The videojs-contrib-ads
plugin provides common functionality needed by video advertisement libraries working with video.js.
It takes care of a number of concerns for you, reducing the code you have to write for your ad integration.
Lead Maintainer: Greg Smith https://github.com/incompl
Maintenance Status: Stable, in its own interesting way
In addition to the video.js library, you'll need two files from this project: videojs.ads.js
and videojs.ads.css
.
After you build the project they are both in the dist
directory.
For development, include the CSS in your HTML's <head>
section with a <link>
tag:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="videojs.ads.css">
Then, include the JavaScript file after video.js, but before your integration code:
<video id="video" src="movie.mp4" controls></video>
<script src="video.js"></script>
<script src="videojs.ads.js"></script>
<script>
videojs('video', {}, function() {
var player = this;
player.ads(); // initialize the ad framework
// your custom ad integration code
});
</script>
You may also use the Javascript and CSS links from the following to get started: https://cdnjs.com/libraries/videojs-contrib-ads
With this basic structure in place, you're ready to develop an ad integration.
Once you call player.ads()
to initialize the plugin, it provides six interaction points (four events and two methods) which you can use in your integration.
Here are the events that communicate information to your integration from the ads plugin:
contentupdate
(EVENT) — Fires when a new content video has been assigned to the player, so your integration can update its ad inventory. NOTE: This will NOT fire while your ad integration is playing a linear Ad.readyforpreroll
(EVENT) — Fires when a content video is about to play for the first time, so your integration can indicate that it wants to play a preroll.
Note: A contentplayback
event is sent but should not be used as it is being removed. The playing
event has the same meaning and is far more reliable.
And here are the interaction points you use to send information to the ads plugin:
adsready
(EVENT) — Trigger this event after to signal that your integration is ready to play ads.adplaying
(EVENT) - Trigger this event when an ads starts playing. If your integration triggersplaying
event when an ad begins, it will automatically be redispatched asadplaying
.adscanceled
(EVENT) — Trigger this event after starting up the player or setting a new video to skip ads entirely. This event is optional; if you always plan on displaying ads, you don't need to worry about triggering it.adserror
(EVENT) - Trigger this event to indicate that an error in the ad integration has ocurred and any ad states should abort so that content can resume.nopreroll
(EVENT) - Trigger this event to indicate that there will be no preroll ad. Otherwise, the player will wait until a timeout occurs before playing content. This event is optional, but can improve user experience.nopostroll
(EVENT) - Trigger this event to indicate that there will be no postroll ad. Otherwise, contrib-ads will trigger an adtimeout event after content ends if there is no postroll.ads-ad-started
(EVENT) - Trigger this when each individual ad begins.ads.startLinearAdMode()
(METHOD) — Call this method to signal that your integration is about to play a linear ad. This method triggersadstart
to be emitted by the player.ads.endLinearAdMode()
(METHOD) — Call this method to signal that your integration is finished playing linear ads, ready for content video to resume. This method triggersadend
to be emitted by the player.ads.skipLinearAdMode()
(METHOD) — Call this method to signal that your integration has received an ad response but is not going to play a linear ad. This method triggersadskip
to be emitted by the player.ads.stitchedAds()
(METHOD) — Get or set thestitchedAds
setting.ads.videoElementRecycled()
(METHOD) - Returns true if ad playback is taking place in the content element.
In addition, video.js provides a number of events and APIs that might be useful to you.
For example, the ended
event signals that the content video has played to completion.
