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I am trying to stream MP4 video as it is encoded from a webserver. I believe I used the appropriate flags, but it is not working correctly. When I download the video from my stream and open it with VLC, it properly shows the duration. Since a socket is not seekable, I assume it writes the metadata to end? My Chrome browser always shows 8 seconds duration. The first 8 seconds plays at the normal speed, but afterwards the pause button turns into play button and the video plays very fast, probably as fast as it is recieved. However the audio is played at normal speed. I tried document.getElementById('myVid').duration = 20000 but it is a readonly field.

I wonder, is there anyway to explicitly state the duration in HTTP headers or in any other way? I cannot find any documentation about it.

ffmpeg -i - -vcodec libx264 -acodec libvo_aacenc -ar 44100 -ac 2 -ab 128000 -f mp4 -movflags frag_keyframe+faststart pipe:1 -fflags +genpts -re -profile baseline -level 30 -preset fast

To close-voters, that thinks it is not programming related, I use it in my own server I coded, and I need to set the duration programatically via JavaScript or setting the HTTP header. I believe it may be related to both ffmpeg or http headers, that's why I posted it here.

app.get("/video/*", function(req,res){
    res.writeHead(200, {
        'Content-Type': 'video/mp4',
    });
    var dir = req.url.split("/").splice(2).join("/");
    var buf = new Buffer(dir, 'base64');
    var src = buf.toString();

    var Transcoder = require('stream-transcoder');
    var stream = fs.createReadStream(src);
    // I added my own flags to this module, they are at below:
    new Transcoder(stream)
        .videoCodec('libx264')
        .audioCodec("libvo_aacenc")
        .sampleRate(44100)
        .channels(2)
        .audioBitrate(128 * 1000)
        .format('mp4')
        .on('finish', function() {
            console.log("finished");
        })
        .stream().pipe(res);
});

exec function in that stream-transcoder module,

    a.push("-fflags");
    a.push("+genpts");
    a.push("-re");
    a.push("-profile");
    a.push("baseline");
    a.push("-level");
    a.push("30");
    a.push("-preset");
    a.push("fast");
    a.push("-strict");
    a.push("experimental");
    a.push("-frag_duration");
    a.push("" + 2 * (1000 * 1000));
    var child = spawn('ffmpeg', a, {
        cwd: os.tmpdir()
    });
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  • An MP4 file is not supported to exhibit this kind of behaviour, regardless of what HTTP headers you send or not. There is probably something wrong with the metadata of the file/stream. Feb 4, 2015 at 19:27

1 Answer 1

3
+100

I believe the X-Content-Duration header is what you need.

Mozilla documentation on X-Content-Duration*

* The documentation discusses the OGG format, but the principle applies to other video formats

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