A <Video>
component for react-native, as seen in
react-native-login!
Requires react-native >= 0.40.0, for RN support of 0.19.0 - 0.39.0 please use a pre 1.0 version.
Version 3.0 features a number of changes to existing behavior. See Updating for changes.
Using npm:
npm install --save react-native-video
or using yarn:
yarn add react-native-video
iOS
Run react-native link
to link the react-native-video library.
If you would like to allow other apps to play music over your video component, add:
AppDelegate.m
#import <AVFoundation/AVFoundation.h> // import
- (BOOL)application:(UIApplication *)application didFinishLaunchingWithOptions:(NSDictionary *)launchOptions
{
...
[[AVAudioSession sharedInstance] setCategory:AVAudioSessionCategoryAmbient error:nil]; // allow
...
}
Note: you can also use the ignoreSilentSwitch
prop, shown below.
tvOS
Run react-native link
to link the react-native-video library.
react-native link
don’t works properly with the tvOS target so we need to add the library manually.
First select your project in Xcode.
After that, select the tvOS target of your application and select « General » tab
Scroll to « Linked Frameworks and Libraries » and tap on the + button
Select RCTVideo-tvOS
Android
Run react-native link
to link the react-native-video library.
Or if you have trouble, make the following additions to the given files manually:
android/settings.gradle
The newer ExoPlayer library will work for most people.
include ':react-native-video'
project(':react-native-video').projectDir = new File(rootProject.projectDir, '../node_modules/react-native-video/android-exoplayer')
If you need to use the old Android MediaPlayer based player, use the following instead:
include ':react-native-video'
project(':react-native-video').projectDir = new File(rootProject.projectDir, '../node_modules/react-native-video/android')
android/app/build.gradle
dependencies {
...
compile project(':react-native-video')
}
MainApplication.java
On top, where imports are:
import com.brentvatne.react.ReactVideoPackage;
Add the ReactVideoPackage
class to your list of exported packages.
@Override
protected List<ReactPackage> getPackages() {
return Arrays.asList(
new MainReactPackage(),
new ReactVideoPackage()
);
}
Windows
Make the following additions to the given files manually:
windows/myapp.sln
Add the ReactNativeVideo
project to your solution.
- Open the solution in Visual Studio 2015
- Right-click Solution icon in Solution Explorer > Add > Existing Project
- UWP: Select
node_modules\react-native-video\windows\ReactNativeVideo\ReactNativeVideo.csproj
- WPF: Select
node_modules\react-native-video\windows\ReactNativeVideo.Net46\ReactNativeVideo.Net46.csproj
windows/myapp/myapp.csproj
Add a reference to ReactNativeVideo
to your main application project. From Visual Studio 2015:
- Right-click main application project > Add > Reference...
- UWP: Check
ReactNativeVideo
from Solution Projects. - WPF: Check
ReactNativeVideo.Net46
from Solution Projects.
MainPage.cs
Add the ReactVideoPackage
class to your list of exported packages.
using ReactNative;
using ReactNative.Modules.Core;
using ReactNative.Shell;
using ReactNativeVideo; // <-- Add this
using System.Collections.Generic;
...
public override List<IReactPackage> Packages
{
get
{
return new List<IReactPackage>
{
new MainReactPackage(),
new ReactVideoPackage(), // <-- Add this
};
}
}
...
// Within your render function, assuming you have a file called
// "background.mp4" in your project. You can include multiple videos
// on a single screen if you like.
<Video source={{uri: "background"}} // Can be a URL or a local file.
ref={(ref) => {
this.player = ref
}} // Store reference
onBuffer={this.onBuffer} // Callback when remote video is buffering
onEnd={this.onEnd} // Callback when playback finishes
onError={this.videoError} // Callback when video cannot be loaded
onFullscreenPlayerWillPresent={this.fullScreenPlayerWillPresent} // Callback before fullscreen starts
onFullscreenPlayerDidPresent={this.fullScreenPlayerDidPresent} // Callback after fullscreen started
onFullscreenPlayerWillDismiss={this.fullScreenPlayerWillDismiss} // Callback before fullscreen stops
onFullscreenPlayerDidDismiss={this.fullScreenPlayerDidDismiss} // Callback after fullscreen stopped
onProgress={this.setTime} // Callback every ~250ms with currentTime
onTimedMetadata={this.onTimedMetadata} // Callback when the stream receive some metadata
style={styles.backgroundVideo} />
// Later to trigger fullscreen
this.player.presentFullscreenPlayer()
// Disable fullscreen
this.player.dismissFullscreenPlayer()
// To set video position in seconds (seek)
this.player.seek(0)
// Later on in your styles..
