Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

VideoView onResume loses buffered portion of the video

I am having an Activity in which there is

  1. VideoView -- Streams a video from a webserver.

  2. Button -- Takes the user to the next activity to be shown.

When the application starts, VideoView is made to play the Video from a webserver.

Now assume

 Total Video length is 60 Minutes   Current Video progress is 20 Minutes   Current Buffered progress 30 Minutes  

Now when I click on the above mentioned Button which takes user to the next activity.

From that Activity if i press the back button, Previous Activity(with VideoView and Button) appears in front of the user. But when resumed all the Buffered Portion of the video is lost and hence the VideoView starts playing the video from the beginning which is really bad. <-- Actual Problem

Problem

When Activity is resumed back, the buffered portion of the video is lost and hence starts buffering it again. So how to overcome re-buffering the buffered portion of the Video ?

Even official Youtube android app. has the same problem.

Edit 1 :

I tried the below code in Activity but its not working.

@Override protected void onPause() {     // TODO Auto-generated method stub     super.onPause();     videoView.suspend(); }  @Override protected void onResume() {     // TODO Auto-generated method stub     super.onResume();     videoView.resume(); } 

Can anyone guide me regarding this problem ?. Or am I missing something to make this work perfectly ?

Current Workaround

I have saved the current playing position of the video in onPause() method and in onResume() method I have used that position to seek the video to that duration. This works fine. But the video buffering starts from the beginning tho it starts the video from the seek position.

Any help is deeply appreciated.

like image 688
Kartik Domadiya Avatar asked Apr 03 '12 04:04

Kartik Domadiya


1 Answers

I've spent several hours trying to hack the original VideoView source code and Now I can confirm VideoView can be hacked to behavior what you want - retain buffering after surface destroyed. I've tested on my Samsung Galaxy S2, which works as expected, in my case, the video buffering (streaming m4v video from remote http server) is successfully retained when I open a new activity and go back.

Basically, the workaround is create you own VideoView class (by copying the source code), and hack the SurfaceHolder.Callback() implementation. Bear in mind that VideoView use some internal/hide API, so if you want to create a copy of VideoView in your own project, you have to follow the inazaruk's article to enable using internal/hide API. As a quick hack, I just download inazaruk's build from here and use inazaruk-android-sdk-dbd50d4/platforms/android-15-internals/android.jar replace my original android.jar in my android-sdk/platforms/android-15/.

VideoView source code can be downloaded from GrepCode. Once you successfully create you own copy without compile error, change SurfaceHolder.Callback() to something like this:

private boolean videoOpened = false;  SurfaceHolder.Callback mSHCallback = new SurfaceHolder.Callback() {      ... ...      public void surfaceCreated(SurfaceHolder holder)     {         Log.i(TAG, "---------------------> surface created.");         mSurfaceHolder = holder;         if (!videoOpened) {           openVideo(); // <-- if first time opened, do something as usual, video is buffered.           /**             * openVideo() actually mMediaPlayer.prepareAsync() is the first key point, it is            * also called in other two VideoView's public methods setVideoURI() and resume(),             * make sure you don't call them in your activity.            */            videoOpened = true;         } else {           start();  // <-- if back from another activity, simply start it again.         }     }      public void surfaceDestroyed(SurfaceHolder holder)     {         Log.i(TAG, "---------------------> surface destroyed.");         // after we return from this we can't use the surface any more.         mSurfaceHolder = null;         if (mMediaController != null) mMediaController.hide();         //release(true);         /**          * release() actually mMediaPlayer.release() is the second key point, it is also          * called in other two VideoView's public methods stopPlayback() and suspend(), make          * sure you don't call them in your activity.          */         pause(); // <-- don't release, just pause.     } }; 

And make sure you don't call videoView.resume(), videoView.setVideoURI(), videoView.suspend() and videoView.stopPlayback() explicitly in you MediaPlayerActivity like this:

@Override protected void onResume() {   if (videoView != null)     videoView.resume();  // <-- this will cause re-buffer.     super.onResume(); }  @Override protected void onPause() {   if (videoView != null)     videoView.suspend(); // <-- this will cause clear buffer.     super.onPause(); } 

Note that I have just done a dirty hack to prove the feasibility, You should design and implement your VideoView class properly to avoid any side-effect.

