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How can I stream MP4 videos from S3 without AVPlayer downloading the files before playing them?

Time:01-13

I have a lot of long (45 mins - 90 mins) MP4 videos in a public S3 bucket and I want to play them in my iOS app using AVPlayer.

I am using AVPlayerViewController to play them but I need to wait several minutes before they start playing as it downloads the whole video rather than streaming it.

I am caching it locally so this is only happening the first time but I would love to stream the video so the user doesn't have to wait for the entire video to download.

Some people are pointing out that I need Cloudfront to stream videos but in the documentation, I've read that this is only necessary when you have many people streaming the same file. I'm building a MVP so I only need a simple solution.

Is there any way to stream an MP4 video from an S3 bucket with AVPlayerViewController without it fully downloading the file before playing it to the user?

CodePudding user response:

TLDR

AVPlayer does not support 'streaming' (HTTP range requests) as you would define it, so either use an alternative video player that does or use a real media streaming protocol like HLS which is supported by AVPlayer & would start the video before downloading it all.

CloudFront is great for delivery in general but is not truly needed - you may have seen it mentioned due to CloudFront image showing multiple HTTP 206 Partial Content responses in the network tab of Google Chrome when loading a video in browser and moving to random points in the video; highlights HTTP range requests


The problem with AVPlayer

Unfortunately, AVPlayer does not support 'streaming' using HTTP range requests & HTTP 206 Partial Content responses. I've verified this manually by creating a demo iOS app in Xcode.

This has nothing to do with S3 - if you stored these files on any other cloud provider or file server, you'd see that the file is still fully loaded before playing.


The possible solutions

Now that the problem is clear, there are 2 solutions.

Using an alternative video player

The easiest solution is to use an alternative video player which does support byte-range fetches. I'm not an expert in iOS development so I sadly can't help in recommending an alternative but I'm sure there'll be a popular library that the industry prefers over the in-built AVPlayer. This would provide you with your (extremely common) definition of 'streaming'.

Using a video streaming protocol

However, if you must use AVPlayer, the solution is to implement true media streaming with a video streaming protocol - true streaming also allows you to leverage features like adaptive bitrate switching, live audio switching, licensing etc.

There are quite a few of these protocols available like DASH (Dynamic Adaptive Streaming over HTTP), SRT (Secure Reliable Transport) & last but not least, HLS (HTTP Live Streaming).

Today, the most widely used streaming protocol on the internet is HLS, created by Apple themselves (hey, maybe the reason to not support range requests is to force you to use the protocol). Apple's own documentation is really wonderful for delving deeper if you are interested.

Without getting too much into protocol detail, HLS will allow playback to start more quickly in general, fast-forwarding can be much quicker & delivers video as it is being watched for the true streaming experience.

To go ahead with HLS:

  1. Use AWS Elemental MediaConvert to convert your MP4 file to HLS format - the resulting output will be 1 (or more) .M3U8 manifest files in addition to .ts media segment file(s)

  2. Upload the resulting output to S3

  3. Point AVPlayer to the .M3U8 file

let asset = AVURLAsset(url: "https://ermiya.s3.eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/videos/video1playlist.m3u8")
let item = AVPlayerItem(asset: asset)
...
  1. Enjoy near-instant loading of the video

CloudFront

In regards to Amazon CloudFront, it isn't required per se & S3 is sufficient in this case but a quick Google search will mention loads of benefits that it provides, especially caching which can help you save on S3 costs later on.


Conclusion

I would go with converting to HLS if you can, as it will yield more possibilities down the line & is a better true streaming experience in general, but using an alternative video player will work just as well due to iOS AVPlayer restrictions.

Whether to use CloudFront or not, will depend on your user base, usage of S3 and other factors.

As you're creating an MVP, I would recommend just doing a batch conversion of your MP4 files to HLS format & not using CloudFront which would add additional complexity to your cloud configuration.

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