This document defines a set of ECMAScript APIs in WebIDL to allow media to be sent to and received from another browser or device implementing the appropriate set of real-time protocols. This specification is being developed in conjunction with a protocol specification developed by the IETF RTCWEB group and an API specification to get access to local media devices developed by the Media Capture Task Force.
The Editors and active contributors of WebRTC 1.0 intend to publish a Candidate Recommendation soon. Consequently, this is a Request for Comments by the WebRTC Working Group to seek wide review of this document.
The API is based on preliminary work done in the WHATWG.
There are a number of facets to video-conferencing in HTML covered by this specification:
This document defines the APIs used for these features. This specification is being developed in conjunction with a protocol specification developed by the IETF RTCWEB group and an API specification to get access to local media devices [[!GETUSERMEDIA]] developed by the Media Capture Task Force. An overview of the system can be found in [[RTCWEB-OVERVIEW]] and [[RTCWEB-SECURITY]].
This specification defines conformance criteria that apply to a single product: the user agent that implements the interfaces that it contains.
Conformance requirements phrased as algorithms or specific steps may be implemented in any manner, so long as the end result is equivalent. (In particular, the algorithms defined in this specification are intended to be easy to follow, and not intended to be performant.)
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-1]], as this specification uses that specification and terminology.
The EventHandler
interface, representing a callback used for event handlers, and the
ErrorEvent interface are defined in [[!HTML5]].
The concepts queue a task, fire a simple event and networking task source are defined in [[!HTML5]].
The terms event, event handlers and event handler event types are defined in [[!HTML5]].
The terms MediaStream, MediaStreamTrack, and MediaStreamConstraints are defined in [[!GETUSERMEDIA]].
The term Blob is defined in [[!FILEAPI]].
The term media description is defined in [[!RFC4566]].
An RTCPeerConnection instance allows to establish
peer to peer communications. Communications are coordinated via a
signaling channel which is provided by unspecified means, but generally
by a script in the page via the server, e.g. using
XMLHttpRequest [[XMLHttpRequest]] or Web Sockets
[[WEBSOCKETS-API]].
The RTCConfiguration defines a set of parameters to
configure how the peer to peer communication established via
RTCPeerConnection is established or
re-established.
dictionary RTCConfiguration {
sequence<RTCIceServer> iceServers;
RTCIceTransportPolicy iceTransportPolicy = "all";
RTCBundlePolicy bundlePolicy = "balanced";
RTCRtcpMuxPolicy rtcpMuxPolicy = "require";
DOMString peerIdentity;
sequence<RTCCertificate> certificates;
unsigned short iceCandidatePoolSize = 0;
};
iceServers of type sequence<RTCIceServer>An array of objects describing servers available to be used by ICE, such as STUN and TURN server.
iceTransportPolicy of type
RTCIceTransportPolicy,
defaulting to "all"Indicates which candidates the ICE agent is allowed to use.
bundlePolicy of type RTCBundlePolicy, defaulting to
"balanced"Indicates which media-bundling policy to use when gathering ICE candidates.
rtcpMuxPolicy of type RTCRtcpMuxPolicy, defaulting to
"require"Indicates which rtcp-mux policy to use when gathering ICE candidates.
peerIdentity of type DOMStringSets the target peer identity for the RTCPeerConnection. The RTCPeerConnection will not establish a connection to a remote peer unless it can be successfully authenticated with the provided name.
certificates of type sequence<RTCCertificate>A set of certificates that the
RTCPeerConnection uses to authenticate.
Valid values for this parameter are created through calls to
the generateCertificate
function.
Although any given DTLS connection will use only one
certificate, this attribute allows the caller to provide
multiple certificates that support different algorithms. The
final certificate will be selected based on the DTLS handshake,
which establishes which certificates are allowed. The
RTCPeerConnection implementation selects which of
the certificates is used for a given connection; how
certificates are selected is outside the scope of this
specification.
If this value is absent, then a set of certificates are
generated for each RTCPeerConnection
instance.
This option allows applications to establish key continuity.
An RTCCertificate can be persisted in
[[INDEXEDDB]] and reused. Persistence and reuse also avoids the
cost of key generation.
The value for this configuration option cannot change after its value is initially selected.
iceCandidatePoolSize of type
unsigned short,
defaulting to 0Size of the prefetched ICE pool as defined in [[!JSEP]]
enum RTCIceCredentialType {
"password",
"token"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
password |
The credential is a long-term authentication password, as described in [[!RFC5389]], Section 10.2. |
token |
The credential is an access token, as described in [[!TRAM-TURN-THIRD-PARTY-AUTHZ]], Section 6.2. |
The RTCIceServer dictionary is used to describe the
STUN and TURN servers that can be used by the ICE agent to
establish a connection with a peer.
dictionary RTCIceServer {
required (DOMString or sequence<DOMString>) urls;
DOMString username;
DOMString credential;
RTCIceCredentialType credentialType = "password";
};
urls of type (DOMString or
sequence<DOMString>), requiredSTUN or TURN URI(s) as defined in [[!RFC7064]] and [[!RFC7065]] or other URI types.
username of type DOMStringIf this RTCIceServer object represents a
TURN server, then this attribute specifies the username to use
with that TURN server.
credential of type DOMStringIf this RTCIceServer object represents a
TURN server, then this attribute specifies the credential to
use with that TURN server.
credentialType of type RTCIceCredentialType, defaulting to
"password"If this RTCIceServer object represents a
TURN server, then this attribute specifies how
credential should be used when that TURN server
requests authorization.
An example array of RTCIceServer objects is:
[
{ "urls": "stun:stun1.example.net" },
{ "urls": ["turns:turn.example.org", "turn:turn.example.net"],
"username": "user",
"credential": "myPassword",
"credentialType": "password" }
]
As noted in [[!JSEP]], if
the iceTransportPolicy member
of the RTCConfiguration is specified, it defines the ICE candidate policy [[!JSEP]]
the browser uses to
surface the permitted candidates to the application; only these
candidates will be used for connectivity checks.
enum RTCIceTransportPolicy {
"relay",
"all"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
relay |
The ICE agent MUST only use media relay candidates such as candidates passing through a TURN server. This can be used to reduce leakage of IP addresses in certain use cases. |
all |
The ICE agent may use any type of candidates when this value is specified. This will not include addresses that have been filtered by the browser. |
As described in [[!JSEP]], BUNDLE policy affects which media tracks are negotiated if the remote endpoint is not BUNDLE-aware, and what ICE candidates are gathered. If the remote endpoint is BUNDLE-aware, all media tracks and data channels are BUNDLEd onto the same transport.
enum RTCBundlePolicy {
"balanced",
"max-compat",
"max-bundle"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
balanced |
Gather ICE candidates for each media type in use (audio, video, and data). If the remote endpoint is not BUNDLE-aware, negotiate only one audio and video track on separate transports. |
max-compat |
Gather ICE candidates for each track. If the remote endpoint is not BUNDLE-aware, negotiate all media tracks on separate transports. |
max-bundle |
Gather ICE candidates for only one track. If the remote endpoint is not BUNDLE-aware, negotiate only one media track. |
Defined in [[!JSEP]]. The following is a non-normative summary for convenience.
The RtcpMuxPolicy affects what ICE candidates are gathered to support non-multiplexed RTCP.
enum RTCRtcpMuxPolicy {
"negotiate",
"require"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
negotiate |
Gather ICE candidates for both RTP and RTCP candidates. If the remote-endpoint is capable of multiplexing RTCP, multiplex RTCP on the RTP candidates. If it is not, use both the RTP and RTCP candidates separately. |
require |
Gather ICE candidates only for RTP and multiplex RTCP on the RTP candidates. If the remote endpoint is not capable of rtcp-mux, session negotiation will fail. |
These dictionaries describe the options that can be used to control the offer/answer creation process.
dictionary RTCOfferAnswerOptions {
boolean voiceActivityDetection = true;
};
voiceActivityDetection of type
boolean, defaulting to
trueMany codecs and systems are capable of detecting "silence" and changing their behavior in this case by doing things such as not transmitting any media. In many cases, such as when dealing with emergency calling or sounds other than spoken voice, it is desirable to be able to turn off this behavior. This option allows the application to provide information about whether it wishes this type of processing enabled or disabled.
dictionary RTCOfferOptions : RTCOfferAnswerOptions {
boolean iceRestart = false;
};
iceRestart of type boolean, defaulting to
falseWhen the value of this dictionary member is true, the
generated description will have ICE credentials that are
different from the current credentials (as visible in the
localDescription attribute's
SDP). Applying the generated description will restart ICE.
When the value of this dictionary member is false, and the
localDescription attribute has
valid ICE credentials, the generated description will have the
same ICE credentials as the current value from the
localDescription attribute.
dictionary RTCAnswerOptions : RTCOfferAnswerOptions {
};
The [[!JSEP]] specification, as a whole, describes the
details of how the RTCPeerConnection
operates. References to specific subsections of [[!JSEP]] are
provided as appropriate.
Calling new RTCPeerConnection(configuration
) creates an RTCPeerConnection object.
The configuration has the information to find and access the servers used by ICE. There may be multiple servers of each type and any TURN server also acts as a STUN server.
An RTCPeerConnection object has a signaling
state, an ICE gathering state, and an ICE
connection state. These are initialized when the object is
created.
The ICE protocol implementation of an
RTCPeerConnection is represented by an ICE
agent [[!ICE]]. The User Agent MUST respond to the following
events triggered by the ICE Agent:
When the ICE Agent's ICE candidate pool size is
set to a nonzero value and the RTCPeerConnection's
ICE gathering state is new, the User Agent MUST
start gathering ICE addresses and update the ICE gathering
state to gathering.
If the ICE Agent has found one or more candidate pairs
for each MediaStreamTrack that forms a valid
connection, update the ICE connection state to
connected.
When the ICE Agent finishes checking all candidate pairs,
if at least one connection has been found for each media
description, update the ICE connection state to
completed, otherwise to failed.
When the RTCPeerConnection() constructor
is invoked, the user agent MUST run the following steps:
Let connection be a newly created
RTCPeerConnection object.
Initialize connection's ICE Agent.
Set the configuration specified by the constructor's first argument.
Let connection have an [[isClosed]]
internal slot, initialized to false.
Let connection have an [[operations]] internal slot, representing an operations queue, initialized to an empty list.
Set connection's signaling state to
stable.
Set connection's ICE connection state to
new.
Set connection's ICE gathering state to
new.
Set connection's connection state to
new.
Set connection's pendingLocalDescription,
currentLocalDescription,
pendingRemoteDescription and
currentRemoteDescription to
null.
If the certificates value in the
RTCConfiguration structure is non-empty, check that
the expires on each value is in the future. If a
certificate has expired, throw an InvalidAccessError
exception and abort these steps; otherwise, store the certificates.
If no certificates value was specified, one or more
new RTCCertificate instances are generated for use
with this RTCPeerConnection instance.
Return connection.
An RTCPeerConnection object has an
operations queue, [[operations]], which ensures that
only one asynchronous operation in the queue is executed concurrently. If
subsequent calls are made while the returned promise of a previous call
is still not settled, they are added to the queue and executed when all
the previous calls have finished executing and their promises have
settled.
To enqueue an operation, run the following steps:
Let connection be the current
RTCPeerConnection object.
