We have already taken into account the problem of pointers and also endian ordering.
When doing a hex dump of the files produced under unix and one produced under android, using the same data content, we have noticed that there are byte differences.
So, other than doing a "memory dump", is it possible to get Boost to serialise the data out to disk ?

On 23/01/2019 01:46, Gavin Lambert via Boost-users wrote:
On 21/01/2019 22:41, Simon Giddings wrote:
We are developing a system which heavily uses memory mapped files.
These files are initially created under a unix system, but will then be used in portable systems such as Android and iOS.
We are having some problems loading memory mapped files created under Unix into Android.

In what context?  Using some Boost library or in general?

Is this scenario even possible ?
Are the memory mapped files compatible between systems ?

They can be, but are not guaranteed to be, depending on what you're storing in the memory.

Binary layout of class types is usually not guaranteed cross-platform (or cross-compiler, for that matter).

Anything involving pointers usually won't work at all, even cross-process or cross-session, let alone cross-platform.

You can also have issues with padding or value endian ordering, depending on the specific platforms involved.
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