var styles = StyleSheet.create({
backgroundVideo: {
position: 'absolute',
top: 0,
left: 0,
bottom: 0,
right: 0,
},
});
- allowsExternalPlayback
- audioOnly
- ignoreSilentSwitch
- muted
- paused
- playInBackground
- playWhenInactive
- poster
- posterResizeMode
- progressUpdateInterval
- rate
- repeat
- resizeMode
- selectedTextTrack
- stereoPan
- textTracks
- useTextureView
- volume
Indicates whether the player allows switching to external playback mode such as AirPlay or HDMI.
- true (default) - allow switching to external playback mode
- false - Don't allow switching to external playback mode
Platforms: iOS
Indicates whether the player should only play the audio track and instead of displaying the video track, show the poster instead.
- false (default) - Display the video as normal
- true - Show the poster and play the audio
For this to work, the poster prop must be set.
Platforms: all
Controls the iOS silent switch behavior
- "inherit" (default) - Use the default AVPlayer behavior
- "ignore" - Play audio even if the silent switch is set
- "obey" - Don't play audio if the silent switch is set
Platforms: iOS
Controls whether the audio is muted
- false (default) - Don't mute audio
- true - Mute audio
Platforms: all
Controls whether the media is paused
- false (default) - Pause the media
- true - Don't pause the media
Platforms: all
Determine whether the media should continue playing while the app is in the background. This allows customers to continue listening to the audio.
- false (default) - Don't continue playing the media
- true - Continue playing the media
To use this feature on iOS, you must:
- Enable Background Audio in your Xcode project
- Set the ignoreSilentSwitch prop to "ignore"
Platforms: Android ExoPlayer, Android MediaPlayer, iOS
Determine whether the media should continue playing when notifications or the Control Center are in front of the video.
- false (default) - Don't continue playing the media
- true - Continue playing the media
Platforms: iOS
An image to display while the video is loading
Value: string with a URL for the poster, e.g. "https://baconmockup.com/300/200/"
Platforms: all
Determines how to resize the poster image when the frame doesn't match the raw video dimensions.
- "contain" (default) - Scale the image uniformly (maintain the image's aspect ratio) so that both dimensions (width and height) of the image will be equal to or less than the corresponding dimension of the view (minus padding).
- "center" - Center the image in the view along both dimensions. If the image is larger than the view, scale it down uniformly so that it is contained in the view.
- "cover" - Scale the image uniformly (maintain the image's aspect ratio) so that both dimensions (width and height) of the image will be equal to or larger than the corresponding dimension of the view (minus padding).
- "none" - Don't apply resize
- "repeat" - Repeat the image to cover the frame of the view. The image will keep its size and aspect ratio. (iOS only)
- "stretch" - Scale width and height independently, This may change the aspect ratio of the src.
Platforms: all
Delay in milliseconds between onProgress events in milliseconds.
Default: 250.0
Platforms: all
Speed at which the media should play.
- 0.0 - Pauses the video
- 1.0 - Play at normal speed
- Other values - Slow down or speed up playback
Platforms: all
Note: For Android MediaPlayer, rate is only supported on Android 6.0 and higher devices.
Determine whether to repeat the video when the end is reached
- false (default) - Don't repeat the video
- true - Repeat the video
Platforms: all
Determines how to resize the video when the frame doesn't match the raw video dimensions.
- "none" (default) - Don't apply resize
- "contain" - Scale the video uniformly (maintain the video's aspect ratio) so that both dimensions (width and height) of the video will be equal to or less than the corresponding dimension of the view (minus padding).
- "cover" - Scale the video uniformly (maintain the video's aspect ratio) so that both dimensions (width and height) of the image will be equal to or larger than the corresponding dimension of the view (minus padding).