If connection's [[isClosed]] slot is
true, return a promise rejected with an
InvalidStateError.
Let operation be the operation to be enqueued.
Let p be a new promise.
Append operation to [[operations]].
If the length of [[operations]] is exactly 1, execute operation.
Upon fulfillment or rejection of the promise returned by the operation, run the following steps:
If connection's [[isClosed]] slot is
true, abort these steps.
If the promise returned by operation was fulfilled with a value, fulfill p with that value.
If the promise returned by operation was rejected with a value, reject p with that value.
Upon fulfillment or rejection of p, execute the following steps:
If connection's [[isClosed]] slot is
true, abort these steps.
Remove the first element of [[operations]].
If [[operations]] is non-empty, execute the operation represented by the first element of [[operations]].
Return p.
An RTCPeerConnection object has an aggregated
connection state. Whenever the state of an
RTCDtlsTransport or RTCIceTransport
changes or when the [[isClosed]] slot turns true,
the User Agent MUST queue a that runs the following steps:
Let connection be this
RTCPeerConnection object.
Let newState be the value of deriving a new state
value as described by the RTCPeerConnectionState
enum.
If connection state is equal to newState, abort these steps.
Let connection state be newState.
Fire a simple event named connectionstatechange
at connection.
When a new ICE candidate is available or when the ICE gathering process is done , the user agent MUST queue a task to run the following steps:
Let connection be the
RTCPeerConnection object associated with this
ICE Agent.
If connection's [[isClosed]] slot is
true, abort these steps.
If the intent of the ICE Agent is to notify the script that:
A new candidate is available.
Add the candidate to connection's
localDescription and create a
RTCIceCandidate instance to represent the
candidate. Let newCandidate be that object.
The gathering process is done.
Update
connection's ICE gathering state to
completed and let newCandidate be
null.
Fire an event named icecandidate with
newCandidate at connection.
To update the ICE gathering
state of an RTCPeerConnection instance
connection to newState, the User Agent MUST queue
a task that runs the following steps:
If connection's [[isClosed]] slot is
true or connection's ice gathering
state has the same value as newState, abort these
steps.
Set connection's ice gathering state to newState.
Fire a simple event named
icegatheringstatechange at
connection.
To update the ICE
connection state of an RTCPeerConnection
instance connection to newState, the User Agent
MUST queue a task that runs the following steps:
If connection's [[isClosed]] slot is
true or connection's ice connection
state has the same value as newState, abort these
steps.
Set connection's ice connection state to newState.
Fire a simple event named
iceconnectionstatechange at
connection.
To set an RTCSessionDescription
description on an RTCPeerConnection
object connection, enqueue the following steps:
Let p be a new promise.
In parallel, start the process to apply description as described in [[!JSEP]].
If the process to apply description fails for any reason, then user agent MUST queue a task runs the following steps:
If connection's [[isClosed]] slot is
true, then abort these steps.
If elements of the SDP were modified in an invalid way
as specified in [[!JSEP]], then reject
p with an InvalidModificationError
and abort these steps.
If the description's type is wrong for the
current signaling state of connection,
then reject p with a
InvalidStateError and abort these steps.
If the content of description is invalid,
then reject p with an
InvalidAccessError and abort these steps.
For all other errors, for example if
description cannot be applied at the media
layer, reject p with
OperationError.
If description is applied successfully, the user agent MUST queue a task that runs the following steps:
If connection's [[isClosed]] slot is
true, then abort these steps.
If description is set as a local description, and its content matches the state of all tracks and data channels, as defined below, clear the negotiation-needed flag.
NOTE: The principles of pending and current SDP were agreed by the WG but the details in the next steps have not yet been fully reviewed. TODO - review this.
If description is set as a local description, then run one of the following steps:
If description is of type "offer", set
connection.pendingLocalDescription
to description and signaling state to
have-local-offer.
If description is of type "answer", then
this completes an offer answer negotiation. Set
connection's currentLocalDescription
to description and currentRemoteDescription
to the value of pendingRemoteDescription.
Set both pendingRemoteDescription
and pendingLocalDescription
to null. Finally set connection's
signaling state to stable
If description is of type "rollback",
then this is a rollback. Set
connection.pendingLocalDescription
to null and signaling state to
stable.
If description is of type "pranswer",
then set connection. pendingLocalDescription
to description and signaling state to
have-local-pranswer.
Otherwise, if description is set as a remote description, then run one of the following steps:
If description is of type "offer", set
connection.pendingRemoteDescription
attribute to description and signaling
state to have-remote-offer.
If description is of type "answer", then
this completes an offer answer negotiation. Set
connection's currentRemoteDescription
to description and currentLocalDescription
to the value of pendingLocalDescription.
Set both pendingRemoteDescription
and pendingLocalDescription
to null. Finally set connection's
signaling state to stable
If description is of type "rollback",
then this is a rollback. Set
connection.pendingRemoteDescription
to null and signaling state to
stable.
If description is of type "pranswer",
then set connection.pendingRemoteDescription
to description and signaling state to
have-remote-pranswer.
If connection's signaling state
changed above, fire a simple event named
signalingstatechange at
connection.
If description is set as a local description,
connection's ICE gathering state is
new, and description contains
media, then update
connection's ICE gathering state to
gathering.
If the process to apply description resulted in an ICE restart [[!JSEP]], then run the following steps:
If connection is not already gathering,
update
connection's ICE gathering state to
gathering.
If connection's ICE connection
state is completed, update
connection's ICE connection state to
connected.
If description is set as a remote description with new media descriptions [[!JSEP]], the User Agent MUST dispatch a receiver for all new media descriptions.
If connection's signaling state is now
stable, and the negotiation-needed flag is
set, the User Agent MUST queue a task to fire a simple
event named negotiationneeded at
connection and clear the negotiation-needed
flag.
Resolve p with undefined.
Return p.
The task source for the tasks listed in this section is the networking task source.
The RTCPeerConnection interface presented in
this section is extended by several partial interfaces throughout this
specification. Notably, the RTP Media API section, that adds the
APIs to send and receive MediaStreamTrack
objects.
[ Constructor (optional RTCConfiguration configuration)]
interface RTCPeerConnection : EventTarget {
Promise<RTCSessionDescriptionInit> createOffer (optional RTCOfferOptions options);
Promise<RTCSessionDescriptionInit> createAnswer (optional RTCAnswerOptions options);
Promise<void> setLocalDescription (RTCSessionDescriptionInit description);
readonly attribute RTCSessionDescription? localDescription;
readonly attribute RTCSessionDescription? currentLocalDescription;
readonly attribute RTCSessionDescription? pendingLocalDescription;
Promise<void> setRemoteDescription (RTCSessionDescriptionInit description);
readonly attribute RTCSessionDescription? remoteDescription;
readonly attribute RTCSessionDescription? currentRemoteDescription;
readonly attribute RTCSessionDescription? pendingRemoteDescription;
Promise<void> addIceCandidate ((RTCIceCandidateInit or RTCIceCandidate)? candidate);
readonly attribute RTCSignalingState signalingState;
readonly attribute RTCIceGatheringState iceGatheringState;
readonly attribute RTCIceConnectionState iceConnectionState;
readonly attribute RTCPeerConnectionState connectionState;
readonly attribute boolean? canTrickleIceCandidates;
static readonly attribute FrozenArray<RTCIceServer> defaultIceServers;
RTCConfiguration getConfiguration ();
void setConfiguration (RTCConfiguration configuration);
void close ();
attribute EventHandler onnegotiationneeded;
attribute EventHandler onicecandidate;
attribute EventHandler onicecandidateerror;
attribute EventHandler onsignalingstatechange;
attribute EventHandler oniceconnectionstatechange;
attribute EventHandler onicegatheringstatechange;
attribute EventHandler onconnectionstatechange;
};
RTCPeerConnection| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| configuration | RTCConfiguration |
✘ | ✔ |
localDescription of type RTCSessionDescription, readonly ,
nullableThe localDescription
attribute MUST return pendingLocalDescription if it is
not null and otherwise it MUST return currentLocalDescription.
currentLocalDescription of type RTCSessionDescription, readonly ,
nullableThe currentLocalDescription
attribute represents the local
RTCSessionDescription that was successfully
negotiated the last time the RTCPeerConnection
transitioned into the stable state plus any local candidates
that have been generated by the ICE Agent since the offer or
answer was created.
The currentLocalDescription
attribute MUST return the last value that algorithms in this
specification set it to, completed with any local candidates
that have been generated by the ICE Agent since the
offer or answer was created. Prior to being set, it returns
null.
pendingLocalDescription of type RTCSessionDescription, readonly ,
nullableThe pendingLocalDescription
attribute represents a local
RTCSessionDescription that is in the
process of being negotiated plus any local candidates that have
been generated by the ICE Agent since the offer or
answer was created. If the RTCPeerConnection is in
the stable state, the value is null. This attribute is updated
by setLocalDescription.
The pendingLocalDescription
attribute MUST return the last value that algorithms in this
specification set it to, completed with any local candidates
that have been generated by the ICE Agent since the
offer or answer was created. Prior to being set, it returns
null.
remoteDescription of type RTCSessionDescription, readonly ,
nullableThe remoteDescription
attribute MUST return pendingRemoteDescription if it
is not null and otherwise it MUST return currentRemoteDescription.
currentRemoteDescription of type RTCSessionDescription, readonly ,
nullableThe currentRemoteDescription
attribute represents the last remote
RTCSessionDescription that was successfully
negotiated the last time the RTCPeerConnection
transitioned into the stable state plus any remote candidates
that have been supplied via addIceCandidate() since the
offer or answer was created.
The currentRemoteDescription
attribute MUST return the value that algorithms in this
specification set it to, completed with any remote candidates
that have been supplied via addIceCandidate() since the
offer or answer was created. Prior to being set, it returns
null.
pendingRemoteDescription of type RTCSessionDescription, readonly ,
nullableThe pendingRemoteDescription
attribute represents a remote
RTCSessionDescription that is in the
process of being negotiated, completed with any remote
candidates that have been supplied via addIceCandidate() since the
offer or answer was created. If the
RTCPeerConnection is in the stable state, the
value is null. This attribute is updated by setLocalDescription.
The pendingRemoteDescription
attribute MUST return the value that algorithms in this
specification set it to, completed with any remote candidates
that have been supplied via addIceCandidate() since the
offer or answer was created. Prior to being set, it returns
null.
signalingState of type RTCSignalingState, readonlyThe signalingState
attribute MUST return the RTCPeerConnection object's
signaling state.
iceGatheringState of type RTCIceGatheringState, readonlyThe iceGatheringState
attribute MUST return the ICE gathering state of the
RTCPeerConnection instance.
iceConnectionState of type RTCIceConnectionState, readonlyThe iceConnectionState
attribute MUST return the ICE connection state of the
RTCPeerConnection instance.
connectionState of type RTCPeerConnectionState, readonlyThe connectionState
attribute MUST return the connection state of the
RTCPeerConnection instance.
canTrickleIceCandidates of type boolean, readonly , nullableThe canTrickleIceCandidates
attribute indicates whether the remote peer is able to accept
trickled ICE candidates [[TRICKLE-ICE]]. The value is
determined based on whether a remote description indicates
support for trickle ICE, as defined in [[!JSEP]]. Prior to the completion of
setRemoteDescription, this
value is null.
defaultIceServers of type
FrozenArray<RTCIceServer>,
static readonlyThe defaultIceServers attribute provides a list
of ICE servers that are configured into the browser. A browser
might be configured to use local or private STUN or TURN
servers. This method allows an application to learn about these
servers and optionally use them.
