Here's a working solution for displaying a "video wall" in a UICollectionView:
1) Store all of your cells in an NSMapTable (from henceforth, you will only access a cell object from the NSMapTable):
self.cellCache = [[NSMapTable alloc] initWithKeyOptions:NSPointerFunctionsWeakMemory valueOptions:NSPointerFunctionsStrongMemory capacity:AppDelegate.sharedAppDelegate.assetsFetchResults.count];
for (NSInteger i = 0; i < AppDelegate.sharedAppDelegate.assetsFetchResults.count; i++) {
[self.cellCache setObject:(AssetPickerCollectionViewCell *)[self.collectionView dequeueReusableCellWithReuseIdentifier:CellReuseIdentifier forIndexPath:[NSIndexPath indexPathForItem:i inSection:0]] forKey:[NSIndexPath indexPathForItem:i inSection:0]];
}
2) Add this method to your UICollectionViewCell subclass:
- (void)setupPlayer:(PHAsset *)phAsset {
typedef void (^player) (void);
player play = ^{
NSString __autoreleasing *serialDispatchCellQueueDescription = ([NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@ serial cell queue", self]);
dispatch_queue_t __autoreleasing serialDispatchCellQueue = dispatch_queue_create([serialDispatchCellQueueDescription UTF8String], DISPATCH_QUEUE_SERIAL);
dispatch_async(serialDispatchCellQueue, ^{
__weak typeof(self) weakSelf = self;
__weak typeof(PHAsset) *weakPhAsset = phAsset;
[[PHImageManager defaultManager] requestPlayerItemForVideo:weakPhAsset options:nil
resultHandler:^(AVPlayerItem * _Nullable playerItem, NSDictionary * _Nullable info) {
if(![[info objectForKey:PHImageResultIsInCloudKey] boolValue]) {
AVPlayer __autoreleasing *player = [AVPlayer playerWithPlayerItem:playerItem];
__block typeof(AVPlayerLayer) *weakPlayerLayer = [AVPlayerLayer playerLayerWithPlayer:player];
[weakPlayerLayer setFrame:weakSelf.contentView.bounds]; //CGRectMake(self.contentView.bounds.origin.x, self.contentView.bounds.origin.y, [[UIScreen mainScreen] bounds].size.width, [[UIScreen mainScreen] bounds].size.height * (9.0/16.0))];
[weakPlayerLayer setVideoGravity:AVLayerVideoGravityResizeAspect];
[weakPlayerLayer setBorderWidth:0.25f];
[weakPlayerLayer setBorderColor:[UIColor whiteColor].CGColor];
[player play];
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_main_queue(), ^{
[weakSelf.contentView.layer addSublayer:weakPlayerLayer];
});
}
}];
});
}; play();
}
3) Call the method above from your UICollectionView delegate this way:
- (UICollectionViewCell *)collectionView:(UICollectionView *)collectionView cellForItemAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath
{
if ([[self.cellCache objectForKey:indexPath] isKindOfClass:[AssetPickerCollectionViewCell class]])
[self.cellCache setObject:(AssetPickerCollectionViewCell *)[collectionView dequeueReusableCellWithReuseIdentifier:CellReuseIdentifier forIndexPath:indexPath] forKey:indexPath];
dispatch_async(dispatch_get_global_queue(0, DISPATCH_QUEUE_PRIORITY_HIGH), ^{
NSInvocationOperation *invOp = [[NSInvocationOperation alloc]
initWithTarget:(AssetPickerCollectionViewCell *)[self.cellCache objectForKey:indexPath]
selector:@selector(setupPlayer:) object:AppDelegate.sharedAppDelegate.assetsFetchResults[indexPath.item]];
[[NSOperationQueue mainQueue] addOperation:invOp];
});
return (AssetPickerCollectionViewCell *)[self.cellCache objectForKey:indexPath];
}
By the way, here's how you would populate a PHFetchResult collection with all videos in the Video folder of the Photos app:
// Collect all videos in the Videos folder of the Photos app
- (PHFetchResult *)assetsFetchResults {
__block PHFetchResult *i = self->_assetsFetchResults;
if (!i) {
static dispatch_once_t onceToken;
dispatch_once(&onceToken, ^{
PHFetchResult *smartAlbums = [PHAssetCollection fetchAssetCollectionsWithType:PHAssetCollectionTypeSmartAlbum subtype:PHAssetCollectionSubtypeSmartAlbumVideos options:nil];
PHAssetCollection *collection = smartAlbums.firstObject;
if (![collection isKindOfClass:[PHAssetCollection class]]) collection = nil;
PHFetchOptions *allPhotosOptions = [[PHFetchOptions alloc] init];
allPhotosOptions.sortDescriptors = @[[NSSortDescriptor sortDescriptorWithKey:@"creationDate" ascending:NO]];
i = [PHAsset fetchAssetsInAssetCollection:collection options:allPhotosOptions];
self->_assetsFetchResults = i;
});
}
NSLog(@"assetsFetchResults (%ld)", self->_assetsFetchResults.count);
return i;
}
If you want to filter videos that are local (and not in iCloud), which is what I'd assume, seeing as you're looking for smooth-scrolling:
// Filter videos that are stored in iCloud
- (NSArray *)phAssets {
NSMutableArray *assets = [NSMutableArray arrayWithCapacity:self.assetsFetchResults.count];
[[self assetsFetchResults] enumerateObjectsUsingBlock:^(PHAsset *asset, NSUInteger idx, BOOL *stop) {
if (asset.sourceType == PHAssetSourceTypeUserLibrary)
[assets addObject:asset];
}];
return [NSArray arrayWithArray:(NSArray *)assets];
}
AVPlayer
. As I stated in my Edit section, the performance problems are inherent in the implementation ofAVFoundation
, and there's nothing you can do about it. If you want to play video in some sort of view that scrolls, and you don't want to drop a ton of frames, then the only real way to do that is to build your own video player from scratch, bypassingAVPlayer
completely. Or, you can wait for iOS 10 and hope that Apple will have gotten its act together by then.AVPlayerLayer
has a lot of internal setup that will not happen until it can conceivably be visible; that is, it has to exist inside a window, even if it's just for one runloop. Doing this, we get very little main thread blockage when rapidly adding/removing players.