Media Stream Library JS is an open-source JavaScript library to handle media stream transforms for Node & the Web. The primary purpose is to deal with RTP streams in a browser without the need to use plugins or Flash, but relying on the Media Source Extensions standard, which is supported in all modern browsers.
Note for IE11 users: if you want to build the library yourself for IE11 instead
of using the provided bundle, you need import from dist/es5
with the following fix in webpack:
alias: {
debug: 'debug/dist/debug.js',
},
You can look at the webpack.config.js
to see how it's used for building the bundle.
The library contains a collection of components that can be connected together to form media pipelines. The components are a low-level abstraction on top of Node streams to allow two-way communication, while media pipelines are sets of connected components with methods that allow you to control the pipeline, and easily add/remove components.
Components can be categorized as:
- sources (socket, file, ...)
- transforms (parsers, depay, muxers, ...)
- sinks (HTML5 element, file, ...)
Make sure you have Node installed on your machine.
Then, to install the library:
npm install media-stream-library
or if you are using yarn
:
yarn add media-stream-library
This library is not a full media player: the framework provides no video controls, progress bar, or other features typically associated with a media player. However, getting video to play in the browser is quite easy (check the browser example). There are currently no codecs included either, we rely on browser support for that.
Although RTP streams is the main focus, the library is not limited to handling RTP streams. Contributions of new components/pipelines are always welcome.
You can directly include the media-stream-library.min.js
file in your browser
(check the browser example):
<script src="media-stream-library.min.js"></script>
or import it into your javascript code:
import {components, pipelines} from 'media-stream-library';
Check the examples
section to see how these can be used in practice.
To use the browser example, run:
npm run examples
or
yarn examples
The easiest way to debug is to use a Node CLI pipeline (see examples) and log what is happening to your component(s).
In the browser, you can set localStorage.debug = 'msl:*'
to log everything
related to just this library (make sure to reload the page after setting the value).
Please read our contributing guidelines before making pull requests.
We use prettier to automatically format code, and this is verified
during testing (part of linting).
To make sure tests don't fail on format problems, it's recommended to use a prettier plugin
for you editor, or to run yarn prettier:fix
before committing any changes.
Make sure your changes pass linting and unit testing locally to save time with your PR,
by running yarn test
.
If you add a new feature, please write a new unit test to catch any future regressions.
Automated tests are run on the master branch and pull requests with GitHub Actions,
for which the configuration can be found in the .github/workflows/ci.yml
file.
When tags are pushed, an automated deploy will release to both Github and NPM.
Any tags that are prereleases will be tagged next
for NPM, otherwise latest
is used.
To release, make sure you are on the master branch and run:
yarn release
git push --follow-tags
after which the pushed tag will cause a build + deploy through GitHub Actions.