VLC-can't playback online video - ios

i'm trying to use VLC to playback youtube online video for IOS5.
I set a NSURL to MVLCMovieViewController, use code like this:
NSString *conntentURL = #"http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FWKYriGgmCo";//(it's a workable link)
NSURL *url = [NSURL URLWithString:connectURL];
MVLCMovieViewController *movieViewController = [[MVLCMovieViewController alloc] init];
movieViewController.url = url;
[self presentModalViewController:movieViewController animated:YES];
[movieViewController release];
run the app, but i got a stop at http.c file with a hint "Program received signal "EXC_BAD_ACCESS"" near code:
p_sys->psz_user_agent = var_InheritString(p_access, "http-user-agent");
for(char *p = p_sys->psz_user_agent; *p, p++)
So does VLC support online playbacking? Or what should to be modified so that i can play a url directly on ios?
Thanks a lot for your help in advance!

I've done a lot of work on the VLC iOS source code, to try to get it to handle RTP and UDP streams. The short answer is that I didn't get it to work for those protocols but HTTP works, and the blocking seems to be at the OS level.
If you want the details on what I did to make VLC compile correctly and work on the latest XCode, please read the following forum thread https://forum.videolan.org/viewtopic.php?f=12&t=108691
Since YouTube seems to be HTTP, it should work but your mileage may vary.
Hope this helps.

Related

Unable to cast music to Chromecast

I'm trying to establish a simple audio stream to a Chromecast device. This is just a POC for me to familiarize myself with the API. What I want to do is load up the user's library, select a song, and have it cast over. I've been following the integration guide quite closely but to no avail.
Please find the full project on Github here.
An overview of my code, AppDelegate.m:
- (BOOL)application:(UIApplication*)application didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:(NSDictionary*)launchOptions
{
GCKCastOptions *options = [GCKCastOptions.alloc initWithReceiverApplicationID:kGCKMediaDefaultReceiverApplicationID];
[GCKCastContext setSharedInstanceWithOptions:options];
[GCKCastContext.sharedInstance.sessionManager addListener:self];
}
UITableViewDelegate:
- (void)tableView:(UITableView*)tableView didSelectRowAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath*)indexPath
{
MPMediaItem *mediaItem = MusicManager.sharedManager[index];
NSString *path = [MPMediaLibrary.defaultMediaLibrary pathForAssetURL:mediaItem.assetURL];
GCKMediaMetadata *metadata = [GCKMediaMetadata.alloc initWithMetadataType:GCKMediaMetadataTypeMusicTrack];
[metadata setString:mediaItem.title forKey:kGCKMetadataKeyTitle];
[metadata setString:mediaItem.artist forKey:kGCKMetadataKeyArtist];
[metadata setString:mediaItem.albumTitle forKey:kGCKMetadataKeyAlbumTitle];
GCKMediaInformation *mediaInfo = [GCKMediaInformation.alloc initWithContentID:path
streamType:GCKMediaStreamTypeBuffered
contentType:[self fileMIMEType:path]
metadata:metadata
streamDuration:mediaItem.playbackDuration
customData:nil];
[GCKCastContext.sharedInstance.sessionManager.currentCastSession.remoteMediaClient loadMedia:mediaInfo autoplay:YES];
}
I initiate the casting session by tapping the GCKCastButton and Start Session, my TV shows the Cast logo, then when I tap on a specific song, my TV briefly shows the metadata (i.e. song title, artist name, etc.), and then reverts back to the Chromecast logo. On the device, if I remain on the screen presented by GCKCastButton, I can also see the details of the song that is supposed to be currently casting, but quickly changes to "No Media Selected" after a few seconds.
I've checked the file path, the MIME type, everything is correct and playable. I've even tried bundling a short MP3 and trying to cast that, but to no avail.
Can't help but feel like I'm missing something here, the integration guide doesn't really give much more info.
Any insight is appreciated. Thanks!
It seems that I was under the wrong impression that the cast library initiates a stream from the provided file itself. But instead it required an actual URL for the Chromecast device to perform a GET operation on.
I imagine this will be solved by running a server locally on the iOS device.

Can I upload an MP3 file to my server from iOS?

