Media Capture from DOM Elements

W3C Working Draft

This version:
https://www.w3.org/TR/2020/WD-mediacapture-fromelement-20201202/
Latest published version:
https://www.w3.org/TR/mediacapture-fromelement/
Latest editor's draft:
https://w3c.github.io/mediacapture-fromelement/
Test suite:
https://github.com/web-platform-tests/wpt/tree/master/mediacapture-fromelement
Previous version:
https://www.w3.org/TR/2020/WD-mediacapture-fromelement-20201201/
Editors:
Martin Thomson (Mozilla)
Miguel Casas-Sanchez (Google, Inc.) (Media Element parts.)
Emircan Uysaler (Google, Inc.) (Canvas Element parts.)
Participate:
GitHub w3c/mediacapture-fromelement
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Abstract

This document defines how a stream of media can be captured from a DOM element, such as a video, audio, or canvas element, in the form of a MediaStream [GETUSERMEDIA].

Status of This Document

This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. Other documents may supersede this document. A list of current W3C publications and the latest revision of this technical report can be found in the W3C technical reports index at https://www.w3.org/TR/.

This document is not complete. It is subject to major changes and, while early experimentations are encouraged, it is therefore not intended for implementation.

This document was published by the Web Real-Time Communications Working Group as a Working Draft. This document is intended to become a W3C Recommendation.

GitHub Issues are preferred for discussion of this specification. Alternatively, you can send comments to our mailing list. Please send them to public-webrtc@w3.org (archives).

Publication as a Working Draft does not imply endorsement by the W3C Membership.

This is a draft document and may be updated, replaced or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to cite this document as other than work in progress.

This document was produced by a group operating under the W3C Patent Policy. W3C maintains a public list of any patent disclosures made in connection with the deliverables of the group; that page also includes instructions for disclosing a patent. An individual who has actual knowledge of a patent which the individual believes contains Essential Claim(s) must disclose the information in accordance with section 6 of the W3C Patent Policy.

This document is governed by the 15 September 2020 W3C Process Document.

1. Introduction

This section is non-normative.

This document describes an extension to both HTML media elements and the HTML canvas element that enables the capture of the output of the element in the form of streaming media.

The captured media is formed into a MediaStream [GETUSERMEDIA], which can then be consumed by the various APIs that process streams of media, such as WebRTC [WEBRTC], or Web Audio [WEBAUDIO].

2. Conformance

As well as sections marked as non-normative, all authoring guidelines, diagrams, examples, and notes in this specification are non-normative. Everything else in this specification is normative.

The key words MUST and MUST NOT in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.

This specification defines conformance criteria that apply to a single product: the user agent that implements the interfaces that it contains.

Implementations that use ECMAScript to implement the APIs defined in this specification must implement them in a manner consistent with the ECMAScript Bindings defined in the Web IDL specification [WEBIDL], as this specification uses that specification and terminology.

3. HTML Media Element Media Capture Extensions

The method captureStream is added on HTML [HTML5] media elements. Methods for capture are added to both HTMLMediaElement and HTMLCanvasElement.

Both MediaStream and HTMLMediaElement expose the concept of a track. Since there is no common type used for HTMLMediaElement, this document uses the term track to refer to either VideoTrack or AudioTrack. MediaStreamTrack is used to identify the media in a MediaStream.

WebIDLpartial interface HTMLMediaElement {
    MediaStream captureStream ();
};

Methods

captureStream

The captureStream() method produces a real-time capture of the media that is rendered to the media element.

The captured MediaStream comprises of MediaStreamTracks that render the content from the set of selected (for VideoTracks, or other exclusively selected track types) or enabled (for AudioTracks, or other track types that support multiple selections) tracks from the media element. If the media element does not have a selected or enabled tracks of a given type, then no MediaStreamTrack of that type is present in the captured stream.

A video element can therefore capture a video MediaStreamTrack and any number of audio MediaStreamTracks. An audio element can capture any number of audio MediaStreamTracks. In both cases, the set of captured MediaStreamTracks could be empty.

Unless and until there is a track of given type that is selected or enabled, no MediaStreamTrack of that type is present in the captured stream. In particular, if the media element does not have a source assigned, then the captured MediaStream has no tracks. Consequently, a media element with a ready state of HAVE_NOTHING produces no captured MediaStreamTrack instances. Once metadata is available and the selected or enabled tracks are determined, new captured MediaStreamTrack instances are created and added to the MediaStream.