This list is likely to be persisent and is the same across origins. It thus increases the fingerprinting surface of the browser. In privacy-sensitive contexts, browsers can consider mitigations such as only providing this data to "trusted" origins (or not providing it at all.)
onnegotiationneeded of type
EventHandlernegotiationneeded.onicecandidate of type EventHandlericecandidate.onicecandidateerror of type
EventHandlericecandidateerror.onsignalingstatechange of type
EventHandlersignalingstatechange.oniceconnectionstatechange of type
EventHandlericeconnectionstatechangeonicegatheringstatechange of type
EventHandlericegatheringstatechange.onconnectionstatechange of type
EventHandlerconnectionstatechange.createOfferThe createOffer method generates a blob of SDP that contains
an RFC 3264 offer with the supported configurations for the
session, including descriptions of the local
MediaStreamTracks attached to this
RTCPeerConnection, the codec/RTP/RTCP options
supported by this implementation, and any candidates that have
been gathered by the ICE Agent. The options
parameter may be supplied to provide additional control over
the offer generated.
As an offer, the generated SDP will contain the full set of
capabilities supported by the session (as opposed to an answer,
which will include only a specific negotiated subset to use);
for each SDP line, the generation of the SDP MUST follow the
appropriate process for generating an offer. In the event
createOffer is called after the session is
established, createOffer will generate an offer
that is compatible with the current session, incorporating any
changes that have been made to the session since the last
complete offer-answer exchange, such as addition or removal of
tracks. If no changes have been made, the offer will include
the capabilities of the current local description as well as
any additional capabilities that could be negotiated in an
updated offer.
Session descriptions generated by createOffer
MUST be immediately usable by setLocalDescription
without causing an error as long as
setLocalDescription is called reasonably soon. If
a system has limited resources (e.g. a finite number of
decoders), createOffer needs to return an offer
that reflects the current state of the system, so that
setLocalDescription will succeed when it attempts
to acquire those resources. The session descriptions MUST
remain usable by setLocalDescription without
causing an error until at least the end of the fulfillment
callback of the returned promise. Calling this method is needed
to get the ICE user name fragment and password.
The value for certificates in the
RTCConfiguration for the
RTCPeerConnection is used to produce a set of
certificate fingerprints. These certificate fingerprints are
used in the construction of SDP and as input to requests for
identity assertions.
If the RTCPeerConnection is configured to
generate Identity assertions by calling
setIdentityProvider, then the session description
SHALL contain an appropriate assertion.
The SDP generation process exposes a subset of the media capabilities of the underlying system, which provides generally persistent cross-origin information on the device. It thus increases the fingerprinting surface of the application. In privacy-sensitive contexts, browsers can consider mitigations such as generating SDP matching only a common subset of the capabilities.
When the method is called, the User Agent MUST run the following steps:
Let connection be the
RTCPeerConnection object on which the
method was invoked.
Return the result of enqueuing the following steps:
Let p be a new promise.
In parallel, start the process to generate an SDP offer, as described in [[!JSEP]].
If the process to generate an SDP offer failed for any reason, or if the identity provider was unable to produce an identity assertion, the User Agent MUST queue a task that runs the following steps:
If connection's [[isClosed]]
slot is true, then abort these
steps.
If the identity provider was unable to
produce an identity assertion, reject
p with a DOMException
object whose name attribute has
the value NotReadableError, and
abort these steps.
Reject p with a
DOMException object whose
name attribute has the value
OperationError.
If an SDP offer, sdpString, was successfully generated, the User Agent MUST queue a task that runs the following steps:
If connection's [[isClosed]]
slot is true, then abort these
steps.
Let offer be a newly created
RTCSessionDescriptionInit
dictionary with its type member
initialized to the string "offer"
and its sdp member initialized to
sdpString.
Resolve p with offer.
Return p.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| options | RTCOfferOptions |
✘ | ✔ |
Promise<RTCSessionDescriptionInit>
createAnswerThe createAnswer method generates an [[!SDP]]
answer with the supported configuration for the session that is
compatible with the parameters in the remote configuration.
Like createOffer, the returned blob contains
descriptions of the local MediaStreamTracks
attached to this RTCPeerConnection, the
codec/RTP/RTCP options negotiated for this session, and any
candidates that have been gathered by the ICE Agent. The
options parameter may be supplied to provide
additional control over the generated answer.
As an answer, the generated SDP will contain a specific configuration that, along with the corresponding offer, specifies how the media plane should be established. The generation of the SDP MUST follow the appropriate process for generating an answer.
Session descriptions generated by createAnswer MUST be
immediately usable by setLocalDescription without
causing an error as long as setLocalDescription is
called reasonably soon. Like createOffer, the
returned description SHOULD reflect the current state of the
system. The session descriptions MUST remain usable by
setLocalDescription without causing an error until
at least the end of the fulfillment callback of the returned
promise. Calling this method is needed to get the ICE user name
fragment and password.
An answer can be marked as provisional, as described in
[[!JSEP]],
by setting the type to
pranswer.
If the RTCPeerConnection is configured to
generate Identity assertions by calling
setIdentityProvider, then the session description SHALL
contain an appropriate assertion.
When the method is called, the User Agent MUST run the following steps:
Let connection be the
RTCPeerConnection object on which the
method was invoked.
Return the result of enqueuing the following steps:
If remoteDescription is
null return a promise rejected with an
InvalidStateError.
Let p be a new promise.
In parallel, start the process to generate an SDP answer, as described in [[!JSEP]].
If the process to generate an SDP answer failed for any reason, or if the identity provider was unable to produce an identity assertion, the User Agent MUST queue a task that runs the following steps:
If connection's [[isClosed]]
slot is true, then abort these
steps.
If the identity provider was unable to
produce an identity assertion, reject
p with a DOMException
object whose name attribute has
the value NotReadableError, and
abort these steps.
Reject p with a
DOMException object whose
name attribute has the value
OperationError.
If an SDP answer, sdpString, was successfully generated, the User Agent MUST queue a task that runs the following steps:
If connection's [[isClosed]]
slot is true, then abort these
steps.
Let answer be a newly created
RTCSessionDescriptionInit
dictionary with its type member
initialized to the string "answer"
and its sdp member initialized to
sdpString.
Unless all non-stopped
RTCRtpTransceivers are
represented in answer, mark
connection as needing
negotiation.
Resolve p with answer.
Return p.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| options | RTCAnswerOptions |
✘ | ✔ |
Promise<RTCSessionDescriptionInit>
setLocalDescriptionThe setLocalDescription
method instructs the RTCPeerConnection to
apply the supplied
RTCSessionDescriptionInit as the local
description.
This API changes the local media state. In order to
successfully handle scenarios where the application wants to
offer to change from one media format to a different,
incompatible format, the RTCPeerConnection
MUST be able to simultaneously support use of both the current
and pending local descriptions (e.g. support codecs that exist
in both descriptions) until a final answer is received, at
which point the RTCPeerConnection can fully
adopt the pending local description, or rollback to the current
description if the remote side rejected the change.
When the method is invoked, the User Agent MUST return the result of setting the RTCSessionDescription indicated by the method's first argument.
[[!JSEP]]
specifies what elements of the SDP returned by
createOffer can be changed before passing it to
setLocalDescription.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| description |
RTCSessionDescriptionInit |
✘ | ✘ |
Promise<void>
setRemoteDescriptionThe setRemoteDescription
method instructs the RTCPeerConnection to
apply the supplied
RTCSessionDescriptionInit as the remote
offer or answer. This API changes the local media state.
When the method is invoked, the User Agent MUST return the result of setting the RTCSessionDescription indicated by the method's first argument.
In addition, a remote description is processed to determine and verify the identity of the peer.
If an a=identity attribute is present in the
session description, the browser validates the identity
assertion..
If the "peerIdentity" configuration is applied to the
RTCPeerConnection, this establishes a
target peer identity of
the provided value. Alternatively, if the
RTCPeerConnection has previously
authenticated the identity of the peer (that is, there is a
current value for peerIdentity ), then this also
establishes a target peer identity.
The target peer identity cannot be changed once set.
Once set, if a different value is provided, the user agent MUST
reject the returned promise with
InvalidModificationError and abort this operation.
The RTCPeerConnection MUST be closed if the
validated peer identity does not match the target peer
identity.
If there is no target peer identity, then
setRemoteDescription does not await the completion
of identity validation.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| description |
RTCSessionDescriptionInit |
✘ | ✘ |
Promise<void>
addIceCandidateThe addIceCandidate()
method provides a remote candidate to the ICE Agent.
This method can also be used to indicate the end of remote
candidates when called with a null value for
candidate. The only members of the argument used
by this method are candidate, sdpMid and sdpMLineIndex; the rest are
ignored. When the method is invoked, the User Agent MUST run
the following steps:
Let candidate be the methods argument.
Let connection be the
RTCPeerConnection object on which the
method was invoked.
If candidate is not null but is
missing values for both sdpMid and
sdpMLineIndex, return a promise rejected with a
TypeError.
Return the result of enqueuing the following steps:
If remoteDescription is
null return a promise rejected with an
InvalidStateError.
Let p be a new promise.
If candidate is null, the
User Agent MUST queue a task that runs the following
steps, and abort these steps:
If connection's [[isClosed]]
slot is true, abort these steps.
For each media description in the last successfully applied remote description, perform the processing for an end-of-candidates indication for said media description as defined in [[TRICKLE-ICE]].
Resolve p with
undefined.
If candidate.sdpMid is not null, run the following steps:
If candidate.sdpMid is not equal to
the mid of any media description in
remoteDescription,
reject p with a DOMException
object whose name attribute has the
value OperationError and stop
processing any more steps.
Else, if candidate.sdpMLineIndex is not null, run the following steps:
If candidate.sdpMLineIndex is equal
to or larger than the number of media descriptions
in remoteDescription,
reject p with a DOMException
object whose name attribute has the
value OperationError and stop
processing any more steps.
In parallel, add the ICE candidate candidate as described in [[!JSEP]].
If candidate could not be successfully added the User Agent MUST queue a task that runs the following steps:
If connection's [[isClosed]]
slot is true, then abort these
steps.
Reject p with a
DOMException object whose
name attribute has the value
OperationError and abort these
steps.
If candidate is applied successfully, the User Agent MUST queue a task that runs the following steps:
If connection's [[isClosed]]
slot is true, then abort these
steps.
Let remoteDescription be
connection's pendingRemoteDescription
if not null, otherwise connection's
currentRemoteDescription.
Add candidate to remoteDescription.
If the ICE Agent is not currently
checking candidate pairs, the ICE Agent MUST
start checking candidate pairs and update
connection's ICE connection state
to checking.
Resolve p with
undefined.
Return p.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| candidate | (RTCIceCandidateInit or
RTCIceCandidate) |
✔ | ✘ |
Promise<void>
getConfigurationReturns a RTCConfiguration object
representing the current configuration of this
RTCPeerConnection object.
When this method is call, the user agent MUST a construct
new RTCConfiguration object to be returned,
and initialize it using the ICE Agent's ICE
transports setting and ICE servers list.