I was googling this question but nothing useful or current came up. I'd like to know if (and if, how) you can select an MP3 file (from itunes?) and upload the contents to one of my own servers on iOS (iphone & ipad app).
One of my clients is asking me if it's possible to do this, and I havn't found the answer yet.
Thanks in advance!
The short answer would be YES.
Here is a working solution for me. But you need to use a third party library. Then this is what you need to do:
Create a temp folder either in the NSDocuments directory or a temp directory.
Use MPMediaQuery to load the music files.
The object that you will get from the MPMediaQuery is an MPMediaItem. With this you can get the asset URL of the media item.
Code:
NSString *assetURL = [mediaItem valueForProperty:MPMediaItemPropertyAssetURL];
get the extension of with the asset URL
NSString *extension = [TSLibraryImport extensionForAssetURL:assetURL];
set a location URL (This will be the location where the mp3 music data will be imported).
NSString *locationURL = [[NSURL fileURLWithPath:[path stringByAppendingPathComponent:musicTitleYouWant]] URLByAppendingPathExtension:extension];
Now you can import the contents of the mp3 from to the directory you set earlier.
TSLibraryImport *libraryImport = [[TSLibraryImport alloc] init];
[libraryImport importAsset:assetURL toURL:locationURL completionBlock:^(TSLibraryImport *libraryImport)
{
if(libraryImport.status == AVAssetExportSessionStatusCompleted)
{
//Once complete the file will be store on the location URL you set earlier. Now you can get the file from that location and convert it to NSData and send it to the server. There are plenty of ways to do that.
}
else
{
//Here means import failed. :(
}
}];
Hope this helps. :)

play a sound from an arbitrary position

I'm looking for a way to play an audio file from just any point in the file.
Currently, whenever I play the file, it just starts from the beginning.
Since it is a loop, I could choose to let it loop, and open/close the volume at will, but I think it is kind of a lame solution, not in the least because of battery concerns.
I really did some research on this, but it is either a freak requirement, or I don't know how to phrase my queries.
Thanks in advance for any tip.
That should be a nice easy problem to solve. You don't post any code, so we can't see what you're trying at the moment. What I'd do is this:
NSString *soundPath = [[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:#"SoundFile" ofType:#"wav"];
AVAudioPlayer * soundData =[[AVAudioPlayer alloc] initWithContentsOfURL:[NSURL fileURLWithPath:soundPath] error:NULL];
[soundData stop];
soundData.currentTime = 22; //This will start playback 22 seconds into the file
[soundData play];
It goes without saying that you need to check the duration of your sound file so that you don't select a time beyond its end!
currentTime is a float (so you can specify millisecond values). You can read more here: https://developer.apple.com/library/ios/documentation/AVFoundation/Reference/AVAudioPlayerClassReference/#//apple_ref/occ/instp/AVAudioPlayer/currentTime

How to stream mp3 files (iOS)

I have found many related questions on SO, but or because I am very new, or because it doesn't exactly fit my problem, I can't find a way to succeed.
So, all I would like to do is playing an audio file stored on an exernal server directly on the iOS device (iPhone in my case)
I have tried differents solution on the net, and this is what I get until now.
NSString* resourcePath = #"http://www.chiptape.com/chiptape/sounds/medium/laugh.mp3"; //your url
NSURL *url = [[NSURL alloc]initWithString:resourcePath];
NSError *error;
audioPlayer = [[AVAudioPlayer alloc] initWithURL:url error:&error];
audioPlayer.delegate = self;
[url release];
[audioPlayer prepareToPlay];
[audioPlayer play];
The compiler show me this error:
No visible #interface for 'AVAudioPlayer' declares the selector
'initWithURL:error:'
I am not sure at all about my code, and would like your guys to know I have started iOS coding yesterday, so it's not impossible I'm missing something so obvious that tutorials/posts don't mention it.
Also, I have imported the library AVFoundation and imported it on my .h file.
I have also declared this on my .h file
AVAudioPlayer *audioPlayer;
I hope there is an easy way to stream audio file on iOS as provide android/java
Thank you and if you need more details comment and I'll update my post.
Try this:
NSString* resourcePath = #"http://www.chiptape.com/chiptape/sounds/medium/laugh.mp3"; //your url
NSURL *audioURL = [NSURL URLWithString:resourcePath];
AVAudioPlayer *audioPlayer = [[[AVAudioPlayer alloc] initWithContentsOfURL: audioURL error:&error]autorelease];
[audioPlayer play];
I'm working with it recently.
AVAudioPlayer can't work with audio stream. In fact, there isn't an easy way to do that.
You need to learn some Core Audio things, get the raw data of media, play them in audioQueue (audioToolBox framework). Real-time audio processing is not a simple work, it's full of c-level api and so many dirty work, don't rush, have fun :)
Check out the book Learning Core Audio and this open-source audio streamer.
Let me know if you need more help.

