I've been experimenting with binary streams in Node.js, and much to my amazement do actually have a working demo of taking a Shoutcast stream using node-radio-stream and pushing it into a HTML5 element using chunked encoding. But it only works in Safari!

Here is my server code:

var radio = require("radio-stream");
var http = require('http');
var url = "http://67.205.85.183:7714";
var stream = radio.createReadStream(url);

var clients = [];

stream.on("connect", function() {
  console.error("Radio Stream connected!");
  console.error(stream.headers);
});


// When a chunk of data is received on the stream, push it to all connected clients
stream.on("data", function (chunk) {
    if (clients.length > 0){
        for (client in clients){
            clients[client].write(chunk);
        };
    }
});

// When a 'metadata' event happens, usually a new song is starting.
stream.on("metadata", function(title) {
  console.error(title);
});

// Listen on a web port and respond with a chunked response header. 
var server = http.createServer(function(req, res){ 
    res.writeHead(200,{
        "Content-Type": "audio/mpeg",
        'Transfer-Encoding': 'chunked'
    });
    // Add the response to the clients array to receive streaming
    clients.push(res);
    console.log('Client connected; streaming'); 
});
server.listen("8000", "127.0.0.1");

console.log('Server running at http://127.0.0.1:8000'); 

My client code is simply:

<audio controls src="http://localhost:8000/"></audio>

This works fine in Safari 5 on the Mac, but doesn't seem to do anything in Chrome or Firefox. Any ideas?

Possible candidates including encoding issues, or just partially-implemented HTML5 features...

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Did you ever get this up & running? – abeger Apr 18 '11 at 19:42
Yes, check out Nate's answer below for more information. – scottw Jun 6 '11 at 16:48
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1 Answer

up vote 7 down vote accepted

Here's a (slightly outdated) summary of the current status of HTML5 Audio and Icecast streams.

As you can see, a MP3 source only seems to work in Safari (and possibly IE9). You might need to experiment with some server-side transcoding (with ffmpeg or mencoder) to OGG Vorbis. I'm pretty sure I was able to get Chrome to behave properly when I was sending Vorbis data.

Firefox was still being a brat though, maybe it doesn't like the chunked encoding (all SHOUTcast servers respond with a HTTP/1.0 version response, which hadn't defined Transfer-Encoding: chunked yet). Try sending a Transfer-Encoding: identity response header with the OGG stream to disable chunked, and Firefox MIGHT work. I haven't tested this.

Let me know how it goes! Cheers!

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Thanks! I'm checking out FFMpeg now to give it a try. – scottw Oct 21 '10 at 7:35
I was able to mess around with this a bit last night, and was actually able to get Chrome to play the transcoded OGG Vorbis data! It seemed that ffmpeg couldn't make a proper OGG file from the MP3 stream, but Chrome was still able to play it. I'm also experimenting with invoking lame and oggenc manually, and result seem promising (a nice compliant OGG file). I suspect that Firefox will work with this kind of stream as well. I'll try to make an updated example in the node-radio-stream repo soon! – TooTallNate Oct 21 '10 at 20:25
Awesome! I just noticed the update on the node list - this is really nice! – scottw Nov 22 '10 at 11:13
For anybody stumbling upon these posts in the future, my node-radio-stream module has been renamed to node-icecast-stack: github.com/TooTallNate/node-icecast-stack – TooTallNate Aug 16 '11 at 1:11
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