- "stretch" - Scale width and height independently, This may change the aspect ratio of the src.
Platforms: Android ExoPlayer, Android MediaPlayer, iOS, Windows UWP
Configure which text track (caption or subtitle), if any, is shown.
selectedTextTrack={{
type: Type,
value: Value
}}
Example:
selectedTextTrack={{
type: "title",
value: "English Subtitles"
}}
Type | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
"system" (default) | N/A | Display captions only if the system preference for captions is enabled |
"disabled" | N/A | Don't display a text track |
"title" | string | Display the text track with the title specified as the Value, e.g. "French 1" |
"language" | string | Display the text track with the language specified as the Value, e.g. "fr" |
"index" | number | Display the text track with the index specified as the value, e.g. 0 |
Both iOS & Android (only 4.4 and higher) offer Settings to enable Captions for hearing impaired people. If "system" is selected and the Captions Setting is enabled, iOS/Android will look for a caption that matches that customer's language and display it.
If a track matching the specified Type (and Value if appropriate) is unavailable, no text track will be displayed. If multiple tracks match the criteria, the first match will be used.
Platforms: Android ExoPlayer, iOS
Adjust the balance of the left and right audio channels. Any value between –1.0 and 1.0 is accepted.
- -1.0 - Full left
- 0.0 (default) - Center
- 1.0 - Full right
Platforms: Android MediaPlayer
Load one or more "sidecar" text tracks. This takes an array of objects representing each track. Each object should have the format:
Property | Description |
---|---|
title | Descriptive name for the track |
language | 2 letter ISO 639-1 code representing the language |
type | Mime type of the track * TextTrackType.SRT - .srt SubRip Subtitle * TextTrackType.TTML - .ttml TTML * TextTrackType.VTT - .vtt WebVTT |
uri | URL for the text track. Currently, only tracks hosted on a webserver are supported |
Example:
import { TextTrackType }, Video from 'react-native-video';
textTracks={[
{
title: "English CC",
language: "en",
type: "text/vtt", TextTrackType.VTT,
uri: "https://bitdash-a.akamaihd.net/content/sintel/subtitles/subtitles_en.vtt"
},
{
title: "Spanish Subtitles",
language: "es",
type: "application/x-subrip", TextTrackType.SRT,
uri: "https://durian.blender.org/wp-content/content/subtitles/sintel_es.srt"
}
]}
This isn't support on iOS because AVPlayer doesn't support it. Text tracks must be loaded as part of an HLS playlist.
Platforms: Android ExoPlayer
Output to a TextureView instead of the default SurfaceView. In general, you will want to use SurfaceView because it is more efficient and provides better performance. However, SurfaceViews has two limitations:
- It can't be animated, transformed or scaled
- You can't overlay multiple SurfaceViews
useTextureView can only be set at same time you're setting the source.
- false (default) - Use a SurfaceView
- true - Use a TextureView
Platforms: Android ExoPlayer
Adjust the volume.
- 1.0 (default) - Play at full volume
- 0.0 - Mute the audio
- Other values - Reduce volume
Platforms: all
Callback function that is called when the media is loaded and ready to play.
Payload:
Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
currentPosition | number | Time in seconds where the media will start |
duration | number | Length of the media in seconds |
naturalSize | object | Properties: * width - Width in pixels that the video was encoded at * height - Height in pixels that the video was encoded at * orientation - "portrait" or "landscape" |
textTracks | array | An array of text track info objects with the following properties: * index - Index number * title - Description of the track * language - 2 letter ISO 639-1 language code * type - Mime type of track |
Example:
{
canPlaySlowForward: true,
canPlayReverse: false,
canPlaySlowReverse: false,
canPlayFastForward: false,
canStepForward: false,
canStepBackward: false,
currentTime: 0,
duration: 5910.208984375,
naturalSize: {
height: 1080
orientation: 'landscape'
width: '1920'
},
textTracks: [
{ title: '#1 French', language: 'fr', index: 0, type: 'text/vtt' },
{ title: '#2 English CC', language: 'en', index: 1, type: 'text/vtt' },
{ title: '#3 English Director Commentary', language: 'en', index: 2, type: 'text/vtt' }
]
}
Platforms: all
Callback function that is called when the media starts loading.
