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I want to auto-start android html5 video using android 4 ice cream sandwich browser. I tried many java-script functions and autobuffer autoplay tags of html5 video. But nothing worked. I start android chrome client in webview via android app and that client should be able to auto-start video. When click the play button video plays but not auto play.

Is it restricted in android? Other thing to notice is that no call back methods are called in chromeClient even when we click the play button & video is playing & completed.

I have googled & found no positive result on this issue on Android 4.

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  • Does this restriction applies to Chrome on Android? Thanks May 19, 2015 at 13:12

2 Answers 2

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It seems that Android 4+ changed the requirements for the play() method to require user interaction. If you trigger play() from within a user event handler (eg. touchstart or mousedown), then you can play the video as long as you run it inside the same event loop.

This means that you shouldn't use async triggers to call play(), but rather call play inside the same event handler without setTimeout() and such, so stuff like time-delayed play is out of the question.

One way is to use the same trick on Android 4 as in iOS – use the first user interaction event to play() and pause() the video. This will enable the video for manipulation later, since you played it during a user initiated action. After you've successfully primed the video, you can call play methods at any time later, regardless of whether the call was made inside the event handler loop or not.

EDIT: Here's a sample code that works on HTC and Samsung, but not Galaxy Nexus 4.1 (requires user interaction to play):

var myVideo = document.getElementById('myvideo');

myVideo.addEventListener('canplay', function() {
  myVideo.play();
});

myVideo.load();
myVideo.play();
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  • Thanks Krof. Does that mean all the callback methods such as onShowCustomView, onCompletion, onPrepared etc in WebCromeClient are not being called for the various events of the video while it is playing? One more thing What does it mean by prime the video. Is there any tutorial or example on what your mentioning? Aug 6, 2012 at 12:56
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    Primed in this case means video already played, which implies that the video play was triggered by the user and is therefore available for playing. Not sure what you mean by "WebChromeClient" though. Aug 6, 2012 at 13:13
  • Krof, This will not work on Samsung S3 & Tab 2.0 devices as you mentioned in Nexus 4.1, user interaction is needed. Aug 15, 2012 at 12:34
  • Yeah, it's still an incomplete solution, sometimes Samsung S3 requires you to kill the browser and then it just miraculously works. It's the worst and slowest browser of all the Androids. Aug 16, 2012 at 9:32
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    On a Nexus 10/Android 4.2, it is possible to trigger playback across a setTimeout but only a single one.
    – dml
    Apr 8, 2013 at 19:55
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Android actually has an API for this! The method is setMediaPlaybackRequiresUserGesture(). I found it after a lot of digging into video autoplay and a lot of attempted hacks from SO. Here's an example from blair vanderhoof:

package com.example.myProject;

import android.os.Bundle;
import org.apache.cordova.*;
import android.webkit.WebSettings;

public class myProject extends CordovaActivity 
{
    @Override
    public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState)
    {
        super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
        super.init();
        // Set by <content src="index.html" /> in config.xml
        super.loadUrl(Config.getStartUrl());
        //super.loadUrl("file:///android_asset/www/index.html");

        WebSettings ws = super.appView.getSettings();
        ws.setMediaPlaybackRequiresUserGesture(false);
    }
}

works on Android 4.4.4

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  • 1
    I think this question is about HTML5 not Cordova.
    – vee
    Dec 5, 2016 at 5:35

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