologists. The research involves physical chemistry, bioinformatics and electrical engineering.