I'm looking for a way to broadcast a live video taken from a webcam or camera rooted to a PC.
The broadcast should be displayed in a HTML5 page using the tag (which support rtp, and rtsp I think).
The user viewing the stream should not have to install any plug-in or video player such as QuickTime.
I need the video to be in mp4 format such as: rtsp://www.mywebsite/streaming/video.mp4
This would be the link I'd put as the src of the html 5 video tag.
So I'd like to know if it's possible, what are my options to do such things.
It's possible. But you will have major problems if you're looking for cross browser support. What you can do is offer HTML5 video to the browsers supporting it and then offer QuickTime for browsers not supporting it.
<video src="stream.mp4">
<!-- Don't support <video> -->
<object>
<param name="src" value="video.mp4" />
<param name="autoplay" value="true" />
<param name="type" value="video/quicktime" height="256" width="320" />
<embed src="video.mp4" height="256" width="320" autoplay="true" type="video/quicktime" pluginspage="http://www.apple.com/quicktime/download/" />
</object>
</video>
Also see: Streaming via RTSP or RTP in HTML5
I don't think it is possible now to "cheat" the HTML5 browser to encapsulate the live video stream to a ".mp4" file.
I believe HTML5 will consider live video support in a near future.
What you can do is just wait. :)
For maximum compatibility, here’s what our video workflow will look like,
Make one version that uses H.264 baseline video and AAC “low complexity” audio in an MP4 container & Make another version that uses WebM (VP8 + Vorbis) or Theora video and Vorbis audio in an Ogg container.
I think this combination solves your problem & it plays on most of browsers.
You should required at least two versions of Video to play in all the browsers.
Related
The volume control in HTML5 videos on my website is not appearing, see screenshot: The video plays when started, but without any sound. The videos also play fine (with sound) in VLC and Windows Media Player.
I have tested in Chrome (65.0.3325.162), Firefox (59.0.1), and Android (on a Samsung tablet). The volume of my system is fine with other applications, and YouTube videos.
Here is the (minimal) code (adding additional attributes like height and poster etc. makes no difference to the problem):
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang='en'>
<body>
<video controls src='vid1.mp4' width='500'>
</video>
<video controls width='500'>
<source src='vid2.mp4' type='video/mp4' />
</video>
</body>
</html>
Am I missing something obvious?
[1]: https://i.stack.imgur.com/qAl7D.png
EDIT:
When I tested with a sample video on http://techslides.com/demos/sample-videos/small.mp4 the controls appeared. It seems to have something to do with the encoded mp4 video itself.
I have now removed the video urls. I re-encoded the videos using VLC, and they are now working correctly.
Why are these HTML5 video problems cropping up now after 5+ years?
TLDR: Your code routes around video content farms and their ad-click revenue by short circuiting MP4 content and eyeballs per second, this is retaliation. It's par for the course.
Browser developers have busted your HTML5 <video> browser embed code, either on purpose or by accident around the codecs needed to decode them. They own the source code of the browser that interprets and decodes your HTML5 MP4 file for presentation in the browser content area. Chrome developers corner the market on MP4 Videos and had their arms twisted by the powers that be. So the browser sees that the codec required to decode your MP4 is likely from an unauthorized area, and thus here we are scratching our heads as to why chrome isn't showing a volume button.
My requirements has to be that HTML5 Video is fixed on server side, I can't require users to fiddle around with their chrome flags or installing a plugin that corrects the bug. It has to just work by default on the latest Chrome, Safari, Firefox then IE, preferably in that order.
Screenshot of the case of the missing HTML5 video volume button:
The video plays, but at zero volume. No volume button is ever presented either during initial load, nor during or after playback. The mp4 download and go-full screen buttons are presented and work correctly during playback.
