docs.rodeo

MDN Web Docs mirror

HTMLMediaElement: srcObject property

{{APIRef("HTML DOM")}} 

The srcObject property of the {{domxref("HTMLMediaElement")}}  interface sets or returns the object which serves as the source of the media associated with the {{domxref("HTMLMediaElement")}} , or null if not assigned.

The object can be a {{domxref("MediaStream")}} , a {{domxref("MediaSource")}} , a {{domxref("Blob")}} , or a {{domxref("File")}}  (which inherits from Blob).

[!NOTE] As of March 2020, only Safari has full support for srcObject, i.e. using MediaSource, MediaStream, Blob, and File objects as values. Other browsers support MediaStream objects; until they catch up, consider falling back to creating a URL with {{domxref("URL.createObjectURL_static", "URL.createObjectURL()")}}  and assigning it to {{domxref("HTMLMediaElement.src")}}  (see below for an example). In addition, as of version 108 Chromium supports attaching a dedicated worker MediaSource object by assigning that object’s {{domxref("MediaSourceHandle")}}  instance (transferred from the worker) to srcObject.

Value

A {{domxref('MediaStream')}} , {{domxref('MediaSource')}} , {{domxref('Blob')}} , or {{domxref('File')}}  object (though see the compatibility table for what is actually supported), or null if not assigned.

Usage notes

Older versions of the Media Source specification required using {{domxref("URL.createObjectURL_static", "URL.createObjectURL()")}}  to create an object URL then setting {{domxref("HTMLMediaElement.src", "src")}}  to that URL. Now you can just set srcObject to the {{domxref("MediaStream")}}  directly.

Examples

Basic example

In this example, a {{domxref("MediaStream")}}  from a camera is assigned to a newly-created {{HTMLElement("video")}}  element.

const mediaStream = await navigator.mediaDevices.getUserMedia({ video: true });
const video = document.createElement("video");
video.srcObject = mediaStream;

In this example, a new {{domxref('MediaSource')}}  is assigned to a newly-created {{HTMLElement("video")}}  element.

const mediaSource = new MediaSource();
const video = document.createElement("video");
video.srcObject = mediaSource;

Supporting fallback to the src property

The examples below support older browser versions that require you to create an object URL and assign it to src if srcObject isn’t supported.

First, a {{domxref("MediaStream")}}  from a camera is assigned to a newly-created {{HTMLElement("video")}}  element, with fallback for older browsers.

const mediaStream = await navigator.mediaDevices.getUserMedia({ video: true });
const video = document.createElement("video");
if ("srcObject" in video) {
  video.srcObject = mediaStream;
} else {
  // Avoid using this in new browsers, as it is going away.
  video.src = URL.createObjectURL(mediaStream);
}

Second, a new {{domxref('MediaSource')}}  is assigned to a newly-created {{HTMLElement("video")}}  element, with fallback for older browsers and browsers that don’t yet support assignment of {{domxref('MediaSource')}}  directly.

const mediaSource = new MediaSource();
const video = document.createElement("video");
// Older browsers may not have srcObject
if ("srcObject" in video) {
  try {
    video.srcObject = mediaSource;
  } catch (err) {
    if (err.name !== "TypeError") {
      throw err;
    }
    // Even if they do, they may only support MediaStream
    video.src = URL.createObjectURL(mediaSource);
  }
} else {
  video.src = URL.createObjectURL(mediaSource);
}

Constructing a MediaSource in a worker and passing it to the main thread to play

The {{domxref("MediaSource.handle")}}  property can be accessed inside a dedicated worker and the resulting {{domxref("MediaSourceHandle")}}  object is then transferred over to the thread that created the worker (in this case the main thread) via a {{domxref("DedicatedWorkerGlobalScope.postMessage()", "postMessage()")}}  call:

// Inside dedicated worker
let mediaSource = new MediaSource();
let handle = mediaSource.handle;
// Transfer the handle to the context that created the worker
postMessage({ arg: handle }, [handle]);

mediaSource.addEventListener("sourceopen", () => {
  // Await sourceopen on MediaSource before creating SourceBuffers
  // and populating them with fetched media — MediaSource won't
  // accept creation of SourceBuffers until it is attached to the
  // HTMLMediaElement and its readyState is "open"
});

Over in the main thread, we receive the handle via a {{domxref("Worker.message_event", "message")}}  event handler, attach it to a {{htmlelement("video")}}  via its HTMLMediaElement.srcObject property, and {{domxref("HTMLMediaElement.play()", "play")}}  the video:

worker.addEventListener("message", (msg) => {
  let mediaSourceHandle = msg.data.arg;
  video.srcObject = mediaSourceHandle;
  video.play();
});

Note: {{domxref("MediaSourceHandle")}} s cannot be successfully transferred into or via a shared worker or service worker.

Specifications

{{Specifications}} 

Browser compatibility

{{Compat}} 

In this article

View on MDN