The returned configuration MUST include a
certificates attribute containing the candidate
set of certificates used for connecting to peers. This
attribute contains the certificates chosen by the application,
or the certificates generated by the user agent for use
with this RTCPeerConnection instance.
RTCConfiguration
setConfigurationThe setConfiguration method updates the ICE
Agent process of gathering local candidates and pinging
remote candidates.
This call may result in a change to the state of the ICE Agent, and may result in a change to media state if it results in connectivity being established.
When the setConfiguration method is
invoked, the user agent MUST run the following steps:
Let connection be the
RTCPeerConnection on which the method
was invoked.
If connection's [[isClosed]] slot is
true, throw an InvalidStateError
exception and abort these steps.
Set the configuration specified by the methods argument on connection.
To set a configuration, run the following steps:
RTCConfiguration dictionary to be
processed.RTCPeerConnection object.configuration.peerIdentity is
set and its value differs from the target peer
identity, throw an InvalidModificationError.
configuration.certificates is
set and the set of certificates differs from the ones used
when connection was constructed, throw an
InvalidModificationError.Let the value of
configuration.iceTransportPolicy be the
ICE Agent's ICE
transports setting.
Let the value of
configuration.bundlePolicy be
connection's bundle policy.
Let the value of
configuration.iceCandidatePoolSize be the
ICE Agent's prefetched ICE candidate pool
size as defined in [[!JSEP]].
Let validatedServers be an empty list.
If configuration.iceServers is defined, then
run the following steps for each element:
Let server be the current list element.
If server.urls is a string,
let server.urls be a list
consisting of just that string.
For each url in
server.urls parse
url and obtain scheme name. If
the scheme name is not implemented by the
browser, or if parsing based on the syntax defined in
[[!RFC7064]] and [[!RFC7065]] fails, throw a
SyntaxError and abort these steps.
If scheme name is turn or
turns, and either of
server.username or
server.credential are omitted,
then throw an InvalidAccessError and abort
these steps.
Appendserver to validatedServers.
Let validatedServers be the ICE Agent's ICE servers list.
If a new list of servers replaces the ICE Agent's
existing ICE servers list, no action will be taken until
the RTCPeerConnection's ICE
gathering state transitions to gathering.
If a script wants this to happen immediately, it should do
an ICE restart.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| configuration | RTCConfiguration |
✘ | ✘ |
void
closeWhen the close method is invoked,
the user agent MUST run the following steps:
Let connection be the
RTCPeerConnection object on which the
method was invoked.
If connection's [[isClosed]] slot is
true, abort these steps.
Destroy connection's ICE Agent, abruptly ending any active ICE processing and any active streaming, and releasing any relevant resources (e.g. TURN permissions).
Let senders be the result of executing the
CollectSenders algorithm.
For every RTCRtpSender sender in
senders,
set sender.transport.state and
sender.transport.transport.state to
"closed". If sender.rtcpTransport
is set, set sender.rtcpTransport.state
and sender.rtcpTransport.transport.state
to "closed".
Let receivers be the result of executing
the CollectReceivers algorithm.
For every RTCRtpReceiver receiver in
receivers,
set receiver.transport.state and
receiver.transport.transport.state to
"closed". If receiver.rtcpTransport
is set, set receiver.rtcpTransport.state
and receiver.rtcpTransport.transport.state
to "closed".
All RTCRtpSenders in
senders are now
considered stopped.
All RTCRtpReceivers in
receivers are now
considered stopped.
Set connection's [[isClosed]] slot to
true.
void
RTCPeerConnection for
legacy purposes.
partial interface RTCPeerConnection {
Promise<void> createOffer (RTCSessionDescriptionCallback successCallback, RTCPeerConnectionErrorCallback failureCallback, optional RTCOfferOptions options);
Promise<void> setLocalDescription (RTCSessionDescriptionInit description, VoidFunction successCallback, RTCPeerConnectionErrorCallback failureCallback);
Promise<void> createAnswer (RTCSessionDescriptionCallback successCallback, RTCPeerConnectionErrorCallback failureCallback);
Promise<void> setRemoteDescription (RTCSessionDescriptionInit description, VoidFunction successCallback, RTCPeerConnectionErrorCallback failureCallback);
Promise<void> addIceCandidate ((RTCIceCandidateInit or RTCIceCandidate) candidate, VoidFunction successCallback, RTCPeerConnectionErrorCallback failureCallback);
Promise<void> getStats (MediaStreamTrack? selector, RTCStatsCallback successCallback, RTCPeerConnectionErrorCallback failureCallback);
};
createOfferWhen the createOffer method is called, the user
agent MUST run the following steps:
Let successCallback be the method's first argument.
Let failureCallback be the callback indicated by the method's second argument.
Let options be the callback indicated by the method's third argument.
Run the steps specified by
RTCPeerConnection's createOffer() method with
options as the sole argument, and let
p be the resulting promise.
Upon fulfillment of p with value offer, invoke successCallback with offer as the argument.
Upon rejection of p with reason r, invoke failureCallback with r as the argument.
Return a promise resolved with
undefined.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| successCallback |
RTCSessionDescriptionCallback |
✘ | ✘ | |
| failureCallback |
RTCPeerConnectionErrorCallback |
✘ | ✘ | |
| options | RTCOfferOptions |
✘ | ✔ |
Promise<void>
setLocalDescriptionWhen the setLocalDescription method is called,
the user agent MUST run the following steps:
Let description be the method's first argument.
Let successCallback be the callback indicated by the method's second argument.
Let failureCallback be the callback indicated by the method's third argument.
Run the steps specified by
RTCPeerConnection's setLocalDescription method with
description as the sole argument, and let
p be the resulting promise.
Upon fulfillment of p, invoke
successCallback with undefined as
the argument.
Upon rejection of p with reason r, invoke failureCallback with r as the argument.
Return a promise resolved with
undefined.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| description |
RTCSessionDescriptionInit |
✘ | ✘ | |
| successCallback | VoidFunction |
✘ | ✘ | |
| failureCallback |
RTCPeerConnectionErrorCallback |
✘ | ✘ |
Promise<void>
createAnswerWhen the createAnswer method is called, the
user agent MUST run the following steps:
Let successCallback be the method's first argument.
Let failureCallback be the callback indicated by the method's second argument.
Run the steps specified by
RTCPeerConnection's createAnswer() method with no
arguments, and let p be the resulting
promise.
Upon fulfillment of p with value answer, invoke successCallback with answer as the argument.
Upon rejection of p with reason r, invoke failureCallback with r as the argument.
Return a promise resolved with
undefined.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| successCallback |
RTCSessionDescriptionCallback |
✘ | ✘ | |
| failureCallback |
RTCPeerConnectionErrorCallback |
✘ | ✘ |
Promise<void>
setRemoteDescriptionWhen the setRemoteDescription method is called,
the user agent MUST run the following steps:
Let description be the method's first argument.
Let successCallback be the callback indicated by the method's second argument.
Let failureCallback be the callback indicated by the method's third argument.
Run the steps specified by
RTCPeerConnection's setRemoteDescription method with
description as the sole argument, and let
p be the resulting promise.
Upon fulfillment of p, invoke
successCallback with undefined as
the argument.
Upon rejection of p with reason r, invoke failureCallback with r as the argument.
Return a promise resolved with
undefined.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| description |
RTCSessionDescriptionInit |
✘ | ✘ | |
| successCallback | VoidFunction |
✘ | ✘ | |
| failureCallback |
RTCPeerConnectionErrorCallback |
✘ | ✘ |
Promise<void>
addIceCandidateWhen the addIceCandidate method is called, the
user agent MUST run the following steps:
Let candidate be the method's first argument.
Let successCallback be the callback indicated by the method's second argument.
Let failureCallback be the callback indicated by the method's third argument.
Run the steps specified by
RTCPeerConnection's addIceCandiddate() method with
candidate as the sole argument, and let
p be the resulting promise.
Upon fulfillment of p, invoke
successCallback with undefined as
the argument.
Upon rejection of p with reason r, invoke failureCallback with r as the argument.
Return a promise resolved with
undefined.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| candidate | (RTCIceCandidateInit or
RTCIceCandidate) |
✘ | ✘ | |
| successCallback | VoidFunction |
✘ | ✘ | |
| failureCallback |
RTCPeerConnectionErrorCallback |
✘ | ✘ |
Promise<void>
getStatsWhen the getStats method is called, the user
agent MUST run the following steps:
Let selector be the method's first argument.
Let successCallback be the callback indicated by the method's second argument.
Let failureCallback be the callback indicated by the method's third argument.
Run the steps specified by
RTCPeerConnection's getStats() method with
selector as the sole argument, and let
p be the resulting promise.
Upon fulfillment of p with value report, invoke successCallback with report as the argument.
Upon rejection of p with reason r, invoke failureCallback with r as the argument.
Return a promise resolved with
undefined.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| selector | MediaStreamTrack |
✔ | ✘ | |
| successCallback | RTCStatsCallback |
✘ | ✘ | |
| failureCallback |
RTCPeerConnectionErrorCallback |
✘ | ✘ |
Promise<void>
An RTCPeerConnection object MUST not be garbage
collected as long as any event can cause an event handler to be
triggered on the object. When the object's [[isClosed]] internal
slot is true, no such event handler can be triggered and
it is therefore safe to garbage collect the object.
All RTCDataChannel and
MediaStreamTrack objects that are connected to a
RTCPeerConnection have a strong reference to the
RTCPeerConnection object.
enum RTCSignalingState {
"stable",
"have-local-offer",
"have-remote-offer",
"have-local-pranswer",
"have-remote-pranswer"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
stable |
There is no offeranswer exchange in progress. This is also the initial state in which case the local and remote descriptions are empty. |
have-local-offer |
A local description, of type "offer", has been successfully applied. |
have-remote-offer |
A remote description, of type "offer", has been successfully applied. |
have-local-pranswer |
A remote description of type "offer" has been successfully applied and a local description of type "pranswer" has been successfully applied. |
have-remote-pranswer |
A local description of type "offer" has been successfully applied and a remote description of type "pranswer" has been successfully applied. |
An example set of transitions might be:
stablehave-local-offerhave-remote-pranswerstablestablehave-remote-offerhave-local-pranswerstableenum RTCIceGatheringState {
"new",
"gathering",
"complete"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
new |
The object was just created, and no networking has occurred yet. |
gathering |
The ICE agent is in the process of gathering candidates for this RTCPeerConnection. |
complete |
The ICE agent has completed gathering. Events such as adding a new interface or a new TURN server will cause the state to go back to gathering. |
enum RTCPeerConnectionState {
"new",
"connecting",
"connected",
"disconnected",
"failed",
"closed"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
new |
Any of the RTCIceTransports or
RTCDtlsTransports are in the
new state and none of the transports are in the
connecting, checking,
failed or disconnected state, or all
transports are in the closed state. |
connecting |
Any of the RTCIceTransports or
RTCDtlsTransports are in the
connecting or checking state and none
of them is in the failed state. |
connected |
All RTCIceTransports and
RTCDtlsTransports are in the
connected, completed or
closed state and at least of them is in the
connected or completed state. |
disconnected |
Any of the RTCIceTransports or
RTCDtlsTransports are in the
disconnected state and none of them are in the
failed or connecting or
checking state. |
failed |
Any of the RTCIceTransports or
RTCDtlsTransports are in a
failed state. |
closed |
The RTCPeerConnection object's
[[isClosed]] slot is true.
|
enum RTCIceConnectionState {
"new",
"checking",
"connected",
"completed",
"failed",
"disconnected",
"closed"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
new |
Any of the RTCIceTransports are in the
new state and none of them are in the
checking, failed or
disconnected state. |
checking |
Any of the RTCIceTransports are in the
checking state and none of them are in the
failed or disconnected state. |
connected |
All RTCIceTransports are in the
connected, completed or
closed state and at least one of them is in the
connected state. |
completed |
All RTCIceTransports are in the
completed or closed state and at
least one of them is in the completed state. |
failed |
Any of the RTCIceTransports are in the
failed state. |
disconnected |
Any of the RTCIceTransports are in the
disconnected state and none of them are in the
failed state. |
closed |
All of the RTCIceTransports are in the
closed state. |
Note that if an RTCIceTransport is discarded as
a result of signaling (e.g. RTCP mux or BUNDLE), or created as a result
of signaling (e.g. adding a new media description), the state
may advance directly from one state to another.
callback RTCPeerConnectionErrorCallback = void (DOMException error);
error of type DOMException
callback RTCSessionDescriptionCallback = void (RTCSessionDescription sdp);
sdp of type RTCSessionDescriptionAll methods that return promises are governed by the standard error handling rules of promises. Methods that do not return promises may throw exceptions to indicate errors.