Stream video while downloading iOS

I am using iOS 7 and I have a .mp4 video that I need to download in my app. The video is large (~ 1 GB) which is why it is not included as part of the app. I want the user to be able to start watching the video as soon as is starts downloading. I also want the video to be able to be cached on the iOS device so the user doesn't need to download it again later. Both the normal methods of playing videos (progressive download and live streaming) don't seem to let you cache the video, so I have made my own web service that chunks up my video file and streams the bytes down to the client. I start the streaming HTTP call using NSURLConnection:
self.request = [[NSMutableURLRequest alloc] initWithURL:self.url];
[self.request setTimeoutInterval:10]; // Expect data at least every 10 seconds
[self.request setHTTPMethod:#"GET"];
self.connection = [[NSURLConnection alloc] initWithRequest:self.request delegate:self startImmediately:YES];
When I receive a data chunk, I append it to the end of the local copy of the file:
- (void)connection:(NSURLConnection *)connection didReceiveData:(NSData *)data
{
NSFileHandle *handle = [NSFileHandle fileHandleForWritingAtPath:[self videoFilePath]];
[handle truncateFileAtOffset:[handle seekToEndOfFile]];
[handle writeData:data];
}
If I let the device run, the file is downloaded successfully and I can play it using MPMoviePlayerViewController:
NSURL *url=[NSURL fileURLWithPath:self.videoFilePath];
MPMoviePlayerViewController *controller = [[MPMoviePlayerViewController alloc] initWithContentURL:url];
controller.moviePlayer.scalingMode = MPMovieScalingModeAspectFit;
[self presentMoviePlayerViewControllerAnimated:controller];
However, if I start the player before the file is completely downloaded, the video starts playing just fine. It even has the correct video length displayed at the top scrubber bar. But when the user gets to the position in the video that I had completed downloading before the video started, the video just hangs. If I close and reopen the MPMoviePlayerViewController, then the video plays until it gets to whatever location I was then at when I launched the MPMoviePlayerViewController again. If I wait until the entire video is downloaded, then the video plays without a problem.
I am not getting any events fired, or error messages printed to the console when this happens (MPMoviePlayerPlaybackStateDidChangeNotification and MPMoviePlayerPlaybackDidFinishNotification are never sent after the video starts). It seems like there is something else that is telling the controller what the length of the video is other than what the scrubber is using...
Does anyone know what could be causing this issue? I am not bound to using MPMoviePlayerViewController, so if a different video playback method would work in this situation I am all for it.
Related Unresolved Questions:
AVPlayer and Progressive Video Downloads with AVURLAssets
Progressive Video Download on iOS
How to play an in downloading progress video file in IOS
UPDATE 1
I have found that the video stall is indeed because of the file size when the video starts playing. I can get around this issue by creating a zero-ed out file before I start the download and over overwrite it as I go. Since I have control over the video streaming server, I added a custom header so I know the size of the file being streamed (default file size header for a streaming file is -1). I am creating the file in my didReceiveResponse method as follows:
- (void)connection:(NSURLConnection *)connection didReceiveResponse:(NSURLResponse *)response
{
// Retrieve the size of the file being streamed.
NSHTTPURLResponse *httpResponse = (NSHTTPURLResponse *)response;
NSDictionary *headers = httpResponse.allHeaderFields;
NSNumberFormatter * formatter = [[NSNumberFormatter alloc] init];
[formatter setNumberStyle:NSNumberFormatterDecimalStyle];
self.streamingFileSize = [formatter numberFromString:[headers objectForKey:#"StreamingFileSize"]];
// Check if we need to initialize the download file
if (![[NSFileManager defaultManager] fileExistsAtPath:self.path])
{
// Create the file being downloaded
[[NSData data] writeToFile:self.path atomically:YES];
// Allocate the size of the file we are going to download.
const char *cString = [self.path cStringUsingEncoding:NSASCIIStringEncoding];
int success = truncate(cString, self.streamingFileSize.longLongValue);
if (success != 0)
{
/* TODO: handle errors here. Probably not enough space... See 'man truncate' */
}
}
}
This works great, except that truncate causes the app to hang for about 10 seconds while it creates the ~1GB file on disk (on the simulator it is instant, only a real device has this problem). This is where I am stuck now - does anyone know of a way to allocate a file more efficiently, or a different way to get the video player to recognize the size of the file without needing to actually allocate it? I know some filesystems support "file size" and "size on disk" as two different properties... not sure if iOS has something like that?