And yes, the chrome flags for new media player are disabled:
What it looked like before, what I expect to see:
The stripped down code I'm using:
This code was evolved from the likes of: http://camendesign.com/code/video_for_everybody
<html><body>
<video width="640"
preload="none"
height="360"
poster="some_content.png"
controls="controls">
<source src="some_content.mp4"
<source src="__VIDEO__.webm" type="video/webm" />
<source src="__VIDEO__.ogv" type="video/ogg" /><!--[if gt IE 6]>
<object width="640" height="375" classid="clsid:02BF25D5-8C17-4B23-BC80-D348
[endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!-->
<object width="640" height="375" type="video/quicktime" data="__VIDEO__.mp4"
<param name="src" value="__VIDEO__.mp4" />
<param name="autoplay" value="false" />
<param name="showlogo" value="false" />
<object width="640" height="380" type="application/x-shockwave-flash"
data="__FLASH__.swf?image=__POSTER__.jpg&file=__VIDEO__.mp4">
<param name="movie" value="__FLASH__.swf?image=__POSTER__.jpg&file=_
<img src="__POSTER__.jpg" width="640" height="360" />
<p>
<strong>No video playback capabilities detected.</strong>
Why not try to download the file instead?<br>
MPEG4
Ogg Theora
</p>
</object><!--[if gt IE 6]><!-->
</object><!--<![endif]-->
</video>
</body></html>
The above code is the code that used to work, but got broken.
Final solution that worked for me: Manual clean of the 3rd party taint from my MP4 videos.
There are many options to clean and re-encode an MP4 video, some free others non-free. One way is open the MP4 file with VLC or other video player or software that has and open/save/reencode/convert tools in it, and save it out to a different video encoding format.
I was able to cook up a handy dandy script in Java to iterate over every MP4 file crack open the MP4 file, clean out the hobo taint if it exists then save and redeploy the mp4 file, and now all is well. Then do this on a schedule.
Other solutions considered, but rejected:
Eliminate the bugged HTML5 video embed tag from your tool set. Display an image with an html5 <img .../> tag, overlay a play button so as to indicate this is a video, when the user clicks either open a new tab where the raw MP4 video plays in browser: the volume button is shown correctly, or worst case the user downloads the MP4 video to disk, and they can open it up from disk with their video player.
Use a different browser or an open source browser, that know how to do the right thing.
Try toggling on the 'new media controls' chrome://flags, maybe at some point in the future the Chrome Devs will push a fix and it won't freak out on the evidence that the mp4 smells of digital rights violations.
Yield the vanguard and eyeball click revenue to the big player content providers, just use an whatever tag to redirect users to the websites who are able to show video correctly.
The game is afoot make your time.
It seems that you are using a mute video. Because of that, the volume control is not showing.
Check this out:
<video src='https://www.w3schools.com/tags/mov_bbb.mp4' controls>
</video>
Adobe has said that it plans to phase out its Flash Player plug-in by the end of 2020. People said that all Flash content should have been migrated to other technologies like HTML5. I agree more or less, but how ready is HTML5 when in comes to replacing Flash entirely?
Let's take an everyday example - video playback on web.
On Flash, I can just embed one player for all the videos on a website and just change the paths to link to different FLV videos(or MP4's) for different videos on the site. As long as Flash is installed on client side, I need not worry much which browser they are using.
However with HTML5, to be cross-browser compatible, AFAIK, I need to have three video files (three different formats of the same video - MP4, WEBM and OGG).
<video id="video" controls preload="metadata" poster="img/poster.jpg">
<source src="video/v1.mp4" type="video/mp4">
<source src="video/v1.webm" type="video/webm">
<source src="video/v1.ogg" type="video/ogg">
<!-- Flash fallback -->
<object type="application/x-shockwave-flash" data="flash-player.swf?videoUrl=video/v1.mp4" width="1024" height="576">
<param name="movie" value="flash-player.swf?videoUrl=video/v1.mp4" />
<param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" />
<param name="wmode" value="transparent" />
<param name="flashvars" value="controlbar=over&image=img/poster.jpg&file=flash-player.swf?videoUrl=video/v1.mp4" />
<img alt="My video" src="img/poster.jpg" width="1024" height="428" title="No video playback possible, please download the video from the link below" />
</object>
<!-- Offer download -->
Download MP4
If I have 80+ different videos on the site, I will have to host 240+ video files on the server, which is quite troublesome to prepare and manage the files. I hate to transcode a video to different format every time before putting the video content on the server.
It is now mid-2017, and HTML5 video is nothing new. I wonder if there is any new cross-browser compatible method/hack to embed video playback using just one video format?
HTML5 is very ready for video. The advantages of using HTML5 over Flash is also to have playback on mobile which is definitely a must in 2017. To the solution to your issue the best you can do is use MP4 (encoded with h264 and aac). This video format is supported on all browsers (webm and ogg are only supported on some browsers).
MPEG-DASH is the new "one standard to rule them all" but it's a way off native support across all browsers at the moment. One answer would be to use a player like Ooyala's or Shaka.js to give you a polyfill, but that's going to be limited in support for older browsers.