Legacy-methods may only throw exceptions to indicate invalid state
and other programming errors. For example, when a legacy-method is
called when the RTCPeerConnection is in an invalid
state or a state in which that particular method is not allowed to be
executed, it will throw an exception. In all other cases, legacy
methods MUST provide an error object to the error callback.
The RTCSdpType enum describes the type of an
RTCSessionDescriptionInit or
RTCSessionDescription instance.
enum RTCSdpType {
"offer",
"pranswer",
"answer",
"rollback"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
offer |
An |
pranswer |
An |
answer |
An |
rollback |
An If the |
The RTCSessionDescription class is used by
RTCPeerConnection to expose local and remote
session descriptions. Attributes on this interface are mutable for
legacy reasons.
[ Constructor (RTCSessionDescriptionInit descriptionInitDict)]
interface RTCSessionDescription {
readonly attribute RTCSdpType type;
readonly attribute DOMString sdp;
serializer = {attribute};
};
RTCSessionDescriptionRTCSessionDescription()
constructor takes a dictionary argument,
descriptionInitDict, whose content is used to
initialize the new RTCSessionDescription
object. This constructor is deprecated; it exists for legacy
compatibility reasons only.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| descriptionInitDict |
RTCSessionDescriptionInit |
✘ | ✘ |
type of type RTCSdpType, readonlysdp of type DOMString, readonlyInstances of this interface are serialized as a map with entries for each of the serializable attributes.
dictionary RTCSessionDescriptionInit {
required RTCSdpType type;
DOMString sdp;
};
type of type RTCSdpType, requiredsdp of type DOMStringtype is rollback, this member can be
left undefined.Many changes to state of an RTCPeerConnection will
require communication with the remote side via the signaling channel, in
order to have the desired effect. The app can be kept informed as to when
it needs to do signaling, by listening to the
negotiationneeded event.
If an operation is performed on an
RTCPeerConnection that requires signaling, the
connection will be marked as needing negotiation. Examples of such
operations include adding or stopping a track, or adding the first data
channel.
Internal changes within the implementation can also result in the connection being marked as needing negotiation.
The negotiation-needed flag is
cleared when setLocalDescription is called (either
for an offer or answer), and the supplied description matches the state
of the tracks/datachannels that currenly exist on the
RTCPeerConnection. Specifically, this means that
all tracks have an associated section in the local description
with their MSID, and, if any data channels have been created, a data
section exists in the local description.
Note that setLocalDescription(answer) will clear the
negotiation-needed flag only if the offer had a corresponding section
for all the tracks/datachannels on the answerer side. Otherwise, a new
offer by the answerer is still needed, and so the state is not
cleared.
When the RTCPeerConnection connection
is marked as negotiation-needed, and it was not already marked as
such:
stable, schedule a
task to check the negotiation-needed flag and, if still set, fire a
negotiationneeded event on connection.
setLocalDescription or
setRemoteDescription processing, as described
above.This interface describes an ICE candidate.
[ Constructor (RTCIceCandidateInit candidateInitDict)]
interface RTCIceCandidate {
readonly attribute DOMString candidate;
readonly attribute DOMString? sdpMid;
readonly attribute unsigned short? sdpMLineIndex;
readonly attribute DOMString foundation;
readonly attribute unsigned long priority;
readonly attribute DOMString ip;
readonly attribute RTCIceProtocol protocol;
readonly attribute unsigned short port;
readonly attribute RTCIceCandidateType type;
readonly attribute RTCIceTcpCandidateType? tcpType;
readonly attribute DOMString? relatedAddress;
readonly attribute unsigned short? relatedPort;
serializer = {candidate, sdpMid, sdpMLineIndex};
};
RTCIceCandidateRTCIceCandidate() constructor takes
a dictionary argument, candidateInitDict, whose
content is used to initialize the new
RTCIceCandidate object. When run, if
both the sdpMid and
sdpMLineIndex dictionary members are
null, throw a TypeError.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| candidateInitDict | RTCIceCandidateInit |
✘ | ✘ |
candidate of type DOMString, readonlycandidate-attribute as defined
in section 15.1 of [[!ICE]].sdpMid of type DOMString, readonly , nullablenull, this contains the identifier of the
"media stream identification" as defined in [[!RFC5888]] for the
media component this candidate is associated with.sdpMLineIndex of type unsigned short, readonly ,
nullablenull, this indicates the index (starting at
zero) of the media description in the SDP this candidate
is associated with.
foundation of type DOMString, readonlyRTCIceTransports.priority of type unsigned long, readonlyip of type DOMString, readonlyThe IP address of the candidate.
The IP addresses exposed in candidates gathered via ICE
and made visibile to the application in
RTCIceCandidate instances can reveal more
information about the device and the user (e.g. location,
local network topology) than the user might have expected in
a non-WebRTC enabled browser.
These IP addresses are always exposed to the application, and potentially exposed to the communicating party, and can be exposed without any specific user consent (e.g. for peer connections used with data channels, or to receive media only).
These IP addresses can also be used as temporary or persistent cross-origin states, and thus contribute to the fingerprinting surface of the device.
Applications can avoid exposing IP addresses to the
communicating party, either temporarily or permanently, by
forcing the ICE Agent to report only relay candidates
via the iceTransportPolicy member of
RTCConfiguration, or by not signalling
non-relay ICE candidates (e.g. until the user has accepted to
share media).
To limit the IP addresses exposed to the application itself, browsers can offer their users different policies regarding sharing local IP addresses, as defined in [[RTCWEB-IP-HANDLING]].
protocol of type RTCIceProtocol, readonlyudp/tcp).port of type unsigned short, readonlytype of type RTCIceCandidateType, readonlytcpType of type RTCIceTcpCandidateType, readonly ,
nullableprotocol is tcp,
tcpType represents the type of TCP candidate.
Otherwise, tcpType is null.relatedAddress of type DOMString, readonly , nullablerelatedAddress is
null.relatedPort of type unsigned short, readonly ,
nullablerelatedPort is null.Instances of this interface are serialized as a map with entries for the following attributes: candidate, sdpMid, sdpMLineIndex.
dictionary RTCIceCandidateInit {
required DOMString candidate;
DOMString? sdpMid = null;
unsigned short? sdpMLineIndex = null;
};
candidate of type DOMString, requiredsdpMid of type DOMString, nullable, defaulting to
nullsdpMLineIndex of type unsigned short, nullable,
defaulting to nullThe RTCIceProtocol represents the protocol of the ICE candidate.
enum RTCIceProtocol {
"udp",
"tcp"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
udp |
A UDP candidate, as described in [[!ICE]]. |
tcp |
A TCP candidate, as described in [[!RFC6544]]. |
The RTCIceTcpCandidateType represents the type of the ICE TCP candidate, as defined in [[!RFC6544]].
enum RTCIceTcpCandidateType {
"active",
"passive",
"so"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
active |
An active TCP candidate is one for which the
transport will attempt to open an outbound connection but
will not receive incoming connection requests. |
passive |
A passive TCP candidate is one for which the
transport will receive incoming connection attempts but not
attempt a connection. |
so |
An so candidate is one for which the
transport will attempt to open a connection simultaneously
with its peer. |
The RTCIceCandidateType represents the type of the ICE candidate, as defined in [[!ICE]] section 15.1.
enum RTCIceCandidateType {
"host",
"srflx",
"prflx",
"relay"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
host |
A host candidate, as defined in Section 4.1.1.1 of [[!ICE]]. |
srflx |
A server reflexive candidate, as defined in Section 4.1.1.2 of [[!ICE]]. |
prflx |
A peer reflexive candidate, as defined in Section 4.1.1.2 of [[!ICE]]. |
relay |
A relay candidate, as defined in Section 7.1.3.2.1 of [[!ICE]]. |
The icecandidate event of the RTCPeerConnection uses
the RTCPeerConnectionIceEvent interface.
Firing an
RTCPeerConnectionIceEvent event named
e with an RTCIceCandidate
candidate means that an event with the name e,
which does not bubble (except where otherwise stated) and is not
cancelable (except where otherwise stated), and which uses the
RTCPeerConnectionIceEvent interface with the
candidate attribute set to the new ICE candidate, MUST be
created and dispatched at the given target.
When firing an RTCPeerConnectionIceEvent event
that contains a RTCIceCandidate object, it MUST
include values for both sdpMid and sdpMLineIndex. If the
RTCIceCandidate is of type srflx or
type relay, the url property of the event
MUST be set to the URL of the ICE server from which the candidate was
obtained.
[ Constructor (DOMString type, RTCPeerConnectionIceEventInit eventInitDict)]
interface RTCPeerConnectionIceEvent : Event {
readonly attribute RTCIceCandidate? candidate;
readonly attribute DOMString? url;
};
RTCPeerConnectionIceEvent| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| type | DOMString |
✘ | ✘ | |
| eventInitDict |
RTCPeerConnectionIceEventInit |
✘ | ✘ |
candidate of type RTCIceCandidate, readonly ,
nullableThe candidate attribute is the
RTCIceCandidate object with the new ICE
candidate that caused the event.
This attribute is set to null when an event is
generated to indicate the end of candidate gathering.
Even where there are multiple media components,
only one event containing a null candidate is
fired.
url of type DOMString, readonly , nullableThe url attribute is the STUN or TURN URL that
identifies the STUN or TURN server used to gather this
candidate. If the candidate was not gathered from a STUN or
TURN server, this parameter will be set to
null.
dictionary RTCPeerConnectionIceEventInit : EventInit {
RTCIceCandidate candidate;
DOMString url;
};
candidate of type RTCIceCandidateSee the
candidate attribute of the
RTCPeerConnectionIceEvent interface.
url of type DOMStringThe icecandidateerror event of the RTCPeerConnection
uses the RTCPeerConnectionIceErrorEvent
interface.
