react-hls-player
v3.0.7
Published
A simple and easy to use react component for playing an hls live stream
Downloads
44,787
Readme
React HLS Player
Introduction
react-hls-player
is a simple HLS live stream player.
It uses hls.js to play your hls live stream if your browser supports html 5 video
and MediaSource Extension
.
Examples
Using the ReactHlsPlayer component
import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
import ReactHlsPlayer from 'react-hls-player';
ReactDOM.render(
<ReactHlsPlayer
src="https://bitdash-a.akamaihd.net/content/sintel/hls/playlist.m3u8"
autoPlay={false}
controls={true}
width="100%"
height="auto"
/>,
document.getElementById('app')
);
Using hlsConfig (advanced use case)
All available config properties can be found on the Fine Tuning section of the Hls.js API.md
import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
import ReactHlsPlayer from 'react-hls-player';
ReactDOM.render(
<ReactHlsPlayer
src="https://bitdash-a.akamaihd.net/content/sintel/hls/playlist.m3u8"
hlsConfig={{
maxLoadingDelay: 4,
minAutoBitrate: 0,
lowLatencyMode: true,
}}
/>,
document.getElementById('app')
);
Using playerRef
The playerRef
returns a ref to the underlying video component, and as such will give you access to all video component properties and methods.
import React from 'react';
import ReactHlsPlayer from 'react-hls-player';
function MyCustomComponent() {
const playerRef = React.useRef();
function playVideo() {
playerRef.current.play();
}
function pauseVideo() {
playerRef.current.pause();
}
function toggleControls() {
playerRef.current.controls = !playerRef.current.controls;
}
return (
<ReactHlsPlayer
playerRef={playerRef}
src="https://bitdash-a.akamaihd.net/content/sintel/hls/playlist.m3u8"
/>
);
}
ReactDOM.render(<MyCustomComponent />, document.getElementById('app'));
You can also listen to events of the video
import React from 'react';
import ReactHlsPlayer from 'react-hls-player';
function MyCustomComponent() {
const playerRef = React.useRef();
React.useEffect(() => {
function fireOnVideoStart() {
// Do some stuff when the video starts/resumes playing
}
playerRef.current.addEventListener('play', fireOnVideoStart);
return playerRef.current.removeEventListener('play', fireOnVideoStart);
}, []);
React.useEffect(() => {
function fireOnVideoEnd() {
// Do some stuff when the video ends
}
playerRef.current.addEventListener('ended', fireOnVideoEnd);
return playerRef.current.removeEventListener('ended', fireOnVideoEnd);
}, []);
return (
<ReactHlsPlayer
playerRef={playerRef}
src="https://bitdash-a.akamaihd.net/content/sintel/hls/playlist.m3u8"
/>
);
}
ReactDOM.render(<MyCustomComponent />, document.getElementById('app'));
Props
All video properties are supported and passed down to the underlying video component
| Prop | Description |
| ------------------------ | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| src String
, required
| The hls url that you want to play |
| autoPlay Boolean
| Autoplay when component is ready. Defaults to false
|
| controls Boolean
| Whether or not to show the playback controls. Defaults to false
|
| width Number
| Video width. Defaults to 100%
|
| height Number
| Video height. Defaults to auto
|
| hlsConfig Object
| hls.js
config, you can see all config here |
| playerRef React Ref
| Pass in your own ref to interact with the video player directly. This will override the default ref. |
Additional Notes
By default, the HLS config will have enableWorker
set to false
. There have been issues with the HLS.js library that breaks some React apps, so I've disabled it to prevent people from running in to this issue. If you want to enable it and see if it works with your React app, you can simply pass in enableWorker: true
to the hlsConfig
prop object. See this issue for more information
Contributors ✨
Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):
This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!