@show-runner/mediasoup
v3.11.26-2
Published
Cutting Edge WebRTC Video Conferencing
Downloads
11
Readme
This fork of mediasoup adds prebuilt binaries. Tagged releases are otherwise identical to the upstream repository.
To use this version, replace your npm install with
@show-runner/mediasoup
mediasoup v3
Website and Documentation
Support Forum
Design Goals
mediasoup and its client side libraries are designed to accomplish with the following goals:
- Be a SFU (Selective Forwarding Unit).
- Support both WebRTC and plain RTP input and output.
- Be a Node.js module/Rust crate in server side.
- Be a tiny JavaScript and C++ libraries in client side.
- Be minimalist: just handle the media layer.
- Be signaling agnostic: do not mandate any signaling protocol.
- Be super low level API.
- Support all existing WebRTC endpoints.
- Enable integration with well known multimedia libraries/tools.
Architecture
Use Cases
mediasoup and its client side libraries provide a super low level API. They are intended to enable different use cases and scenarios, without any constraint or assumption. Some of these use cases are:
- Group video chat applications.
- One-to-many (or few-to-many) broadcasting applications in real-time.
- RTP streaming.
Features
- ECMAScript 6/Idiomatic Rust low level API.
- Multi-stream: multiple audio/video streams over a single ICE + DTLS transport.
- IPv6 ready.
- ICE / DTLS / RTP / RTCP over UDP and TCP.
- Simulcast and SVC support.
- Congestion control.
- Sender and receiver bandwidth estimation with spatial/temporal layers distribution algorithm.
- Data message exchange (via WebRTC DataChannels, SCTP over plain UDP, and direct termination in Node.js/Rust).
- Extremely powerful (media worker thread/subprocess coded in C++ on top of libuv).
Demo Online
Try it at v3demo.mediasoup.org (source code).
Authors
Social
- Twitter: @mediasoup_sfu
Sponsor
You can support mediasoup by sponsoring it. Thanks!