Updated version of react-native-rtmpview
$ yarn add @matinzd/react-native-rtmpview
There is no need to link just add and rebuild your app.
Find or create an iOS podfile in the ./ios
directory, and add:
pod 'Yoga', path: '../node_modules/react-native/ReactCommon/yoga/Yoga.podspec'
pod 'React', path: '../node_modules/react-native'
pod 'react-native-rtmpview', :path => '../node_modules/react-native-rtmpview'
Next, run
pod install
Because react-native-rtmpview has cocoapod dependencies on third-party video playback libraries, it must be added through Cocoapods. (You cannot simply use react-native link
for example, as you can with other libraries).
This library now works with Android clients. In your project's settings.gradle
file, add:
include ':@matinzd_react-native-rtmpview'
project(':@matinzd_react-native-rtmpview').projectDir = new File(rootProject.projectDir, '../node_modules/@matinzd/react-native-rtmpview/android')
In the android/app/build.gradle
file, under dependencies, add:
implementation project(':@matinzd_react-native-rtmpview')
Then, in your ReactApplication
class, under MainApplication.java
, import the package and make sure that the getPackages()
method includes:
new RNRtmpViewPackage()
For example:
import com.perrystreetsoftware.RNRtmpViewPackage;
@Override
protected List<ReactPackage> getPackages() {
return Arrays.<ReactPackage>asList(
new MainReactPackage(),
// other packages...
new RNRtmpViewPackage()
);
}
react-native-rtmpview includes an example project to help get you started. To build and run the example, download or clone the project from github, and then run the following from the root of the project:
cd Example/
npm install --save
react-native run-ios
import { RtmpView } from '@matinzd/react-native-rtmpview';
export default class Example extends Component {
componentDidMount() {
this.player.initialize();
}
render() {
return (
<RtmpView
style={styles.player}
shouldMute={true}
ref={e => { this.player = e; }}
onPlaybackState={(data) => {
this.handlePlaybackState(data);
}}
onFirstVideoFrameRendered={(data) => {
this.handleFirstVideoFrameRendered(data);
}}
url="rtmp://localhost:1935/live/stream"
/>
)
}
}
By default this class will pass all events through using an event emitter, which can be subscribed to this way:
const RNRtmpEventManager = new NativeEventEmitter(
NativeModules.RNRtmpEventManager
);
RNRtmpEventManager.addListener(
"RNRtmpEvent",
(data) => this.handleRNRtmpEvent(data)
);
However, there are two events that are especially useful: knowing playback state changes, and knowing when the first video frame has been rendered. This is because you can do things like remove a loading screen.
Thus, we have specially pulled out those events and made them actual function properties of the view.
react-native-rtmpview is designed to use the best-of-breed RTMP playback libraries on both iOS and Android.
On iOS, react-native-rtmpview is based on KSYLive, which is a popular iOS library for video and RTMP streaming. The complete list of options for RTMP streaming on iOS can be found here on StackOverflow, and includes:
- HaishinKit (formerly lf) - This library does not support RTMP playback (technically it does, but only as an 'experimental feature')
- LaiFeng iOS Live Kit - Popular library in terms of stars (3k+) but not updated since 2016, so effectively abandoned.
- VideoCore - Popular (1k+ stars), but library abandoned in 2015.
- react-native-nodemediaclient - The underlying native library is very limited and is still emerging in popularity (100+ stars). It does not surface as many playback events or provide as much configurabilty as other RTMP streaming libraries.
- VLCKit - Publishes MobileVLCKit, which does work in iOS, but does not give enough configuration options and does not allow customization of the video buffer. This makes the library unreliable when playing back an RTMP stream that is flaky and leads to an extreme lag between the playback time and the live video time.
- KSYLive_iOS - Growing in popularity (500+ stars) and updated very recently (in 2018)
As a result, we elected to base our implementation for RTMP in React Native on the actively-maintained KSYLive_iOS library, because it was both the most full-featured and still actively maintained.
You will note that KSYLive itself publishes their own react native wrapper, which you will find at: https://github.com/ksvc/react-native-video-player
This is also of course a viable option for integrating an RTMP playback view within iOS and Android, however, this requires you to use the Kingsoft implementation on Android as well. Our library does NOT use Kingsoft for its Android implementation.
On Android, react-native-rtmpview is based on ExoPlayer, which is supported and actively maintained by Google. ExoPlayer is a general-purpose media playback library, and in version 2.5 added the LibRtmp client for Android.
Because of this, we felt that the ExoPlayer / LibRTMP solution was the obvious choice when implementing Android support. Clients of react-native-rtmpview will get best-of-breed player solutions on both platforms.
You will note in the Example/package.json file that we have an explicit dependency on react-native-rtmpview:
"react-native-rtmpview": "*"
We do not have a relative dependency (i.e.,
"react-native-rtmpview": "file:.."
Relative dependencies are created by running npm -i ../
and they create a symoblic link (ln -s
) inside of node_modules/<your_library>/
, and are preferable because changes you make at the root of your project in the actual source code of your library are immediately reflected within your Example project, thus making development of your library easier.
We cannot do this; instead we must have a complete and unconnected copy of the project within Example/node_modules/
. This means if you use the Example project to test/debug react-native-rtmpview, you will have to make those changes to code buried within Example/node_modules/react-native-rtmpview
, and manually apply or copy those changes up one level at the root of the project.
We are required to use this architecture because if you create a relative link, every time you launch the app by running react-native run-ios
, you will see a redbox stating:
"Unable to resolve module `react` from `<path>`: Module does not exist in the module map."
I have confirmed that this also plagues other apps with Example directories architected similiarly, including react-native-twilio-video-webrtc
There is some chatter online about how to use wml to address this problem, but I was unable to get it working.
Thus, until React improves its module resolution process, we will be forced to manually copy over changes made while developing using the Example project.