I've got an HTML5 <video>
element whose source is a .m3u8
(HLS stream)
I have an M3U8 with three different renditions: 640x360
, 960x540
, and 1280x720
On Desktops I have a Flash Player for playing the video, so the HTML5 fallback is only intended for mobile (iOS and Android) - I am doing all of my testing on an iPad and, once it's working, I will try it out on Android and hope everything works the same.
My goal is to, at any point in time, figure out what rendition the video element is playing. The rendition is subject to change as the user's bandwidth changes.
I tried using the .videoHeight
property, but it always returns 480 regardless of the rendition being downloaded - which is particularly odd because 480 isn't even an option.
Does anyone know how I can figure out the rendition being downloaded?
Cleaning up some old questions that never received answers:
Unfortunately this one is just not possible. The HTMl5 video spec and HTML5 video implementations in most browsers are intended to abstract away all of the underlying magic involved in playing videos. You give it a source, it plays. Everything else is completely hidden and you have no access. No access to metadata channels, no access to audio channels, no access to bitrate and resolution information,...
At best I developed a solution to guess which resolution was playing. Every 10 seconds a 1 MB file was loaded over AJAX. I measured the speed at which this downloaded to guess at their current bandwidth. I know that QuickTime will only play a rendition if you have double the required bandwidth. So if the 960x540
rendition requires 1400 kbit/s then it won't play unless you have 2800 kbit/s bandwidth.
It's not very good (and wastes 6 MB of bandwidth per minute) but it's better than nothing.