Payload:
Property | Description |
---|---|
isNetwork | Boolean indicating if the media is being loaded from the network |
type | Type of the media. Not available on Windows |
uri | URI for the media source. Not available on Windows |
Example:
{
isNetwork: true,
type: '',
uri: 'https://bitdash-a.akamaihd.net/content/sintel/hls/playlist.m3u8'
}
Platforms: all
Methods operate on a ref to the Video element. You can create a ref using code like:
return (
<Video source={...}
ref => (this.player = ref) />
);
seek(seconds)
Seek to the specified position represented by seconds. seconds is a float value.
seek()
can only be called after the onLoad
event has fired.
Example:
this.player.seek(200); // Seek to 3 minutes, 20 seconds
Platforms: all
By default iOS seeks within 100 milliseconds of the target position. If you need more accuracy, you can use the seek with tolerance method:
seek(seconds, tolerance)
tolerance is the max distance in milliseconds from the seconds position that's allowed. Using a more exact tolerance can cause seeks to take longer. If you want to seek exactly, set tolerance to 0.
Example:
this.player.seek(120, 50); // Seek to 2 minutes with +/- 50 milliseconds accuracy
Platforms: iOS
To see the full list of available props, you can check the propTypes of the Video.js component.
- By default, iOS 9+ will only load encrypted HTTPS urls. If you need to load content from a webserver that only supports HTTP, you will need to modify your Info.plist file and add the following entry:
For more detailed info check this article
Within your render function, assuming you have a file called "background.mp4" in your expansion file. Just add your main and (if applicable) patch version
<Video
source={{uri: "background", type: "mp4", mainVer: 1, patchVer: 0}}
/>
This will look for an .mp4 file (background.mp4) in the given expansion version.
The asset system introduced in RN 0.14
allows loading image resources shared across iOS and Android without touching native code. As of RN 0.31
the same is true of mp4 video assets for Android. As of RN 0.33
iOS is also supported. Requires react-native-video@0.9.0
.
<Video
source={require('../assets/video/turntable.mp4')}
/>
To enable audio to play in background on iOS the audio session needs to be set to AVAudioSessionCategoryPlayback
. See Apple documentation for additional details. (NOTE: there is now a ticket to expose this as a prop )
-
See an Example integration in
react-native-login
note that this example uses an older version of this library, before we usedexport default
-- if you userequire
you will need to dorequire('react-native-video').default
as per instructions above. -
Try the included VideoPlayer example yourself:
git clone git@github.com:react-native-community/react-native-video.git cd react-native-video/example npm install open ios/VideoPlayer.xcodeproj
Then
Cmd+R
to start the React Packager, build and run the project in the simulator. -
Lumpen Radio contains another example integration using local files and full screen background video.
Previously, on Android ExoPlayer if the paused prop was not set, the media would not automatically start playing. The only way it would work was if you set paused={false}
. This has been changed to automatically play if paused is not set so that the behavior is consistent across platforms.
Previously, on Android MediaPlayer if you setup an AppState event when the app went into the background and set a paused prop so that when you returned to the app the video would be paused it would be ignored.
Note, Windows does not have a concept of an app going into the background, so this doesn't apply there.
Version 3.0 updates the Android build tools and SDK to version 27. React Native is in the process of switchting over to SDK 27 in preparation for Google's requirement that new Android apps use SDK 26 by August 2018.
You will either need to install the version 27 SDK and version 27.0.3 buildtools or modify your build.gradle file to configure react-native-video to use the same build settings as the rest of your app as described below.
You will need to create a project.ext
section in the top-level build.gradle file (not app/build.gradle). Fill in the values from the example below using the values found in your app/build.gradle file.
// Top-level build file where you can add configuration options common to all sub-projects/modules.
buildscript {
... // Various other settings go here
}
allprojects {
... // Various other settings go here
project.ext {
compileSdkVersion = 23
buildToolsVersion = "23.0.1"
minSdkVersion = 16
targetSdkVersion = 22
}
}
- Add support for playing multiple videos in a sequence (will interfere with current
repeat
implementation) - Callback to get buffering progress for remote videos
- Bring API closer to HTML5
<Video>
reference
MIT Licensed