This project does not send these events, but these events are a convention used some some integrations that you may want to consider sending for consistency.
ads-request
: Fired when ad data is requested.ads-load
: Fired when ad data is available following an ad request.ads-pod-started
: Fired when a LINEAR ad pod has started.ads-pod-ended
: Fired when a LINEAR ad pod has completed.ads-allpods-completed
: Fired when all LINEAR ads are completed.ads-ad-started
: Fired when the ad starts playing.ads-ad-ended
: Fired when the ad completes playing.ads-first-quartile
: Fired when the ad playhead crosses first quartile.ads-midpoint
: Fired when the ad playhead crosses midpoint.ads-third-quartile
: Fired when the ad playhead crosses third quartile.ads-pause
: Fired when the ad is paused.ads-play
: Fired when the ad is resumed.ads-mute
: Fired when the ad volume has been muted.ads-click
: Fired when the ad is clicked.
player.ads.provider = {
"type": `String`,
"event": `Object`
}
player.ads.ad = {
"type": `String`,
"index": `Number`,
"id": `String`,
"duration": `Number`,
"currentTime": `Function`
}
An optional feature that contrib-ads supports is ad macros. Ad macros are often used by ad integrations to support addition of run-time values into a server URL or configuration.
For example, an ad integration that supports this feature might accept an ad server URL like this:
'http://example.com/vmap.xml?id={player.id}'
In the ad integration, it would use the videojs-contrib-ads macro feature to process that URL like this:
serverUrl = player.ads.adMacroReplacement(serverUrl, true);
This would result in a server URL like this:
'http://example.com/vmap.xml?id=12345'
where 12345 is the player ID.
adMacroReplacement takes 3 arguments:
- The string that has macros to be replaced.
true
if the macro values should be URI encoded when they are inserted, elsefalse
(defaultfalse
)- An object that defines additional macros, such as
{'{five}': 5}
(default{}
)
Name | Value |
---|---|
{player.id} | The player ID |
{player.duration} | The duration of current video* |
{timestamp} | Current epoch time |
{document.referrer} | Value of document.referrer |
{window.location.href} | Value of window.location.href |
{random} | A random number 0-1 trillion |
{mediainfo.id} | Pulled from mediainfo object |
{mediainfo.name} | Pulled from mediainfo object |
{mediainfo.description} | Pulled from mediainfo object |
{mediainfo.tags} | Pulled from mediainfo object |
{mediainfo.reference_id} | Pulled from mediainfo object |
{mediainfo.duration} | Pulled from mediainfo object |
{mediainfo.ad_keys} | Pulled from mediainfo object |
* Returns 0 if video is not loaded. Be careful timing your ad request with this macro.
A macro such as {mediainfo.custom_fields.foobar} allows the user to access the value of any property in mediainfo.custom_fields
.
A macro such as {pageVariable.foobar} allows the user access the value of any property on the window
object. Only certain value types are allowed, per this table:
Type | What happens |
---|---|
String | Used without any change |
Number | Converted to string automatically |
Boolean | Converted to string automatically |
Null | Returns the string "null" |
Undefined | Logs warning and returns empty string |
Other | Logs warning and returns empty string |
An optional feature that allows the manipulation of metadata tracks, specifically in the case of working with advertising cue points.
For example, an ad integration may want to make an ad request when a cuepoint change has been observed. To do this, an ad integration would need to do something like this:
player.ads.cueTextTracks.processMetadataTracks(player, processMetadataTrack)
where processMetadataTrack could be something like this:
function processMetadataTrack(player, track) {
track.addEventListener('cuechange', function() {
var cues = this.cues;
var processCue = function() {
// Make an ad request
...
};
var cancelAds = function() {
// Optional method to dynamically cancel ads
// This will depend on the ad implementation
...
};
player.ads.cueTextTracks.processAdTrack(player, cues, processCue, cancelAds);
});
}
For more information on the utility methods that are available, see cueTextTracks.js.
A track is 'enabled' if the track.mode is set to hidden
or showing
. Otherwise, a track is disabled
and is not updated. It is important to note that some tracks may be disabled as a workaround of not being able to remove them, and so should not be re-enabled. Ad integrations should be careful about setting the mode of tracks in these cases and shadow setMetadataTrackMode
to determine which tracks are safe to change. For example, if all tracks should be hidden:
player.ads.cueTextTracks.setMetadataTrackMode = function(track) {
// Hide the tracks so they are enabled and get updated
// but are not shown in the UI
track.mode = 'hidden';
}
Here's an outline of what a basic ad integration might look like. It only plays a single preroll ad before each content video, but does demonstrate the interaction points offered by the ads plugin.
