I have an application that we're trying to migrate to 64bit from 32bit. It's .NET, compiled using the x64 flags. However, we have a large number of DLLs written in FORTRAN 90 compiled for 32bit. The functions in the FORTRAN DLLs are fairly simple: you put data in, you pull data out; no state of any sort. We also don't spend a lot of time there, a total of maybe 3%, but the calculation logic it performs is invaluable.
Can I somehow call the 32bit DLLs from 64bit code? MSDN suggests that I can't, period. I've done some simple hacking and verified this. Everything throws an invalid entry point exception. The only possible solution i've found so far is to create COM+ wrappers for all of the 32bit DLL functions and invoke COM from the 64bit process. This seems like quite a headache. We can also run the process in WoW emulation, but then the memory ceiling wouldn't be increased, capping at around 1.6gb.
Is there any other way to call the 32bit DLLs from a 64bit CLR process?
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