If you're worried about managing assets there are Media Asset Management systems that can take a single asset and produce a variety of versions (eg mp4, webm, ogg as well as fragmented mp4 such as HLS and Dash) or you could roll your own using something like ffmpeg for transcoding or use a service like Azure Media Service
I've got a set of videos that are going to be posted on a new site I'm developing, using our new html5 player. I know Firefox only supports .ogg format, whereas most others (including eventually IE9) support h264.
I'm looking to tap into the experience of the crowd here: has anyone had any luck with a single video format across browsers? Or am I doomed to double-encode everything? It just seems a shame to waste space on having two copies of each video because we can't standardize our codecs.
Thanks in advance!
PS (Flash player isn't really an option as a fallback, partly on principle and partly because of a rather large mobile userbase.)
From my personal experience with HTML5 Video, I create mp4, ogg, and flv file formats, and use the following implementation:
<video id="movie" width="" height="" preload controls>
<source id="srcMp4" src="video.mp4" />
<source id="srcOgg" src="video.ogg" />
<object id="flowplayer" name="flowplayer" width="480" height="352" data="http://releases.flowplayer.org/swf/flowplayer-3.2.5.swf"
type="application/x-shockwave-flash">
<param name="movie" value="http://releases.flowplayer.org/swf/flowplayer-3.2.5.swf" />
<param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" />
<param name="flashvars"
value='config={"clip":"http://domain.com/video.flv"}' />
</object>
</video>
The MP4 format is provided first, due to a previous bug in iPad which only sees the first source listed.
If the browser can't play the MP4 version, it tries to load the Ogg version. If that fails, it uses Flowplayer (flash) as a fallback.
I know you're looking for a solution without flash as a fallback, but in my opinion, we're just not there yet. People are still using IE6 for crying out loud!
HTML5 Video is still in the making, and until it's completely stable across all browsers and platforms, you'll need to provide a "workaround" for different scenarios.
For mobile, perhaps you can detect the User-Agent and go from there...
Hope this helps
Probably WebM if not Ogg. WebM's patents are owned by Google but have been released from that. Ogg is probably OK but there are concerns. H.264 is a patent trap waiting to happen.
We have a somewhat similar problem.
<video id="movie" width="320" height="240" preload controls src="demo.mp4" />
We use the h.264 format, which I suggest you should do as well since you have a large mobile userbase (lots of iPhones I suppose).
However, WebM is the open format for people with principles ;) I can only hope MS and Apple will support it in the near future.
I have HTML page where windows media player is embedded. It works very well in all browsers on Windows, but when trying to open in Firefox on Mac OS, it fails to open.
Is there any alternative method which can be controlled using Javascript or HTML or do I have to install Window Media Player support for Mac OS?
Try streaming with flash as a fallback, or use the <video> or <audio> tag, that Safari supports.
If you are trying to stream video in a way that works consistently on every browser, you should look into Video For Everyone:
Video for Everybody is very simply a chunk of HTML code that embeds a video into a website
using the HTML5 element which offers native playback in Firefox
3.5 and Safari 3 & 4 and an increasing number of other browsers.
The video is played by the browser itself. It loads quickly and doesn’t threaten to crash your browser.
In other browsers that do not support , it falls
back to QuickTime.
If QuickTime is not installed, Adobe Flash is used. You can host locally or embed any Flash file, such as a YouTube video.
The only downside, is that you have to have 2/3 versions of the same video stored, but you can serve to every existing device/browser that supports video (i.e.: the iPhone).
<video width="640" height="360" poster="__POSTER__.jpg" controls="controls">
<source src="__VIDEO__.ogv" type="video/ogg" />
<source src="__VIDEO__.mp4" type="video/mp4" /><!--[if gt IE 6]>
<object width="640" height="375" classid="clsid:02BF25D5-8C17-4B23-BC80-D3488ABDDC6B"><!
