The 1.4 version of hls.js now ships with an ESM version of the library (dist/hls.mjs
) which requires that you specify the workerPath
config option in order for web workers to be used. This should point to the dist/hls.worker.js
file included in the package.
If you are using the UMD version (dist/hls.js
), no changes are required.
Important Note: If you are using a bundler, such as webpack, the ESM version of the package will likely be used by default. If this is the case, make sure to add the workerPath
config option after upgrading to hls.js 1.4 or above.
This guide provides an overview to migrating an application using hls.js from v0.14.x to v1.0.0.
Promise support is now required. If your app requires support for older browsers that do not include support for Promises, include your own Promise polyfill.
The new backBufferLength
setting applies to Live and VOD streams. It defaults to Infinity, leaving back buffer eviction to the browser to perform on SourceBuffer append (https://www.w3.org/TR/media-source-2/#sourcebuffer-coded-frame-eviction). The demo page includes a setting of 90 seconds for demonstration purposes.
In v1.0 and up, the back buffer on VOD and Live content will be left up to the browser by default. Set backBufferLength
to Infinity
and liveBackBufferLength
to 90
if you would like v1 to handle back buffer eviction for Live and VOD streams as older versions did. While liveBackBufferLength
can still be used, it has been
marked deprecated and may be removed in an upcoming minor release.
The new frontBufferFlushThreshold
setting defaults to Infinity seconds and governs active eviction of buffered ranges outside of
the current contiguous front buffer. For example, given currentTime=0 and bufferedRanges=[[0, 100], [150, 200]] with
a configured frontBufferFlushThreshold=60, we will only remove the range from [150, 200] as it lies outside of the target buffer length
and is not contiguous with the forward buffer from the currentTime of 0.
The new lowLatencyMode
setting is enabled by default. Set to false
to disable Low-latency part loading and target
latency playback rate adjustment.
The new experimental progressive
setting is disabled by default. Set it to true
to stream and append audio and
video data as it streams for each segment before segment load completion. Not recommended for production or small segments
with only a single GoP or less.
hls.audioTracks
andhls.subtitleTracks
as well asAUDIO_TRACKS_UPDATED
andSUBTITLE_TRACKS_UPDATED
events only list tracks in the active level's audio/sub GROUP-ID afterLEVEL_LOADING
(this will go unnoticed for streams with no or only one group per track type)- The
MANIFEST_PARSED
event still reports all tracks when multiple GROUP-ID values are present. Applications that used that event to get tracks would need to be updated in v1 to switch to the corresponding track update events to select available tracks using the available indexes. - Track ids are no longer indexes of the complete list of audio or subtitle tracks. They are now indexes within each group. So six tracks in two groups that had ids 0,1,2,3,4,5 will now have ids 0,1,2,0,1,2. This allows for tracks to be changed by index/id within the range of available tracks as they were before.
- The
- Added
groupId
to audio and subtitle track loading and loaded events
-
Setting
hls.currentLevel
no longer pauses the media element while clearing the buffer and loading the new level. This can result in a stall error if playback doesn't start within a quarter of a second. Applications implementing manual quality switching withhls.currentLevel
that do not want a stall reported should either pause or setvideo.playbackRate
to0
until the level switch is complete. -
The maximum gap that will be jumped is now driven via the GapController
MAX_START_GAP_JUMP
. By default this value is set to two seconds, to match with the value that browsers will automatically skip when theautoplay
attribute on the<video>
element is set to true.
Event order and content have changed in some places. See Breaking Changes below, and please report any issues with breaking changes that impact your integrations
FRAG_LOADED
fires after events handled on progress which can include everything up to appending a fragment if workers are disabled (more details below under Known Issues)BUFFER_CODECS
data has changed from{ tracks: { video?, audio? } }
to simply{ video?, audio? }
BUFFER_APPENDING
data has changed from{ type, data, parent, content }
to{ type, data, frag, chunkMeta }
BUFFER_APPENDED
data has changedFRAG_DECRYPT_ERROR
events are now surfaced as aFRAG_PARSING_ERROR
along with other fragment transmuxing errors- Added additional error details to help identify the source of certain network error events:
SUBTITLE_LOAD_ERROR
SUBTITLE_TRACK_LOAD_TIMEOUT
UNKNOWN
- Added additional error detail for streams that cannot start because source buffer(s) could not be created after parsing media codecs
BUFFER_INCOMPATIBLE_CODECS_ERROR
will fire instead ofBUFFER_CREATED
with an emptytracks
list. This media error is fatal and not recoverable. If you encounter this error make sure you include the correct CODECS string in your manifest, as this is most likely to occur when attempting to play a fragmented mp4 playlist with unknown codecs.
FRAG_LOAD_PROGRESS
has been deprecatedFRAG_PARSING_DATA
has been deprecatedSTREAM_STATE_TRANSITION
has been deprecated
- The
stats
object has changedtrequest
,tfirst
,tload
have been replaced byloading: HlsProgressivePerformanceTiming
tparsed
has been replaced byparsing: HlsProgressivePerformanceTiming
- On the
Fragment
object:hasElementaryStream
function has been removedsetElementaryStream
and_elementaryStreams
have been renamed (these are only for internal use)
- FRAG____ events are now fired for LL-HLS part events with a
part
property that include the part details.
v0.x types are not compatible with v1.x. Type definitions are now exported with the build and npm package in
dist/hls.js.d.ts
. Please use these type definitions if you are having trouble with
DefinitelyTyped @types/hls.js
and v1.x.