[ Constructor (DOMString type, RTCPeerConnectionIceErrorEventInit eventInitDict)]
interface RTCPeerConnectionIceErrorEvent : Event {
readonly attribute DOMString hostCandidate;
readonly attribute DOMString url;
readonly attribute unsigned short errorCode;
readonly attribute USVString errorText;
};
RTCPeerConnectionIceErrorEvent| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| type | DOMString |
✘ | ✘ | |
| eventInitDict |
RTCPeerConnectionIceErrorEventInit |
✘ | ✘ |
hostCandidate of type DOMString, readonlyThe hostCandidate attribute is the local IP
address and port used to communicate with the STUN or TURN
server.
On a multihomed system, multiple interfaces may be used to contact the server, and this attribute allows the application to figure out on which one the failure occurred.
If use of multiple interfaces has been prohibited for privacy reasons, this attribute will be set to 0.0.0.0:0 or [::]:0, as appropriate.
url of type DOMString, readonlyThe url attribute is the STUN or TURN URL that
identifies the STUN or TURN server for which the failure
occurred.
errorCode of type unsigned short, readonlyThe errorCode attribute is the numeric STUN
error code returned by the STUN or TURN server
[[STUN-PARAMETERS]].
If no host candidate can reach the server,
errorCode will be set to the value 701
which is outside the STUN error code range.
This error is only fired once per server URL while in
the RTCIceGatheringState of "gathering".
errorText of type USVString, readonlyThe errorText attribute is the STUN reason text
returned by the STUN or TURN server [[STUN-PARAMETERS]].
If the server could not be reached, errorText
will be set to an implementation-specific value providing
details about the error.
dictionary RTCPeerConnectionIceErrorEventInit : EventInit {
DOMString hostCandidate;
DOMString url;
unsigned short errorCode;
USVString statusText;
};
hostCandidate of type DOMStringurl of type DOMStringerrorCode of type unsigned shortstatusText of type USVStringMany applications have multiple media flows of the same data type and
often some of the flows are more important than others. WebRTC uses the
priority and Quality of Service (QoS) framework described in
[[!RTCWEB-TRANSPORT]] and [[!TSVWG-RTCWEB-QOS]] to provide priority and
DSCP marking for packets that will help provide QoS in some networking
environments. The priority setting can be used to indicate the relative
priority of various flows. The priority API allows the JavaScript
applications to tell the browser whether a particular media flow is high,
medium, low or of very low importance to the application by setting the
priority property of
RTCRtpEncodingParameters objects to one of the
following values.
enum RTCPriorityType {
"very-low",
"low",
"medium",
"high"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
very-low |
See [[!RTCWEB-TRANSPORT]], Section 4. |
low |
See [[!RTCWEB-TRANSPORT]], Section 4. |
medium |
See [[!RTCWEB-TRANSPORT]], Section 4. |
high |
See [[!RTCWEB-TRANSPORT]], Section 4. |
Applications that use this API should be aware that often better overall user experience is obtained by lowering the priority of things that are not as important rather than raising the priority of the things that are.
The certificates that RTCPeerConnection instances use to
authenticate with peers use the RTCCertificate
interface. These objects can be explicitly generated by applications
using the generateCertificate method on the connection and
provided in the RTCConfiguration when constructing a
new RTCPeerConnection instance.
The explicit certificate management functions provided here are
optional. If an application does not provide the
certificates configuration option when constructing an
RTCPeerConnection a new set of certificates MUST be
generated by the user agent. That set MUST include an ECDSA
certificate with a private key on the P-256 curve and a signature with a
SHA-256 hash.
partial interface RTCPeerConnection {
static Promise<RTCCertificate> generateCertificate (AlgorithmIdentifier keygenAlgorithm);
};
generateCertificate, staticThe generateCertificate function causes the
user agent to create and store an X.509 certificate
[[!X509V3]] and corresponding private key. A handle to
information is provided in the form of the
RTCCertificate interface. The returned
RTCCertificate can be used to control the
certificate that is offered in the DTLS sessions established by
RTCPeerConnection.
The keygenAlgorithm argument is used to control how
the private key associated with the certificate is generated. The
keygenAlgorithm argument uses the WebCrypto
[[!WebCryptoAPI]]
AlgorithmIdentifier type. The
keygenAlgorithm value MUST be a valid argument to
window.crypto.subtle.generateKey; that is, the
value MUST produce a non-error result when normalized according
to the WebCrypto
algorithm normalization process [[!WebCryptoAPI]] with an
operation name of generateKey and a [[supportedAlgorithms]]
value specific to production of certificates for
RTCPeerConnection. If the algorithm normalization
process produces an error, the call to
generateCertificate MUST be rejected with that
error.
Signatures produced by the generated key are used to
authenticate the DTLS connection. The identified algorithm (as
identified by the name of the normalized
AlgorithmIdentifier) MUST be an asymmetric algorithm
that can be used to produce a signature.
The certificate produced by this process also contains a
signature. The validity of this signature is only relevant for
compatibility reasons. Only the public key and the resulting
certificate fingerprint are used by
RTCPeerConnection, but it is more likely that a
certificate will be accepted if the certificate is well formed.
The browser selects the algorithm used to sign the certificate; a
browser SHOULD select SHA-256 [[!FIPS-180-4]] if a hash algorithm
is needed.
The resulting certificate MUST NOT include information that can be linked to a user or user agent. Randomized values for distinguished name and serial number SHOULD be used.
An optional expires attribute MAY be added to the
keygenAlgorithm parameter. If this contains a
DOMTimeStamp value, it indicates the maximum
time that the RTCCertificate is valid for
relative to the current time. A user agent sets the
expires attribute
of the returned RTCCertificate to the current
time plus the value of the expires attribute.
However, a user agent MAY choose to limit the period over
which an RTCCertificate is valid.
A user agent MUST reject a call to
generateCertificate() with a
DOMException of type NotSupportedError
if the keygenAlgorithm parameter identifies an
algorithm that the user agent cannot or will not use to
generate a certificate for RTCPeerConnection.
The following values MUST be supported by a user agent:
{ name: "RSASSA-PKCS1-v1_5",
modulusLength: 2048, publicExponent: new Uint8Array([1, 0, 1]),
hash: "SHA-256" }, and { name: "ECDSA",
namedCurve: "P-256"
}.
It is expected that a user agent will have a small or even fixed set of values that it will accept.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| keygenAlgorithm | AlgorithmIdentifier |
✘ | ✘ |
Promise<RTCCertificate>
The RTCCertificate interface represents a
certificate used to authenticate WebRTC communications. In addition to
the visible properties, internal slots contain a handle to the
generated private keying materal ([[handle]]) and a certificate ([[certificate]]) that
RTCPeerConnection uses to authenticate with a peer.
interface RTCCertificate {
readonly attribute DOMTimeStamp expires;
readonly attribute FrozenArray<RTCDtlsFingerprint> fingerprints;
AlgorithmIdentifier getAlgorithm ();
};
expires of type DOMTimeStamp, readonlyThe expires attribute indicates the date and time
in milliseconds relative to 1970-01-01T00:00:00Z after which
the certificate will be considered invalid by the browser.
After this time, attempts to construct an
RTCPeerConnection using this certificate fail.
Note that this value might not be reflected in a
notAfter parameter in the certificate itself.
fingerprints of type FrozenArray<RTCDtlsFingerprint>, readonlyA list of certificate fingerprints, one of which is computed with the digest algorithm used in the certificate signature.
getAlgorithmReturns the value of keygenAlgorithm passed in
the call to generateCertificate().
AlgorithmIdentifier
For the purposes of this API, the [[certificate]] slot contains unstructured binary data.
Note that a RTCCertificate might not directly hold
private keying material, this might be stored in a secure module.
The RTCCertificate object can be stored and retrieved
from persistent storage by an application. When a user agent is
required to obtain a structured clone [[!HTML]] of a
RTCCertificate object, it performs the following
steps:
RTCCertificate object to
be cloned.RTCCertificate object.expires attribute from
input to output.The RTP media API lets a web application send and receive
MediaStreamTracks over a peer-to-peer connection. Tracks, when
added to a RTCPeerConnection, result in signaling; when this
signaling is forwarded to a remote peer, it causes corresponding tracks to
be created on the remote side.
The actual encoding and transmission of MediaStreamTracks
is managed through objects called RTCRtpSenders.
Similarly, the reception and decoding of MediaStreamTracks is
managed through objects called RTCRtpReceivers. Each
track to be sent is associated with exactly one
RTCRtpSender, and each track to be received is
associated with exactly one RTCRtpReceiver.
The encoding and transmission of each MediaStreamTrack
SHOULD be made such that its characteristics (width, height and frameRate
for video tracks; volume, sampleSize, sampleRate and channelCount for audio
tracks) are to a reasonable degree retained by the track created on the
remote side. There are situations when this does not apply, there may for
example be resource constraints at either endpoint or in the network or
there may be RTCRtpSender settings applied that
instruct the implementation to act differently.
RTCRtpSenders are created when the application
attaches a MediaStreamTrack to a
RTCPeerConnection, via the addTrack
method. RTCRtpReceivers, on the other hand, are created
when remote signaling indicates new tracks are available, and each new
MediaStreamTrack and its associated
RTCRtpReceiver are surfaced to the application via the
ontrack event. Both RTCRtpSender and
RTCRtpReceiver objects are created by the
addTransceiver method.
A RTCPeerConnection object contains a set of
RTCRtpTransceivers,
representing the paired senders and receivers with some shared state.
This set is initialized to the empty set when the
RTCPeerConnection object is created.
The RTP media API extends the RTCPeerConnection
interface as described below.
partial interface RTCPeerConnection {
sequence<RTCRtpSender> getSenders ();
sequence<RTCRtpReceiver> getReceivers ();
sequence<RTCRtpTransceiver> getTransceivers ();
RTCRtpSender addTrack (MediaStreamTrack track, MediaStream... streams);
void removeTrack (RTCRtpSender sender);
RTCRtpTransceiver addTransceiver ((MediaStreamTrack or DOMString) trackOrKind, optional RTCRtpTransceiverInit init);
attribute EventHandler ontrack;
};
ontrack of type EventHandlerThe event type of this event handler is
track.
getSendersReturns a sequence of RTCRtpSender objects
representing the RTP senders that are currently attached to this
RTCPeerConnection object.
The getSenders
method MUST return the result of executing the
CollectSenders algorithm.
We define the CollectSenders algorithm as follows:
CollectTransceivers algorithm.RTCRtpSender objects in
senderset.
The conversion from the senders set to the sequence
is user agent defined and the order does not have
to be stable between calls.
sequence<RTCRtpSender>
getReceiversReturns a sequence of RTCRtpReceiver
objects representing the RTP receivers that are currently
attached to this RTCPeerConnection
object.
The getReceivers
method MUST return the result of executing
the CollectReceivers algorithm.
We define the CollectReceivers algorithm as follows:
CollectTransceivers algorithm.RTCRtpReceiver objects in
receiverset.
The conversion from the receivers set to the sequence
is user agent defined and the order does not have
to be stable between calls.
sequence<RTCRtpReceiver>
getTransceiversReturns a sequence of RTCRtpTransceiver
objects representing the RTP transceivers that are currently
attached to this RTCPeerConnection
object.
The getTransceivers
method MUST return the result of executing the
CollectTransceivers algorithm.