Update:

As an alternative, you should able to achieve same effect using plain MediaPlayer create your MediaPlayerActivity if you don't want to do the interal/hide API stuff You can start with the MediaPlayerDemo_Video.java in ApiDemos sample. The key point is make sure prepare (result buffering) and release method is properly handled in both SurfaceHolder Callback methods and Activity life cycle method to avoid prepare/release video every time surface is created/destroyed, and Activity is started,resumed/paused,stopped. I've created a dummy BufferedMediaPlayerActivity (highly simplified for posting here) which contains only key parts and can be used for quick demonstration, it doesn't have MediaController, however, you can check from Logcat to see that the buffer percentage is actually keep increasing instead of rolling over from 0 every time you open new activity and go back.

BufferedMediaPlayerActivity.java:

package com.example;  import android.media.AudioManager; import android.media.MediaPlayer; import android.media.MediaPlayer.OnBufferingUpdateListener; import android.media.MediaPlayer.OnPreparedListener; import android.os.Bundle; import android.util.Log; import android.view.SurfaceHolder; import android.view.SurfaceView;  public class BufferedMediaPlayerActivity extends Activity implements OnPreparedListener, OnBufferingUpdateListener, SurfaceHolder.Callback {    private static final String TAG = "BufferedMediaPlayerActivity";   private int mVideoWidth;   private int mVideoHeight;   private MediaPlayer mMediaPlayer;   private SurfaceView mPreview;   private SurfaceHolder holder;   private String path;   private boolean mIsVideoReadyToBePlayed = false;    @Override   public void onCreate(Bundle icicle) {     super.onCreate(icicle);     setContentView(R.layout.buffered_media_player);     mPreview = (SurfaceView) findViewById(R.id.surface);     holder = mPreview.getHolder();     holder.addCallback(this);     holder.setType(SurfaceHolder.SURFACE_TYPE_PUSH_BUFFERS);     holder.setFixedSize(mVideoWidth, mVideoHeight);     // retrieve httpUrl passed from previous activity.     path = getIntent().getExtras().getString("videoUrl");   }    @Override   public void onDestroy() {     super.onDestroy();     if (mMediaPlayer != null) {       mMediaPlayer.release();       mMediaPlayer = null;     }     mIsVideoReadyToBePlayed = false;   }    private void playVideo() {     mIsVideoReadyToBePlayed = false;     try {       // Create a new media player and set the listeners       mMediaPlayer = new MediaPlayer();       mMediaPlayer.setDataSource(path);       mMediaPlayer.setDisplay(holder);       mMediaPlayer.prepare();       mMediaPlayer.setOnPreparedListener(this);       mMediaPlayer.setOnBufferingUpdateListener(this);       mMediaPlayer.setAudioStreamType(AudioManager.STREAM_MUSIC);     } catch (Exception e) {       Log.e(TAG, "error: " + e.getMessage(), e);     }   }    @Override   public void onPrepared(MediaPlayer mediaplayer) {     Log.d(TAG, "onPrepared called");     mIsVideoReadyToBePlayed = true;     if (mIsVideoReadyToBePlayed) {       mMediaPlayer.start();     }   }    @Override   public void onBufferingUpdate(MediaPlayer mp, int percent) {     Log.i(TAG, "---------------> " + percent);   }    @Override   public void surfaceChanged(SurfaceHolder surfaceholder, int i, int j, int k) {     Log.d(TAG, "surfaceChanged called");   }    @Override   public void surfaceCreated(SurfaceHolder holder) {     Log.d(TAG, "surfaceCreated called");     if (!mIsVideoReadyToBePlayed)       playVideo();     else       mMediaPlayer.start();   }    @Override   public void surfaceDestroyed(SurfaceHolder surfaceholder) {     Log.d(TAG, "surfaceDestroyed called");     mMediaPlayer.pause();   }  } 

buffered_media_player.xml:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> <LinearLayout xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"   android:orientation="vertical"   android:layout_width="match_parent"   android:layout_height="match_parent">    <SurfaceView android:id="@+id/surface"     android:layout_width="200dip"     android:layout_height="160dip"     android:layout_gravity="center">   </SurfaceView>  </LinearLayout> 
like image 138
yorkw Avatar answered Sep 23 '22 14:09

yorkw