This is not actually a runnable example, as it needs more information as specified in the code comments.
videojs('video', {}, function() {
var player = this;
player.ads(); // initialize the ad framework
// request ads whenever there's new video content
player.on('contentupdate', function(){
// fetch ad inventory asynchronously, then ...
player.trigger('adsready');
});
player.on('readyforpreroll', function() {
player.ads.startLinearAdMode();
// play your linear ad content
player.src('http://url/to/your/ad.content');
// when all your linear ads have finished… do not confuse this with `ended`
player.one('adended', function() {
player.ads.endLinearAdMode();
});
});
});
Your actual integration will be significantly more complex.
To implement midroll ads, you'd want to listen to timeupdate
events to monitor the progress of the content video's playback.
For a more involved example that plays both prerolls and midrolls, see the example directory in this project.
To manage communication between your ad integration and the video.js player, the ads plugin goes through a number of states. Here's a state diagram which shows the states of the ads plugin and how it transitions between them:
The ads plugin starts in the init
state and immediately transitions to content-set
if a video is loaded.
Transitions with solid arrows are traversed when an event with the appropriate type is triggered on the player.
Dotted-line arrows indicate a transition that occurs when a timeout expires.
The timeline at right shows how the ads plugin communicates with your integration.
The ad framework can be configured with custom settings by providing a settings object at initialization:
player.ads({
timeout: 3000
});
The current set of options are described in detail below.
Type: number
Default Value: 5000
The maximum amount of time to wait for an ad implementation to initialize before playback, in milliseconds.
If the viewer has requested playback and the ad implementation does not fire adsready
before this timeout expires, the content video will begin playback.
It's still possible for an ad implementation to play ads after this waiting period has finished but video playback will already be in progress.
Once the ad plugin starts waiting for the adsready
event, one of these things will happen:
- integration ready within the timeout — this is the best case, preroll(s) will play without the user seeing any content video first.
- integration ready, but after timeout has expired — preroll(s) still play, but the user will see a bit of content video.
- integration never becomes ready — content video starts playing after timeout.
This timeout is necessary to ensure a good viewer experience in cases where the ad implementation suffers an unexpected or irreparable error and never fires an adsready
event.
Without this timeout, the ads plugin would wait forever, and neither the content video nor ads would ever play.
If the ad implementation takes a long time to initialize and this timeout is too short, then the content video will beging playing before the first preroll opportunity. This has the jarring effect that the viewer would see a little content before the preroll cuts in.
During development, we found that five seconds seemed to be long enough to accommodate slow initialization in most cases, but still short enough that failures to initialize didn't look like failures of the player or content video.
Type: number
Default Value: 100
The maximum amount of time to wait for an ad implementation to initiate a preroll, in milliseconds.
If readyforpreroll
has been fired and the ad implementation does not call startLinearAdMode()
before prerollTimeout
expires, the content video will begin playback.
prerollTimeout
is cumulative with the standard timeout parameter.
Once the ad plugin fires readyforpreroll
, one of these things will happen:
startLinearAdMode()
called within the timeout — preroll(s) will play without the user seeing any content video first.skipLinearAdMode()
is called within the timeout because there are no linear ads in the response or you already know you won't be making a preroll request - content video plays without preroll(s).startLinearAdMode()
is never called — content video plays without preroll(s).startLinearAdMode()
is called, but after the prerollTimeout expired — bad user experience; content video plays a bit, then preroll(s) cut in.
The prerollTimeout should be as short as possible so that the viewer does not have to wait unnecessarily if no preroll is scheduled for a video.
Make this longer if your ad integration needs a long time to decide whether it has preroll inventory to play or not.
