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HLS.js is a JavaScript library that plays HLS in browsers with support for MSE.

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hls.js

hls.js is a JavaScript library that implements an HTTP Live Streaming client. It relies on HTML5 video and MediaSource Extensions for playback.

It works by transmuxing MPEG-2 Transport Stream and AAC/MP3 streams into ISO BMFF (MP4) fragments. Transmuxing is performed asynchronously using a Web Worker when available in the browser. hls.js also supports HLS + fmp4, as announced during WWDC2016

hls.js works directly on top of a standard HTML<video> element.

hls.js is written in ECMAScript6 (*.js) and TypeScript (*.ts) (strongly typed superset of ES6), and transpiled in ECMAScript5 using the TypeScript compiler.

Modules written in TS and plain JS/ES6 can be interdependent and imported/required by each other.

Webpack is used to build the distro bundle and serve the local development environment.

API docs and usage guide

Note you can access the docs for a particular version using "https://github.com/video-dev/hls.js/blob/deployments/README.md"

Demo

Latest Release

https://hls-js.netlify.com/demo

Master

https://hls-js-dev.netlify.com/demo

Specific Version

Find the commit on https://github.com/video-dev/hls.js/blob/deployments/README.md.

Compatibility

hls.js is only compatible with browsers supporting MediaSource extensions (MSE) API with 'video/MP4' mime-type inputs.

Hls.js is supported on:

  • Chrome for Android 39+
  • Chrome for Desktop 39+
  • Firefox for Android 41+
  • Firefox for Desktop 42+
  • IE11+ for Windows 8.1+
  • Edge for Windows 10+
  • Opera for Desktop
  • Vivaldi for Desktop
  • Safari for Mac 8+ (beta)
  • Safari for ipadOS 13+

Please note: iOS Safari on iPhone does not support the MediaSource API. This includes all browsers on iOS as well as apps using UIWebView and WKWebView.

Safari browsers (iOS, iPadOS, and macOS) have built-in HLS support through the plain video "tag" source URL. See the example below (Getting Started) to run appropriate feature detection and choose between using Hls.js or natively built-in HLS support.

When a platform has neither MediaSource nor native HLS support, the browser cannot play HLS.

Keep in mind that if the intention is to support HLS on multiple platforms, beyond those compatible with hls.js, the HLS streams need to strictly follow the specifications of RFC8216, especially if apps, smart TVs, and set-top boxes are to be supported.

Find a support matrix of the MediaSource API here: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/MediaSource

Getting Started

<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/hls.js@latest"></script>
<!-- Or if you want a more recent alpha version -->
<!-- <script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/hls.js@alpha"></script> -->
<video id="video"></video>
<script>
  var video = document.getElementById('video');
  var videoSrc = 'https://test-streams.mux.dev/x36xhzz/x36xhzz.m3u8';
  if (Hls.isSupported()) {
    var hls = new Hls();
    hls.loadSource(videoSrc);
    hls.attachMedia(video);
  }
  // hls.js is not supported on platforms that do not have Media Source
  // Extensions (MSE) enabled.
  //
  // When the browser has built-in HLS support (check using `canPlayType`),
  // we can provide an HLS manifest (i.e. .m3u8 URL) directly to the video
  // element through the `src` property. This is using the built-in support
  // of the plain video element, without using hls.js.
  //
  // Note: it would be more normal to wait on the 'canplay' event below however
  // on Safari (where you are most likely to find built-in HLS support) the
  // video.src URL must be on the user-driven white-list before a 'canplay'
  // event will be emitted; the last video event that can be reliably
  // listened-for when the URL is not on the white-list is 'loadedmetadata'.
  else if (video.canPlayType('application/vnd.apple.mpegurl')) {
    video.src = videoSrc;
  }
</script>

Alternative setup

Note that the example code above will check for hls.js support first and then fallback to check if the browser natively supports HLS. To check for native browser support first and then fallback to Hls.js, swap these conditionals.

See this comment to understand some of the tradeoffs.

