In this guide, see the features and functionality that Mux Player gives you out of the box.
Mux Platform integration
Understand how Mux Player integrates with the Mux Platform
Responsiveness
Understand how Mux Player handles responsiveness at different sizes
Controls and UI
See how Mux Player handles controls based on the stream type, and feature availability
Accessibility
Understand how Mux Player addresses accessibility
Error handling
Understand how Mux Player handles errors
Audio player
Understand how Mux Player supports audio only
Mux Player is built for playing assets hosted with Mux Video. Features like timeline hover previews and automatically pulling poster images work with minimal configuration because the video is hosted by Mux.
Mux Player will use the optimal Hls.js settings based on the provided stream-type
. New versions of Mux Player will contain upgraded versions of Hls.js that are known to be stable versions and tested with Mux Player.
Mux Player is integrated with Mux Data automatically to measure the performance and quality of experience. See the Understand metric definitions guide to learn more about the metrics that are tracked with Mux Data.
Your Mux Data environment will be inferred from the playback ID provided to Mux Player. No configuration is necessary. If you would like to override that default and send the video views to a specific Mux environment, you can pass the env-key
(HTML element) attribute or envKey
(React) prop.
Mux Player has different UI permutations based on stream type (on-demand
, live
, ll-live
, live:dvr
, ll-live:dvr
), device availability, and screen size.
Note that the responsiveness of Mux Player is based on the size of the container that it is being rendered in, not the viewport size. If you have a collection of small players in a large viewport, the layout of the controls for each player will be sized appropriately.
<div> <mux-player stream-type="live" playback-id="v69RSHhFelSm4701snP22dYz2jICy4E4FUyk02rW4gxRM" metadata-video-title="Test Live Stream" metadata-viewer-user-id="user-id-007" ></mux-player> </div> <div style="max-width: 250px;"> <mux-player stream-type="live" playback-id="v69RSHhFelSm4701snP22dYz2jICy4E4FUyk02rW4gxRM" metadata-video-title="Test Live Stream" metadata-viewer-user-id="user-id-007" ></mux-player> </div>
Here is a CodeSandbox environment you can view samples in
Mux Player will show or hide controls based on availability.
On iPhone browsers Mux Player uses Apple's fullscreen functionality.
On iPhone and iPad browsers, the volume slider is not present. Volume level must be controlled via the hardware buttons. This is a restrictions of iOS and iPadOS.
The fullscreen button will not show if fullscreen functionality is not available on the page (for example, if Mux Player is embedded inside of an iframe that does not include the allow="fullscreen"
attribute. This is currently the case on CodeSandbox examples and other similar code testing platforms.
If you are embedding Mux Player in an iframe, use the <iframe allow="fullscreen">
in order to access fullscreen functionality.
You'll notice the controls are different for "on-demand"
, "live"
, "ll-live"
, live:dvr
and ll-live:dvr
stream types.
Chromecast support is built-in. The only thing you need to do in order to enable it is add the Google Cast script to the <head>
of your webpage.
<script
defer
src="https://www.gstatic.com/cv/js/sender/v1/cast_sender.js?loadCastFramework=1"
></script>
When this script is loaded and a Chromecast is detected on the network then Mux Player will show the Chromecast button in the control bar.
Note that the default Chromecast receiver app does not currently support low-latency Live Streams. If you have your own receiver app that you want to use instead of the default Chromecast receiver app you can over-ride the variable: chrome.cast.media.DEFAULT_MEDIA_RECEIVER_APP_ID
to point to your receiver app ID.
When live streaming with Mux you have 2 options for viewers:
playback_id
associated with the Live Stream for playback. Non-DVR mode keeps viewers on the "live edge" of the live content and does not allow them to seek backwards while the stream is live.playback_id
associated with the Asset that corresponds to the Live Stream for playback. DVR mode allows users to seek backwards while the stream is still live.For more information about non-DVR mode and DVR mode and some of the tradeoffs to consider, take a look at this guide.
When viewing live streams with Mux Player you have 2 options:
playback_id
associated with the Live Stream itself. If the Live Stream was created with "latency_mode": "low"
then it is a low-latency live stream and in Mux Player you should specify stream-type="ll-live"
, otherwise specify stream-type="live"
.playback_id
associated with the Asset in order to view the live stream in DVR-mode. For DVR-mode, if the Live Stream was created with "latency_mode": "low"
then in Mux Player specify stream-type="ll-live:dvr"
, otherwise specify stream-type="live:dvr"
.When using DVR-mode in Mux Player, the UI will show a timeline for users to scroll back to the beginning of the Live Stream while the Live Stream is still active.
Timeline hover previews show a small thumbnail of the video content at a given timestamp. They help to provide a contextual visual for the viewer based on where their cursor is positioned over the timeline.
When you play back a video hosted on Mux using Mux Player, you’ll see built-in timeline hover previews for the video with no extra work on your end.
Mux Player has taken steps to being fully WCAG AA compliant. At this time Mux Player supports:
Make sure to take accessibility into consideration when customizing Mux Player. See the guide for customizing the look and feel of Mux Player to change things like primary color, secondary color, or styling with CSS.
When setting color variables and changing styles make sure your implementation meets the contrast ratio requirements for WCAG 2.1.
Mux Player will internally make every attempt to recover from errors and maintain smooth playback.
When Mux Player encounters unrecoverable fatal errors, it will try to:
[mux-player]
will contain debugging details and a link to more information.If you have an audio-only Mux asset, you can set the audio
attribute on mux-player
to display the audio player. You can also add the audio
attribute to a video asset to make a video look like an audio player.