Ideally, your ad integration should already know if it wants to play a preroll before the readyforpreroll
event. In this case, skipLinearAdMode() should be called to resume content quickly.
Type: number
Default Value: 100
The maximum amount of time to wait for an ad implementation to initiate a postroll, in milliseconds.
If contentended
has been fired and the ad implementation does not call startLinearAdMode()
before postrollTimeout
expires, the content video will end playback.
Once the ad plugin fires contentended
, one of these things will happen:
startLinearAdMode()
called within the timeout — postroll(s) will play without the user seeing any content video first.skipLinearAdMode()
is called within the timeout - content video stops.startLinearAdMode()
is never called — content video stops.startLinearAdMode()
is called, but after the postrollTimeout expired — content video stops
The postrollTimeout should be as short as possible so that the viewer does not have to wait unnecessarily if no postroll is scheduled for a video.
Make this longer if your ad integration needs a long time to decide whether it has postroll inventory to play or not.
Ideally, your ad integration should already know if it wants to play a postroll before the contentended
event.
Type: boolean
Default Value: false
Set this to true if you are using ads stitched into the content video. This is necessary for ad events to be sent correctly.
Type: boolean
Default Value: false
If debug is set to true, the ads plugin will output additional information about its current state during playback. This can be handy for diagnosing issues or unexpected behavior in an ad integration.
The plugin triggers a number of custom events on the player during its operation. As an ad provider, you can listen for them to trigger behavior in your implementation. They may also be useful for other plugins to track advertisement playback.
The player has entered linear ad playback mode. This event is fired directly as a consequence of calling startLinearAdMode()
. This event only indicates that an ad break has begun; the start and end of individual ads must be signalled through some other mechanism.
The player has returned from linear ad playback mode. This event is fired directly as a consequence of calling startLinearAdMode()
. Note that multiple ads may have played back between adstart
and adend
.
The player is skipping a linear ad opportunity and content-playback should resume immediately. This event is fired directly as a consequence of calling skipLinearAdMode()
. It can indicate that an ad response was made but returned no linear ad content or that no ad call is going to be made at either the preroll or postroll timeout opportunities.
A timeout managed by the plugin has expired and regular video content has begun to play. Ad integrations have a fixed amount of time to inform the plugin of their intent during playback. If the ad integration is blocked by network conditions or an error, this event will fire and regular playback resumes rather than stalling the player indefinitely.
Once the plugin is initialized, there are a couple properties you can access to inspect the plugin's state and modify its behavior.
In order to detect changes to the content video, videojs-contrib-ads monitors the src attribute of the player. If you need to make a change to the src attribute during content playback that should not be interpreted as loading a new video, you can update this property with the new source you will be loading:
// you might want to switch from a low bitrate version of a video to a
// higher quality one at the user's request without forcing them to
// re-watch all the ad breaks they've already viewed
// first, you'd update contentSrc on the ads plugin to the URL of the
// higher bitrate rendition:
player.ads.contentSrc = 'movie-high.mp4';
// then, modify the src attribute as usual
player.src('movie-high.mp4');
Prevents videojs-contrib-ads from restoring the previous video source
If you need to change the video source during ad playback, you can use disableNextSnapshotRestore to prevent videojs-contrib-ads to restore to the previous video source.
if (player.ads.state === 'ad-playback') {
player.ads.disableNextSnapshotRestore = true;
player.src('another-video.mp4');
}
The ads plugin is designed to be built with npm
.
If you don't already have npm
, then download and install Node.js (which comes with npm).
With NPM ready, you can download the ads plugin's build-time dependencies and then build the ads plugin. Open a terminal to the directory where you've cloned this repository, then:
$ npm install
$ npm run build
We will run a suite of unit tests and code formatting checks, then create a dist/
directory.
Inside you'll find the minified ads plugin file videojs.ads.min.js
, the unminified videojs.ads.js
, and the CSS videojs.ads.css
.
A short list of features, fixes and changes for each release is available in CHANGELOG.md.
See LICENSE-APACHE2.