Transport Stream Online Segmenter Save

Transport stream web based HLS segmenter.

Project README

transport-stream-online-segmenter

This is a tool that allows you to create an HLS chunklist from any transport stream file. For the online version all the process is done inside the browser, so the input TS file are NOT uploaded anywhere making segmentation process fast and secure. Taking advantage of HLS v6 we can generate a byte range HLS chunklist that prevents you to modify / split your TS file.

You can also execute the same segmenter in the CLI (nodeJS), and then segment a live TS TCP stream or a local TS file, in this case the chunks can be generated and saved to the local disc. If you segment a TS TCP stream you can activate LHLS segementation (see: lhls-media-streaming). See note 1 if you want to test LHLS.

Usage in the browser

  • Click here online-segmenter
  • Select the desired target duration and select a .ts file from your local computer (see note 2 to generate a file), or put a URL of any ts file (remember should have a proper CORS policy)
  • The .ts file will be processed in YOUR browser and the resulting HLS v6 chunklist displayed

Testing the results:

  • Copy the resulting chunklist data in a file in the same directory where your .ts file is, for example chunklist.m3u8
  • Use any HLS player to play the resulting manifest file chunklist.m3u8. For instance: VLC or Safari
  • (optional) is more "fun" if you put a webserver in front of those files. For instance node-static

Usage in the console to process files

  • Use the following syntax (see note 3 on how to generate a TS stream):
./transport-stream-segmenter-cli.js /your_path/input.ts /your_path/chunklist.m3u8

You can execute ./transport-stream-segmenter-cli.js (without arguments) to get help about accepted parameters

Usage in the console to process TCP streams (live)

It provides a server TCP socket to ingest a TS TCP stream, and it generates a live EVENT or WINDOW chunklist, it also saves the chunk files indicating them as growing files, useful if you want to implement LHLS or reduce latency using chunked transfer. See Note 2 if you want to test it.

  • Use the following syntax, see note 2 for testing:
./transport-stream-segmenter-tcp.js 9000 /tmp media_ out.m3u8 4 127.0.0.1 event

You can execute ./transport-stream-segmenter-tcp.js (without arguments) to get help about accepted parameters

Notes

Note 1: testing LHLS

For LHLS you need a webserver that supports chunked transfer for growing files, see: webserver-chunked-growingfiles

Note 2: Generating a TS file

If you do not have any ts file you can generate one by using ffmpeg:

ffmpeg -f lavfi -re -i testsrc=duration=10:size=320x200:rate=30 \
-f lavfi -re -i sine=frequency=1000:duration=10:sample_rate=44100 \
-pix_fmt yuv420p -c:v libx264 -b:v 1000k -g 30 -x264opts "keyint=120:min-keyint=120:no-scenecut" -profile:v baseline -preset veryfast \
-c:a libfdk_aac -b:a 96k \
-f mpegts demo.ts

Note 3: Generation a TS stream

Note 2: If you do not have any encoder able to generate a TS TCP stream, you can execute the following script included in this repo (it uses ffmpeg behind the scenes):

./test/scripts/videoTestToLiveTSTSCP.sh 1000 120 9000 127.0.0.1
Open Source Agenda is not affiliated with "Transport Stream Online Segmenter" Project. README Source: jordicenzano/transport-stream-online-segmenter

Open Source Agenda Badge

Open Source Agenda Rating