We define the CollectTransceivers algorithm as follows:
RTCRtpTransceiver objects in this
RTCPeerConnection object's set of
transceivers. The conversion from the transceiver set to the
sequence is user agent defined and the order
does not have to be stable between calls.sequence<RTCRtpTransceiver>
addTrackAdds a new track to the RTCPeerConnection,
and indicates that it is contained in the specified
MediaStreams.
When the addTrack method is invoked,
the user agent MUST run the following steps:
Let connection be the
RTCPeerConnection object on which this
method was invoked.
Let track be the
MediaStreamTrack object indicated by the
method's first argument.
Let streams be a list of
MediaStream objects constructed from the
method's remaining arguments, or an empty list if the method
was called with a single argument.
If connection's [[isClosed]] slot is
true, throw an InvalidStateError
exception and abort these steps.
Let senders be the result of executing the
CollectSenders algorithm.
If an RTCRtpSender for
track already exists in senders,
throw an
InvalidAccessError exception and abort these
steps.
The steps below describe how to determine if an existing
sender can be reused. Doing so will cause future calls to
createOffer and createAnswer to
mark the corresponding media description as
sendrecv or sendonly
and add the MSID of the track added, as defined in
[[!JSEP]].
If any RTCRtpSender object in
senders matches all the
following criteria, let sender be that object, or
null otherwise:
The sender's track is null.
The transceiver kind of the
RTCRtpTransceiver, associated with
the sender, matches track's kind.
The sender has never been used to send. More
precisely, the RTCRtpTransceiver
associated with the sender has always had a direction of
either recvonly or
inactive.
If sender is not null, run the
following steps to use that sender:
Set sender.track to track.
Set sender's [[associated MediaStreams]] to streams.
Enable sending direction on the
RTCRtpTransceiver associated with
sender.
If sender is null, run the
following steps:
Create an RTCRtpSender with track and streams and let sender be the result.
Create an RTCRtpReceiver with track.kind as kind and let receiver be the result.
Create an RTCRtpTransceiver with sender and receiver and let transceiver be the result.
Add transceiver to connection's set of transceivers
A track could have contents that are inaccessible to the
application. This can be due to being marked with a
peerIdentity option or anything that would make
a track
CORS cross-origin. These tracks can be supplied to the
addTrack method, and have an
RTCRtpSender created for them, but
content MUST NOT be transmitted, unless they are also marked
with peerIdentity and they meet the requirements
for sending (see isolated streams and
RTCPeerConnection).
All other tracks that are not accessible to the application MUST NOT be sent to the peer, with silence (audio), black frames (video) or equivalently absent content being sent in place of track content.
Note that this property can change over time.
Mark connection as needing negotiation.
Return sender.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| track | MediaStreamTrack |
✘ | ✘ | |
| streams | MediaStream |
✘ | ✘ |
RTCRtpSender
removeTrackStops sending media from sender. The
RTCRtpSender will still appear in
getSenders. Doing so will cause future calls to
createOffer to mark the media description for
the corresponding transceiver as recvonly or
inactive, as defined in [[!JSEP]].
When the other peer stops sending a track in this manner, an
ended event is
fired at the MediaStreamTrack object.
When the removeTrack method is
invoked, the user agent MUST run the following steps:
Let connection be the
RTCPeerConnection object on which the
RTCRtpSender, sender, is to be
stopped.
If connection's [[isClosed]] slot is
true, throw an InvalidStateError
exception and abort these steps.
Let senders be the result of executing the
CollectSenders algorithm.
If sender is stopped or not in
senders, then abort
these steps.
Stop sender.
Mark connection as needing negotiation.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| sender | RTCRtpSender |
✘ | ✘ |
void
addTransceiverCreate a new RTCRtpTransceiver and add it
to the set of transceivers.
Adding a transceiver will cause future calls to
createOffer to add a media description for
the corresponding transceiver, as defined in [[!JSEP]].
The initial value of mid is null. Setting a new
RTCSessionDescription may change it to a
non-null value, as defined in [[!JSEP]].
When this method is invoked, the User Agent MUST run the following steps:
If the dictionary argument is present, and it has a
streams member, let streams be that
list of MediaStream objects, or an empty
list otherwise.
If the dictionary argument is present, and it has a
sendEncodings member, let
sendEncodings be that list of
RTCRtpEncodingParameters objects, or an empty
list otherwise.
If the first argument is a string, let it be kind and run the following steps:
If kind is not a legal
MediaStreamTrack kind, throw a
TypeError and abort these, and all further
steps.
Let track be null.
If the first argument is a
MediaStreamTrack, let it be track
and let kind be track.kind.
Create an RTCRtpSender with track, streams and sendEncodings and let sender be the result.
If sendEncodings is set, then subsequent
calls to createOffer will be configured to send
multiple RTP encodings as defined in [[!JSEP]]. When
setRemoteDescription is called with a
corresponding remote description that is able to receive
multiple RTP encodings as defined in [[!JSEP]], the
RTCRtpSender may send multiple RTP encodings
and the parameters retrieved via the transceiver's
sender.getParameters() will reflect the
encodings negotiated.
RID values passed into
init.sendEncodings must be composed only of
case-sensitive alphanumeric characters (a-z, A-Z, 0-9) up to
a maximum of 16 characters.
Create an RTCRtpReceiver with kind and
let receiver be the result. This specification
does not define how to configure createOffer
to receive multiple RTP encodings. However when
setRemoteDescription is called with a
corresponding remote description that is able to send
multiple RTP encodings as defined in [[!JSEP]], the
RTCRtpReceiver may receive multiple RTP encodings
and the parameters retrieved via the transceiver's
receiver.getParameters() will reflect the
encodings negotiated.
Create an RTCRtpTransceiver with sender and receiver and let transceiver be the result.
Return transceiver.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| trackOrKind | (MediaStreamTrack or
DOMString) |
✘ | ✘ | |
| init | RTCRtpTransceiverInit |
✘ | ✔ |
RTCRtpTransceiver
dictionary RTCRtpTransceiverInit {
RTCRtpTransceiverDirection direction = "sendrecv";
sequence<MediaStream> streams;
sequence<RTCRtpEncodingParameters> sendEncodings;
};
direction of type RTCRtpTransceiverDirection,
defaulting to "sendrecv"RTCRtpTransceiver.streams of type sequence<MediaStream>When the remote PeerConnection's ontrack event fires
corresponding to the RTCRtpReceiver being
added, these are the streams that will be put in the event.
sendEncodings of type sequence<RTCRtpEncodingParameters>A sequence containing parameters for sending RTP encodings of media.
enum RTCRtpTransceiverDirection {
"sendrecv",
"sendonly",
"recvonly",
"inactive"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
sendrecv |
The RTCRtpTransceiver's
RTCRtpSender sender
will offer to send RTP, and will send RTP if the
remote peer accepts and
sender.getParameters().encodings[i].active
is "true" for any value of i. The
RTCRtpTransceiver's
RTCRtpReceiver will offer to receive RTP,
and will receive RTP if the remote peer accepts.
|
sendonly |
The RTCRtpTransceiver's
RTCRtpSender sender
will offer to send RTP, and will send RTP if the
remote peer accepts and
sender.getParameters().encodings[i].active
is "true" for any value of i. The
RTCRtpTransceiver's
RTCRtpReceiver will not offer to receive
RTP, and will not receive RTP.
|
recvonly |
The RTCRtpTransceiver's
RTCRtpSender will not offer to send RTP,
and will not send RTP. The RTCRtpTransceiver's
RTCRtpReceiver will offer to receive RTP,
and will receive RTP if the remote peer accepts.
|
inactive |
The RTCRtpTransceiver's
RTCRtpSender will not offer to send RTP,
and will not send RTP. The RTCRtpTransceiver's
RTCRtpReceiver will not offer to receive
RTP, and will not receive RTP.
|
Rejection of incoming MediaStreamTrack objects
can be done by the application, after receiving the track, by stopping
it.
To dispatch a receiver for an incoming media description [[!JSEP]], the user agent MUST run the following steps:
Let connection be the
RTCPeerConnection expecting this media.
If connection's [[isClosed]] slot is
true, abort these steps.
Let streams be a list of
MediaStream objects that the sender indicated
the sent MediaStreamTrack being a part of. The
information needed to collect these objects is part of the media
description.
Run the following steps to create a track representing the incoming media description:
Create a MediaStreamTrack object
track to represent the media description. The source
of track is a remote source provided by
connection.
Initialize track.kind attribute to
audio or video depending on the media
type of the media description.
Initialize track.id attribute to the
media description track id.
Initialize track.label attribute to
remote audio or remote video
depending on the media type of the media description.
Initialize track.readyState
attribute to live.
Initialize track.muted attribute to
true. See the MediaStreamTrack
section about how the muted attribute reflects if
a MediaStreamTrack is receiving media data
or not.
Add track to all MediaStream
objects in streams.
This will result in an addtrack event being fired at each MediaStream as described in [[!GETUSERMEDIA]].
Create a new RTCRtpReceiver object
receiver for track, and add it to
connection's set of receivers.
Fire an event named track with transceiver,
track, and streams at the
connection object.
When an RTCPeerConnection finds that a track
from the remote peer has been removed, the user agent MUST follow these
steps:
Let connection be the
RTCPeerConnection associated with the track
being removed.
Let track be the MediaStreamTrack
object that represents the track being removed, if any. If there
isn't one, then abort these steps.
By definition, track is now ended.
A task is thus queued to update track and fire an event.
Queue a task to run the following substeps:
If connection's [[isClosed]] slot is
true, abort these steps.
Remove the RTCRtpReceiver associated
with track from connection's set of
receivers.
Since the beginning of this specification, remote MediaStreamTracks have been created by the setRemoteDescription call, one track for each non-rejected media description in the remote description. This meant that at the caller, MediaStreamTracks were not created until the answer was received, and any media received prior to a remote description (AKA "early media") would be discarded. If any form of remote description is provided (either an answer or a pranswer), this issue does not occur.
If we want to allow early media to be played out, minor changes are necessary. Fundamentally, we would need to change when tracks are created for the offerer; this would have to happen either as a result of setLocalDescription, or when media packets are received. This ensures that these objects can be created and connected to media elements for playout.
However, there are three consequences to this potential change:
For now, we simply make note of this issue, until it can be considered fully by the WG.
The RTCRtpSender interface allows an application
to control how a given MediaStreamTrack is encoded and
transmitted to a remote peer. When setParameters is called
on an RTCRtpSender object, the encoding is changed
appropriately.
An RTCRtpSender can be stopped, which indicates that it will no longer
send any media.
To create an RTCRtpSender with a
MediaStreamTrack, track, a list of
MediaStream objects, streams, and optionally a
list of RTCRtpEncodingParameters objects,
sendEncodings, run the following steps:
Let sender be a new RTCRtpSender
object.
Set sender.track to track.
Let sender have an [[associated
MediaStreams]] internal slot, representing a list of
MediaStream objects that the
MediaStreamTrack object of this sender is associated
with.
Set sender's [[associated MediaStreams]] slot to streams.
Let sender have a [[send encodings]]
internal slot, representing a list of
RTCRtpEncodingParameters objects, initialized to an
empty list.
If sendEncodings is given as input to this algorithm, set the [[send encodings]] slot to sendEncodings.
