ffplayout is a 24/7 broadcasting solution. It can playout a folder with containing video clips, or play for every day a JSON playlist, while keeping the current playlist editable.
The ffplayout apps are mostly made to run on Linux as system services. But in general they should run on all platforms which are supported by Rust.
Check the releases for pre compiled version.
- have all values in a separate config file
- dynamic playlist
- replace missing playlist or clip with a dummy clip
- playing clips in watched folder mode
- send emails with error message
- overlay a logo
- overlay text, controllable through ffplayout-frontend (needs ffmpeg with libzmq and enabled JSON RPC server)
- EBU R128 loudness normalization (single pass)
- loop playlist infinitely
- remote source
- trim and fade the last clip, to get full 24 hours
- when playlist is not 24 hours long, loop filler clip until time is full
- set custom day start, so you can have playlist for example: from 6am to 6am, instate of 0am to 12pm
- normal system requirements and no special tools
- no GPU power is needed
- stream to server or play on desktop
- logging to files, or colored output to console
- add filters to input, if is necessary to match output stream:
- yadif (deinterlacing)
- pad (letterbox or pillarbox to fit aspect)
- fps (change fps)
- scale (fit target resolution)
- aevalsrc (if video have no audio)
- apad (add silence if audio duration is to short)
- tpad (add black frames if video duration is to short)
- output:
- stream
- desktop
- HLS
- null (for debugging)
- JSON RPC server, for getting infos about current playing and controlling
- live ingest
- image source (will loop until out duration is reached)
- extra audio source (experimental *) (has priority over audio from video source)
- multiple audio tracks (experimental *)
- custom filter globally in config, or in playlist for specific clips
- import playlist from text or m3u file, with CLI or frontend
For preview stream, read: /docs/preview_stream.md
* Experimental functions do not guarantee the same stability, also they can fail in unusual circumstances. The code and configuration options may change in the future.
ffpapi serves the frontend and it acts as a REST API for controlling the engine, manipulate playlists, add settings etc.
- RAM and CPU depends on video resolution, minimum 4 threads and 3GB RAM for 720p are recommend
- ffmpeg v4.2+ and ffprobe (ffplay if you want to play on desktop)
- if you want to overlay text, ffmpeg needs to have libzmq
Check install for details about how to install ffplayout.
{
"channel": "Test 1",
"date": "2019-03-05",
"program": [{
"in": 0,
"out": 647.68,
"duration": 647.68,
"source": "/Media/clip1.mp4"
}, {
"in": 0,
"out": 890.02,
"duration": 890.02,
"source": "/Media/clip2.mp4",
"custom_filter": "eq=gamma_b=0.6:gamma_g=0.7[c_v_out]"
}, {
"in": 0,
"out": 149,
"duration": 149,
"source": "/Media/clip3.mp4",
"category": "advertisement"
}, {
"in": 0,
"out": 114.72,
"duration": 114.72,
"source": "/Media/image1.jpg",
}, {
"in": 0,
"out": 230.30,
"duration": 230.30,
"source": "/Media/image2.jpg",
"audio": "/Media/audio1.mp3"
}, {
"in": 0,
"out": 2531.36,
"duration": 2531.36,
"source": "https://example.org/big_buck_bunny.webm",
"category": ""
}
]
}
(Endless) streaming over multiple days will only work when config have day_start value and the length value is 24 hours. If you need only some hours for every day, use a cron job, or something similar.
For outputting to HLS, output parameters should look like:
out:
...
output_param: >-
...
-flags +cgop
-f hls
-hls_time 6
-hls_list_size 600
-hls_flags append_list+delete_segments+omit_endlist+program_date_time
-hls_segment_filename /var/www/html/live/stream-%09d.ts /var/www/html/live/stream.m3u8
The ffplayout engine can run a JSON RPC server. A request looks like:
curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -H "Authorization: ---auth-key---" \
-d '{"jsonrpc": "2.0", "id":1, "method": "player", "params":{"control":"next"}}' \
127.0.0.1:7070
At the moment this commends are possible:
'{"jsonrpc": "2.0", "id":1, "method": "player", "params":{"media":"current"}}' # get infos about current clip
'{"jsonrpc": "2.0", "id":2, "method": "player", "params":{"media":"next"}}' # get infos about next clip
'{"jsonrpc": "2.0", "id":3, "method": "player", "params":{"media":"last"}}' # get infos about last clip
'{"jsonrpc": "2.0", "id":4, "method": "player", "params":{"control":"next"}}' # jump to next clip
'{"jsonrpc": "2.0", "id":5, "method": "player", "params":{"control":"back"}}' # jump to last clip
'{"jsonrpc": "2.0", "id":6, "method": "player", "params":{"control":"reset"}}' # reset playlist to old state
'{"jsonrpc": "2.0", "id":7, "method": "player", "params":{"control":"text", \
"message": {"text": "Hello from ffplayout", "x": "(w-text_w)/2", "y": "(h-text_h)/2", \
"fontsize": 24, "line_spacing": 4, "fontcolor": "#ffffff", "box": 1, \
"boxcolor": "#000000", "boxborderw": 4, "alpha": 1.0}}}' # send text to drawtext filter from ffmpeg
Output from {"media":"current"}
show:
{
"jsonrpc": "2.0",
"result": {
"current_media": {
"category": "",
"duration": 154.2,
"out": 154.2,
"seek": 0.0,
"source": "/opt/tv-media/clip.mp4"
},
"index": 39,
"play_mode": "playlist",
"played_sec": 67.80771999300123,
"remaining_sec": 86.39228000699876,
"start_sec": 24713.631999999998,
"start_time": "06:51:53.631"
},
"id": 1
}
When you are in playlist mode and jumping forward or backwards in time, the time shift will be saved so the playlist is still in sync. But have in mind, that then maybe your playlist gets to short. When you are not resetting the state, it will reset on the next day automatically.