<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/hls.js@latest"></script>
<!-- Or if you want a more recent alpha version -->
<!-- <script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/hls.js@alpha"></script> -->
<video id="video"></video>
<script>
  var video = document.getElementById('video');
  var videoSrc = 'https://test-streams.mux.dev/x36xhzz/x36xhzz.m3u8';
  //
  // First check for native browser HLS support
  //
  if (video.canPlayType('application/vnd.apple.mpegurl')) {
    video.src = videoSrc;
    //
    // If no native HLS support, check if hls.js is supported
    //
  } else if (Hls.isSupported()) {
    var hls = new Hls();
    hls.loadSource(videoSrc);
    hls.attachMedia(video);
  }
</script>

Video Control

Video is controlled through HTML <video> element HTMLVideoElement methods, events and optional UI controls (<video controls>).

Player Integration

The following players integrate hls.js for HLS playback:

They use hls.js in production!

Chrome/Firefox integration

made by gramk, plays hls from address bar and m3u8 links

Dependencies

No external JS libs are needed. Prepackaged builds are included with each release.

Hls.js can be installed as a dependency using npm:

npm install hls.js

or for the version from master (canary)

npm install hls.js@canary

Installation

Either directly include dist/hls.js or dist/hls.min.js

Or type

npm install --save hls.js

CORS

All HLS resources must be delivered with CORS headers permitting GET requests.

Features

  • VoD & Live playlists
    • DVR support on Live playlists
  • fragmented MP4 container (beta)
  • MPEG-2 TS container
    • ITU-T Rec. H.264 and ISO/IEC 14496-10 Elementary Stream
    • ISO/IEC 13818-7 ADTS AAC Elementary Stream
    • ISO/IEC 11172-3 / ISO/IEC 13818-3 (MPEG-1/2 Audio Layer III) Elementary Stream
    • Packetized metadata (ID3v2.3.0) Elementary Stream
  • AAC container (audio only streams)
  • MPEG Audio container (MPEG-1/2 Audio Layer III audio only streams)
  • Timed Metadata for HTTP Live Streaming (in ID3 format, carried in MPEG-2 TS)
  • AES-128 decryption
  • SAMPLE-AES decryption (only supported if using MPEG-2 TS container)
  • Encrypted media extensions (EME) support for DRM (digital rights management)
    • Widevine CDM (beta/experimental) (see Shaka-package test-stream in demo)
  • CEA-608/708 captions
  • WebVTT subtitles
  • Alternate Audio Track Rendition (Master Playlist with Alternative Audio) for VoD and Live playlists
  • Adaptive streaming
    • Manual & Auto Quality Switching
      • 3 Quality Switching modes are available (controllable through API means)
        • Instant switching (immediate quality switch at current video position)
        • Smooth switching (quality switch for next loaded fragment)
        • Bandwidth conservative switching (quality switch change for next loaded fragment, without flushing the buffer)
      • In Auto-Quality mode, emergency switch down in case bandwidth is suddenly dropping to minimize buffering.
  • Accurate Seeking on VoD & Live (not limited to fragment or keyframe boundary)
  • Ability to seek in buffer and back buffer without redownloading segments
  • Built-in Analytics
    • All internal events can be monitored (Network Events, Video Events)
    • Playback session metrics are also exposed
  • Resilience to errors
    • Retry mechanism embedded in the library
    • Recovery actions can be triggered fix fatal media or network errors
  • Redundant/Failover Playlists

Supported M3U8 tags

For details on the HLS format and these tags' meanings, see https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-pantos-hls-rfc8216bis-08

Manifest tags

  • #EXT-X-STREAM-INF:<attribute-list> <URI>
  • #EXT-X-MEDIA:<attribute-list>
  • #EXT-X-SESSION-DATA:<attribute-list>

The following properties are added to their respective variants' attribute list but are not implemented in their selection and playback.