I figured out how to do this, and it is much simpler than my original idea.
First, since my video is in .mp4, the MPMoviePlayerViewController or AVPlayer class can play it directly from a web server - I don't need to implement anything special and they can still seek to any point in the video. This must be part of how the .mp4 encoding works with the movie players. So, I just have the raw file available on the server - no special headers required.
Next, when the user decides to play the video I immediately start playing the video from the server URL:
NSURL *url=[NSURL fileURLWithPath:serverVidelFileURLString];
controller = [[MPMoviePlayerViewController alloc] initWithContentURL:url];
controller.moviePlayer.scalingMode = MPMovieScalingModeAspectFit;
[self presentMoviePlayerViewControllerAnimated:controller];
This makes it so the user can watch the video and seek to any location they want. Then, I start downloading the file manually using NSURLConnection like I had been doing above, except now I am not streaming the file, I just download it directly. This way I don't need the custom header since the file size is included in the HTTP response.
When my background download completes, I switch the playing item from the server URL to the local file. This is important for network performance because the movie players only download a few seconds ahead of what the user is watching. Being able to switch to the local file as soon as possible is key to avoid downloading too much duplicate data:
NSTimeInterval currentPlaybackTime = videoController.moviePlayer.currentPlaybackTime;
[controller.moviePlayer setContentURL:url];
[controller.moviePlayer setCurrentPlaybackTime:currentPlaybackTime];
[controller.moviePlayer play];
This method does have the user downloading two video files at the same time initially, but initial testing on the network speeds my users will be using shows it only increases the download time by a few seconds. Works for me!
You gotta create an internal webserver that acts like a proxy! Then set your player to play the movie from the localhost.
When using HTTP protocol to play a video with MPMoviePlayerViewController, the first thing the player does is to ask for the byte-range 0-1 (first 2 bytes) just to obtain the file length. Then, the player asks for "chunks" of the video using the "byte-range" HTTP command (the purpose is to save some battery).
What you have to do is to implement this internal server that delivers the video to the player, but your "proxy" must consider the length of your video as the full length of the file, even if the actual file hasn't been completely downloaded from the internet.
Then you you set your player to play a movie from " http:// localhost : someport "
I've done this before... it works perfectly!
Good luck!
I can only assume that the MPMoviePlayerViewController caches the file length of the file when you started it.
The way to fix (just) this issue is to first determine how large the file is. Then create a file of that length. Keeping an offset pointer, as the file downloads, you can overwrite the "null" values in the file with the real data.
So you get to a specific point in the download, start the MPMoviePlayerViewController, and let it run. I'd also suggest you use the "F_NOCACHE" flag (with fcntl()) so you bypass the file block cache (which means you will lower your memory footprint).
The downside to this architecture is that if you get stalled, and the movie player gets ahead of you, well, the user is going to have a pretty bad experience. Not sure if there is any way for you to monitor and take preemptive action.
EDIT: its quite possible that the video is not read sequentially, but certain information requires the player to essentially look ahead for something. If so, then this is doomed to fail. The only other possible solution is to use some software tool to sequentially order the file (I'm no video expert so cannot comment from experience on any of the above).
To test this out, you can construct a "damaged" video of varying lengths, and test that to see what works and what does not. For instance, suppose you have a 100Meg file. Write a little utility program, and over write the last 50Megs of data with zeros. Now play this video. Its should fail 1/2 through. If it fails right away, well, you now know that its seeking in the file.
If non sequential, its possible that its looking at the last 1000 bytes or so, in which case if you don't overwrite that things work as you want. If you get lucky and this is the case, you would eventually download the last 1000 bytes, then then start from the front of the file.
It really gets down to finding some way before introducing real networking into the picture, to play a partial file. You will surely find it easier to artificially introduce the networking conditions without really doing it real time.

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