A captured MediaStreamTrack ends when playback ends (and the ended event fires) or when the track that it captures is no longer selected or enabled for playback. A track is no longer selected or enabled if the source is changed by setting the src or srcObject attributes of the media element.

The set of captured MediaStreamTracks change if the source of the media element changes. If the source for the media element ends, a different source is selected.

If the selected VideoTrack or enabled AudioTracks for the media element change, a addtrack event with a new MediaStreamTrack is generated for each track that was not previously selected or enabled; and a removetrack events is generated for each track that ceases to be selected or enabled. A MediaStreamTrack MUST end prior to being removed from the MediaStream.

Since a MediaStreamTrack can only end once, a track that is enabled, disabled and re-enabled will be captured as two separate tracks. Similarly, restarting playback after playback ends causes a new set of captured MediaStreamTrack instances to be created. Seeking during playback without changing track selection does not generate events or cause a captured MediaStreamTrack to end.

The MediaStreamTracks that comprise the captured MediaStream become muted or unmuted as the tracks they capture change state. At any time, a media element might not have active content available for capture on a given track for a variety of reasons:

  • Media playback could be paused.
  • A track might not have content for the current playback time if that time is either before the content of that track starts or after the content ends.
  • A MediaStreamTrack that is acting as a source could be muted or disabled.
  • The contents of the track might become inaccessible to the current origin due to cross-origin protections. For instance, content that is rendered from an HTTP URL can be subject to a redirect on a request for partial content, or the enabled or selected tracks can change to include cross-origin content.

Absence of content is reflected in captured tracks through the muted attribute. A captured MediaStreamTrack MUST have a muted attribute set to true if its corresponding source track does not have available and accessible content. A mute event is raised on the MediaStreamTrack when content availability changes.

What output a muted capture produces as a result will vary based on the type of media: a VideoTrack ceases to capture new frames when muted, causing the captured stream to show the last captured frame; a muted AudioTrack produces silence.

Whether a media element is actively rendering content (e.g., to a screen or audio device) has no effect on the content of captured streams. Muting the audio on a media element does not cause the capture to produce silence, nor does hiding a media element cause captured video to stop. Similarly, the audio level or volume of the media element does not affect the volume of captured audio.

Captured audio from an element with an effective playback rate other than 1.0 MUST be time-stretched. An unplayable playback rate causes the captured audio track to become muted.

4. HTML Canvas Element Media Capture Extensions

The captureStream method is added to the HTML [HTML5] canvas element. The resulting CanvasCaptureMediaStreamTrack provides methods that allow for controlling when frames are sampled from the canvas.

WebIDLpartial interface HTMLCanvasElement {
    MediaStream captureStream (optional double frameRequestRate);
};

Methods

captureStream

The captureStream() method produces a real-time video capture of the surface of the canvas. The resulting media stream has a single video CanvasCaptureMediaStreamTrack that matches the dimensions of the canvas element.

Content from a canvas that is not origin-clean MUST NOT be captured. This method throws a SecurityError exception if the canvas is not origin-clean.

A captured stream MUST immediately cease to capture content if the origin-clean flag of the source canvas becomes false after the stream is created by captureStream(). The captured MediaStreamTrack MUST become muted, producing no new content while the canvas remains in this state.

Each track that captures a canvas has a [[frameCaptureRequested]] internal slot that is set to true when a new frame is requested from the canvas.

The value of [[frameCaptureRequested]] on all new tracks is set to true when the track is created. On creation of the captured track with a specific, non-zero frameRequestRate, the user agent starts a periodic timer at an interval of 1/frameRequestRate seconds. At each activation of the timer, [[frameCaptureRequested]] is set to true.

In order to support manual control of frame capture with the requestFrame() method, browsers MUST support a value of 0 for frameRequestRate. However, a captured stream MUST request capture of a frame when created, even if frameRequestRate is zero.

This method throws a NotSupportedError if frameRequestRate is negative.

A new frame is requested from the canvas when [[frameCaptureRequested]] is true and the canvas is painted. Each time that the captured canvas is painted, the following steps are executed:

  1. For each track capturing from the canvas execute the following steps:
    1. If new content has been drawn to the canvas since it was last painted, and if the [[frameCaptureRequested]] internal slot of track is set, add a new frame to track containing what was painted to the canvas.
    2. If a frameRequestRate value was specified, set the [[frameCaptureRequested]] internal slot of track to false.