[endif]--><!--[if !IE]><!-->
<object width="640" height="375" type="video/quicktime" data="__VIDEO__.mp4"><!--<![endif]-->
<param name="src" value="__VIDEO__.mp4" />
<param name="autoplay" value="false" />
<param name="showlogo" value="false" />
<object width="640" height="380" type="application/x-shockwave-flash"
data="__FLASH__.swf?image=__POSTER__.jpg&file=__VIDEO__.mp4">
<param name="movie" value="__FLASH__.swf?image=__POSTER__.jpg&file=__VIDEO__.mp4" />
<img src="__POSTER__.jpg" width="640" height="360" />
<p>
<strong>No video playback capabilities detected.</strong>
Why not try to download the file instead?<br />
MPEG4 / H.264 “.mp4” (Windows / Mac) |
Ogg Theora & Vorbis “.ogv” (Linux)
</p>
</object><!--[if gt IE 6]><!-->
</object><!--<![endif]-->
</video>
If you need to look for a Flash based player (both audio and video), take a look at Flowplayer, an Open Source (GPL 3) video player for the Web. It can do almost anything you might want to do, and there is an extensive collection of plugins for many applications.
Side-step the problem by using a flash based mp4 video player, this approach is the de facto one currently.
I'm working on a very small site, with almost zero budget as a favor for a friend. She wants to put a short audio and video clip on the site (both clips are under two minutes). The audio is currently a 1.6 MB AAC (.m4a) and the video is a 30 MB H.264 (.mov).
What's the current best practice that's going to be the easiest for me, while still creating a good experience for the users? Should we upload the video to youtube or vimeo and embed? There's probably some simple audio player I could download. I have flash, so could make an FLV; I could convert the m4a to an mp3, etc. I could just link directly to the raw files....
Outsource it.
Youtube
Blip.tv (FAQ)
Vimeo (Basics)
Many popular video sites use Blip.tv
Thatguywiththeglasses
Cinemassacre
And others use Youtube
Screwattack
In terms of being modern and standards compliant for video embedding, Video for Everyone is probably the best way.
<!-- “Video for Everybody” by Kroc Camen <camendesign.com> cc-by -->
<video width="640" height="480" controls="controls">
<source src="__MY_VIDEO__.ogv" type="video/ogg" />
<source src="__MY_VIDEO__.mp4" type="video/mp4" />
<object width="640" height="500" type="application/x-shockwave-flash"
data="__FLASH_PLAYER__.swf" flashvars="file=__MY_VIDEO__.mp4"
> <param name="movie" value="__FLASH_PLAYER_.swf" />
<param name="flashvars" value="file=__MY_VIDEO__.mp4" />
<!--[if gt IE 6]>
<object width="640" height="495" classid="clsid:02BF25D5-8C17-4B23-BC80-D3488ABDDC6B">
<param name="src" value="__MY_VIDEO__.mp4" /><!
[endif]--><!--[if gt IE 6]><!-->
<object width="640" height="495" type="video/quicktime" data="__MY_VIDEO__.mp4"
> <param name="src" value="__MY_VIDEO__.mp4" />
<!--<![endif]--><p>
<strong>No video playback capabilities detected.</strong>
Why not try to download the file instead?<br />
MPEG4 / H.264 “.mp4” (Windows / Mac) |
Ogg Theora & Vorbis “.ogv” (Linux)
</p><!--[if gt IE 6]><!--></object><!--<![endif]-->
<!--[if gt IE 6]></object><![endif]-->
</object>
</video>
A fully commented version is available at the link above.
This uses the video tag if it's supported, but as Firefox and Safari both support different formats (Ogg and Mp4) you need to have a couple of different versions of the video files.
This works on every browser, from IE6 to the iPhone, and from Chrome to Opera including everything in between.
For audio, the audio tag is the most modern, though I'm not sure about browser support at the moment.
Uploading to a service like YouTube, Blip.tv, or Vimeo is good, but you'll have to settle for them tossing in "related videos" or other ads on your content, and you'll be forced to stick with their player/branding.
You could get the JW FLV Media Player, and play the .mov through flash. And actually, if you go with blip, they will host the file and give you the absolute path to the .flv itself - meaning you could load it directly into your local copy of JW FLV Player, and likely bypass their ads/related content.
Another nifty thing to consider would be the jQuery Media Player. It quickly converts markup/css into a media-player driven by the powerful jQuery framework. Using this with the free hosting provided by Blip.tv (who again give you direct access to your .flv files) would be a great solution too.
for the video, I recommend to use youtube. you can embed into your pages without sacrificing spaces and bandwith.
For the sound, i would recommend to use mp3 (not aac since not everybody has aac) and then you can put flash mp3 player (try this : 5 best flash podcast players)
For mp3, if it is a speech or just human talking about something, you don't need to make stereo, mono is more than enough. You can edit using Audacity (free-open source software). I guest (from my past experience) 1 hour speech could be 5-6 MB mono mp3 (about 96Kbps if i am not wrong)