  • VIDEO-RANGE and HDCP-LEVEL (See #2489)

Playlist tags

  • #EXTM3U
  • #EXT-X-VERSION=<n>
  • #EXTINF:<duration>,[<title>]
  • #EXT-X-ENDLIST
  • #EXT-X-MEDIA-SEQUENCE=<n>
  • #EXT-X-TARGETDURATION=<n>
  • #EXT-X-DISCONTINUITY
  • #EXT-X-DISCONTINUITY-SEQUENCE=<n>
  • #EXT-X-BYTERANGE=<n>[@<o>]
  • #EXT-X-MAP:<attribute-list>
  • #EXT-X-KEY:<attribute-list> (METHOD=SAMPLE-AES is only supports with MPEG-2 TS segments)
  • #EXT-X-PROGRAM-DATE-TIME:<attribute-list>
  • #EXT-X-START:TIME-OFFSET=<n>
  • #EXT-X-SERVER-CONTROL:<attribute-list>
  • #EXT-X-PART-INF:PART-TARGET=<n>
  • #EXT-X-PART:<attribute-list>
  • #EXT-X-PRELOAD-HINT:<attribute-list>
  • #EXT-X-SKIP:<attribute-list>
  • #EXT-X-RENDITION-REPORT:<attribute-list>

The following tags are added to their respective fragment's attribute list but are not implemented in streaming and playback.

  • #EXT-X-DATERANGE:<attribute-list> (Not added to metadata TextTracks. See #2218)
  • #EXT-X-BITRATE (Not used in ABR controller)
  • #EXT-X-GAP (Not implemented. See #2940)

Not Supported

For a complete list of issues, see "Top priorities" in the Release Planning and Backlog project tab. Codec support is dependent on the runtime environment (for example, not all browsers on the same OS support HEVC).

  • Multiple #EXT-X-MAP tag support #2279
  • CMAF CC support #2623
  • Emsg Inband Timed Metadata for FMP4 (ID3 within Emsgv1) in "metadata" TextTracks #2360
  • #EXT-X-DATERANGE in "metadata" TextTracks #2218
  • #EXT-X-GAP filling #2940
  • #EXT-X-I-FRAME-STREAM-INF I-frame Media Playlist files
  • SAMPLE-AES with fmp4, aac, mp3, vtt... segments (MPEG-2 TS only)
  • Advanced variant selection based on runtime media capabilities (See issues labeled media-capabilities)
  • MP3 elementary stream audio in IE and Edge (<=18) on Windows 10 (See #1641 and Microsoft answers forum)

Server-side-rendering (SSR) and require from a Node.js runtime

You can safely require this library in Node and absolutely nothing will happen. A dummy object is exported so that requiring the library does not throw an error. Hls.js is not instantiable in Node.js. See #1841 for more details.

License

hls.js is released under Apache 2.0 License

Development and getting started

First, checkout the repository and install the required dependencies

git clone https://github.com/video-dev/hls.js.git
# setup dev environment
cd hls.js
npm install
# runs dev-server for demo page (recompiles on file-watch, but doesn't write to actual dist fs artifacts)
npm run dev
# lint
npm run lint

Before submitting a PR, please see our contribution guidelines.

Setup

After cloning or pulling from the repository, first of all, make sure your local node-modules are up-to-date with the package deps:

npm install

Build system (Webpack)

Build all flavors (suitable for prod-mode/CI):

npm install
npm run build

Only debug-mode artifacts:

npm run build:debug

Build and watch (customized dev setups where you'll want to host through another server than webpacks' - for example in a sub-module/project)

npm run build:watch

Only specific flavor (known configs are: debug, dist, light, light-dist, demo):

npm run build -- --env dist # replace "dist" by other configuration name, see above ^

Note: The "demo" config is always built.

NOTE: hls.light.*.js dist files do not include EME, subtitles, or alternate-audio support. In addition, the following types are not available in the light build:

  • AudioStreamController
  • AudioTrackController
  • CuesInterface
  • EMEController
  • SubtitleStreamController
  • SubtitleTrackController
  • TimelineController

Linter (ESlint)

Run linter:

npm run lint

Run linter with auto-fix mode:

npm run lint:fix

Run linter with errors only (no warnings)

npm run lint:quiet

Automated tests (Mocha/Karma)

Run all tests at once:

npm test

Run unit tests:

npm run test:unit

Run unit tests in watch mode:

npm run test:unit:watch

Run functional (integration) tests:

npm run test:func

Design

Click here for details.

Test Status

Sauce Test Status Testing Powered By SauceLabs

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HLS.js is a JavaScript library that plays HLS in browsers with support for MSE.

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