When adding new frames to track containing what was painted to the canvas, the alpha channel content of the canvas must be captured and preserved if the canvas is not fully opaque. The consumers of this track might not preserve the alpha channel.

Note

This algorithm results in a captured track not starting until something changes in the canvas.

Parameter Type Nullable Optional Description
frameRequestRate double
Return type: MediaStream

4.1 The CanvasCaptureMediaStreamTrack

The CanvasCaptureMediaStreamTrack is an extension of MediaStreamTrack that provide a single requestFrame() method. Applications that depend on tight control over the rendering of content to the media stream can use this method to control when frames from the canvas are captured.

WebIDL[Exposed=Window] interface CanvasCaptureMediaStreamTrack : MediaStreamTrack {
    readonly        attribute HTMLCanvasElement canvas;
    undefined requestFrame ();
};

Attributes

canvas of type HTMLCanvasElement, readonly
The canvas element that this media stream captures.

Methods

requestFrame

The requestFrame() method allows applications to manually request that a frame from the canvas be captured and rendered into the track. In cases where applications progressively render to a canvas, this allows applications to avoid capturing a partially rendered frame.

Note

As currently specified, this results in no SecurityError or other error feedback if the canvas is not origin-clean. In part, this is because we don't track where requests for frames come from. Do we want to highlight that?

No parameters.
Return type: undefined

5. Security Considerations

Media elements can render media resources from origins that differ from the origin of the media element. In those cases, the contents of the resulting MediaStreamTrack MUST be protected from access by the document origin.

How this protection manifests will differ, depending on how the content is accessed. For instance, rendering inaccessible video to a canvas element [HTML] causes the origin-clean flag of the canvas to become false; attempting to create a Web Audio MediaStreamAudioSourceNode [WEBAUDIO] succeeds, but produces no information to the document origin (that is, only silence is transmitted into the audio context); attempting to transfer the media using WebRTC [WEBRTC] results in no information being transmitted.

The origin of the media that is rendered by a media element can change at any time. This is even the case for a single media resource. User agents MUST ensure that a change in the origin of media doesn't result in exposure of cross origin content.

6. Change Log

This section will be removed before publication.

Changes since 2015-tbd-tbd

A. Acknowledgements

This document is based on the stream processing specification [streamproc] originally developed by Robert O'Callahan.

B. References

B.1 Normative references

[HTML]
HTML Standard. Anne van Kesteren; Domenic Denicola; Ian Hickson; Philip Jägenstedt; Simon Pieters. WHATWG. Living Standard. URL: https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/
[HTML5]
HTML5. Ian Hickson; Robin Berjon; Steve Faulkner; Travis Leithead; Erika Doyle Navara; Theresa O'Connor; Silvia Pfeiffer. W3C. 27 March 2018. W3C Recommendation. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/html5/
[mediacapture-streams]
Media Capture and Streams. Cullen Jennings; Bernard Aboba; Jan-Ivar Bruaroey; Henrik Boström; Daniel Burnett; Adam Bergkvist; Anant Narayanan. W3C. 4 November 2020. W3C Candidate Recommendation. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/mediacapture-streams/
[RFC2119]
Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels. S. Bradner. IETF. March 1997. Best Current Practice. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2119
[RFC8174]
Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words. B. Leiba. IETF. May 2017. Best Current Practice. URL: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8174
[streamproc]
MediaStream Processing API. Robert O'Callahan. W3C. 31 May 2012. W3C Note. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/streamproc/
[WEBAUDIO]
Web Audio API. Paul Adenot; Hongchan Choi. W3C. 11 June 2020. W3C Candidate Recommendation. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/webaudio/
[WEBIDL]
Web IDL. Boris Zbarsky. W3C. 15 December 2016. W3C Editor's Draft. URL: https://heycam.github.io/webidl/
[WEBRTC]
WebRTC 1.0: Real-Time Communication Between Browsers. Cullen Jennings; Henrik Boström; Jan-Ivar Bruaroey; Adam Bergkvist; Daniel Burnett; Anant Narayanan; Bernard Aboba; Taylor Brandstetter. W3C. 5 November 2020. W3C Candidate Recommendation. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/webrtc/

B.2 Informative references

[GETUSERMEDIA]
Media Capture and Streams. Cullen Jennings; Bernard Aboba; Jan-Ivar Bruaroey; Henrik Boström; Daniel Burnett; Adam Bergkvist; Anant Narayanan. W3C. 4 November 2020. W3C Candidate Recommendation. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/mediacapture-streams/