Return sender.
interface RTCRtpSender {
readonly attribute MediaStreamTrack? track;
readonly attribute RTCDtlsTransport? transport;
readonly attribute RTCDtlsTransport? rtcpTransport;
static RTCRtpCapabilities getCapabilities (DOMString kind);
Promise<void> setParameters (optional RTCRtpParameters parameters);
RTCRtpParameters getParameters ();
Promise<void> replaceTrack (MediaStreamTrack withTrack);
};
track of type MediaStreamTrack, readonly ,
nullableThe track attribute is the track that is
associated with this RTCRtpSender object.
transport of type RTCDtlsTransport, readonly, nullableThe transport attribute is the transport over
which media from track is sent in the form of RTP
packets. Prior to construction of the
RTCDtlsTransport object, the transport
attribute will be null. When BUNDLE is used, multiple
RTCRtpSender objects will share one
transport and will all send RTP and RTCP over
the same transport.
rtcpTransport of type RTCDtlsTransport, readonly ,
nullableThe rtcpTransport attribute is the transport over
which RTCP is sent and received. Prior to construction of the
RTCDtlsTransport object, the rtcpTransport
attribute will be null. When RTCP mux is used
(or BUNDLE, which mandates RTCP mux), rtcpTransport
will be null, and both RTP and RTCP traffic will flow over the
transport described by transport.
getCapabilities, staticThe RTCRtpSender.getCapabilities
method returns the most optimist view on the capabilities of the
system for sending media of the given kind. It does not reserve
any resources, ports, or other state but is meant to provide a
way to discover the types of capabilities of the browser
including which codecs may be supported.
These capabilities provide generally persistent cross-origin information on the device and thus increases the fingerprinting surface of the application. In privacy-sensitive contexts, browsers can consider mitigations such as reporting only a common subset of the capabilities.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| kind | DOMString |
✘ | ✘ |
RTCRtpCapabilities
setParametersThe setParameters method updates how
track is encoded and transmitted to a remote
peer.
When the setParameters method is called, the user
agent MUST run the following steps:
RTCRtpSender object on which
setParameters is invoked.getParameters(), abort these steps
and return a promise rejected with
InvalidModificationError. Note that this also
applies to transactionId.scaleResolutionDownBy parameter in the
parameters argument has a value less than 1.0, abort
these steps and return a promise rejected with
RangeError.RTCRtpSender's internal
transactionId slot to a previously unused
value.undefined.If codecs are reordered, the new order indicates the
preference for sending, with the first codec being the codec with
highest preference. If a codec is removed, that codec will not be
used to send. The effect of reordering or removing codecs lasts
until the codecs are renegotiated. After the codecs are
renegotiated, they are set to the value negotiated, and
setParameters needs to be called again to re-apply
codec preferences.
setParameters does not cause SDP renegotiation
and can only be used to change what the media stack is sending or
receiving within the envelope negotiated by Offer/Answer. The
attributes in the RTCRtpParameters dictionary
are designed to not enable this, so attributes like
ssrc that cannot be changed are read only. Other
things, like bitrate, are controlled using limits such as
maxBitrate, where the User Agent needs to ensure it
does not exceed the maximum bitrate specified by
maxBitrate, while at the same time making sure it
satisfies constraints on bitrate specified in other places such
as the SDP.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| parameters | RTCRtpParameters |
✘ | ✔ |
Promise<void>
getParametersThe getParameters method returns the
RTCRtpSender object's current parameters for
how track is encoded and transmitted to a remote
RTCRtpReceiver. It may used with
setParameters to change the parameters in the
following way:
var params = sender.getParameters();
// ... make changes to RTCRtpParameters
params.encodings[0].active = false;
sender.setParameters(params)
RTCRtpParameters
replaceTrackAttempts to replace the track being sent with another track provided, without renegotiation.
To avoid track identifiers changing on the remote receiving end when a track is replaced, the sender MUST retain the original track identifier and stream associations and use these in subsequent negotiations.
When the replaceTrack method is
invoked, the user agent MUST run the following steps:
RTCRtpSender object on which
replaceTrack is invoked.Let connection be the
RTCPeerConnection object that created
sender.
If sender is stopped, return a promise
rejected with an InvalidStateError.
Let withTrack be the argument to this method.
Let transceiver be the
RTCRtpTransceiver object associated with
sender.
If withTrack.kind differs from the
transceiver kind of transceiver, return a
promise rejected with a TypeError.
If transceiver is not yet associated with a
media description [[!JSEP]], then set
sender's track attribute to
withTrack, and return a promise resolved with
undefined.
Let p be a new promise.
Run the following steps in parallel:
Determine if negotiation is needed to transmit
withTrack in place of the sender's existing
track. Negotiation is not needed if the sender's existing
track is ended (which appears as though the track was
muted). Ignore which MediaStream the track
resides in and the id attribute of the track
in this determination. If negotiation is needed, then
reject p with
InvalidModificationError and abort these
steps.
Have the sender switch seamlessly to transmitting withTrack instead of the sender's existing track, without negotiating.
Queue a task that sets sender's
track
attribute to withTrack, and resolves
p with undefined.
Return p.
Changing dimensions and/or frame rates might not require negotiation. Cases that may require negotiation include:
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| withTrack | MediaStreamTrack |
✘ | ✘ |
Promise<void>
dictionary RTCRtpParameters {
DOMString transactionId;
sequence<RTCRtpEncodingParameters> encodings;
sequence<RTCRtpHeaderExtensionParameters> headerExtensions;
RTCRtcpParameters rtcp;
sequence<RTCRtpCodecParameters> codecs;
RTCDegradationPreference degradationPreference = "balanced";
};
transactionId of type DOMStringAn unique identifier for the last set of parameters applied. Ensures that setParameters can only be called based on a previous getParameters, and that there are no intervening changes.
encodings of type sequence<RTCRtpEncodingParameters>A sequence containing parameters for RTP encodings of media.
headerExtensions of type sequence<RTCRtpHeaderExtensionParameters>A sequence containing parameters for RTP header extensions.
rtcp of type RTCRtcpParametersParameters used for RTCP.
codecs of type sequence<RTCRtpCodecParameters>
A sequence containing the media codecs that an RTCRtpSender
will choose from, as well as entries for RTX, RED and FEC mechanisms.
Corresponding to each media codec where retransmission via RTX is enabled,
there will be an entry in codecs[] with a mimeType
attribute indicating retransmission via "audio/rtx" or "video/rtx", and an
sdpFmtpLine attribute (providing the "apt" and "rtx-time"
parameters).
degradationPreference of type
RTCDegradationPreference,
defaulting to "balanced"When bandwidth is constrained and the
RtpSender needs to choose between degrading
resolution or degrading framerate,
degradationPreference indicates which is
preferred.
dictionary RTCRtpEncodingParameters {
unsigned long ssrc;
RTCRtpRtxParameters rtx;
RTCRtpFecParameters fec;
RTCDtxStatus dtx;
boolean active;
RTCPriorityType priority;
unsigned long maxBitrate;
unsigned long maxFramerate;
DOMString rid;
double scaleResolutionDownBy = 1.0;
};
ssrc of type unsigned longThe SSRC of the RTP source stream of this encoding (non-RTX, non-FEC RTP stream). Read-only parameter.
rtx of type RTCRtpRtxParametersThe parameters used for RTX, or unset if RTX is not being used.
fec of type RTCRtpFecParametersThe parameters used for FEC, or unset if FEC is not being used.
dtx of type RTCDtxStatus
For an RTCRtpSender, indicates whether
discontinuous transmission will be used. Setting it to
disabled causes discontinuous transmission
to be turned off. Setting it to enabled
causes discontinuous transmission to be turned on if
it was negotiated (either via a codec-specific parameter
or via negotiation of the CN codec). This attribute is
ignored by a video sender.
active of type booleanFor an RTCRtpSender, indicates that this
encoding is actively being sent. Setting it to false causes this
encoding to no longer be sent. Setting it to true causes this
encoding to be sent. For an RTCRtpReceiver,
indicates that this encoding is being decoded. Setting it to
false causes this encoding to no longer be decoded. Setting it to
true causes this encoding to be decoded.
priority of type RTCPriorityTypeIndicates the priority of this encoding. It is specified in [[!RTCWEB-TRANSPORT]], Section 4.
maxBitrate of type unsigned longIndicates the maximum bitrate that can be used to send this encoding. The encoding may also be further constrained by other limits (such as maxFramerate or per-transport or per-session bandwidth limits) below the maximum specified here. maxBitrate is the Transport Independent Application Specific Maximum (TIAS) bandwidth defined in [[RFC3890]] Section 6.2.2, which is the maximum bandwidth needed without counting IP or other transport layers like TCP or UDP.
maxFramerate of type unsigned longIndicates the maximum framerate that can be used to send this encoding.
rid of type DOMStringIf set, this RTP encoding will be sent with the RID
header extension as defined
by [[!JSEP]]. The
RID is not modifiable via
setParameters. It can only be set or modified in
addTransceiver or addTrack.
scaleResolutionDownBy of type
double, defaulting to
1.0If the sender's kind is "video", the video's
resolution will be scaled down in each dimension by the given
value before sending. For example, if the value is 2.0, the video
will be scaled down by a factor of 2 in each dimension, resulting
in sending a video of one quarter the size. If the value is 1.0,
the video will not be affected. The value must be greater than or
equal to 1.0.
Usage of the attributes is defined in the table below:
| Attribute | Type | Receiver/Sender | Read/Write |
|---|---|---|---|
| ssrc |
unsigned long
|
Receiver/Sender | Read-only |
| fec |
RTCRtpFecParameters
|
Receiver/Sender | Read-only |
| dtx |
RTCDtxStatus
|
Sender | Read/Write |
| rtx |
RTCRtpRtxParameters
|
Receiver/Sender | Read-only |
| active |
boolean
|
Sender | Read/Write |
| priority |
RTCPriorityType
|
Sender | Read/Write |
| maxBitrate |
unsigned long
|
Sender | Read/Write |
| maxFramerate |
unsigned long
|
Sender | Read/Write |
| scaleResolutionDownBy |
double
|
Sender | Read/Write |
| rid |
DOMString
|
Receiver/Sender | Read-only |
enum RTCDtxStatus {
"disabled",
"enabled"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
disabled |
Discontinuous transmission is disabled. |
enabled |
Discontinuous transmission is enabled if negotiated. |
enum RTCDegradationPreference {
"maintain-framerate",
"maintain-resolution",
"balanced"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
maintain-framerate |
Degrade resolution in order to maintain framerate. |
maintain-resolution |
Degrade framerate in order to maintain resolution. |
balanced |
Degrade a balance of framerate and resolution. |
dictionary RTCRtpRtxParameters {
unsigned long ssrc;
};
ssrc of type unsigned longThe SSRC of the RTP stream for RTX. Read-only parameter.
dictionary RTCRtpFecParameters {
unsigned long ssrc;
};
ssrc of type unsigned longThe SSRC of the RTP stream for FEC. Read-only parameter.
dictionary RTCRtcpParameters {
DOMString cname;
boolean reducedSize;
};
cname of type DOMStringThe Canonical Name (CNAME) used by RTCP (e.g. in SDES messages). Read-only parameter.
reducedSize of type booleanWhether reduced size RTCP [[RFC5506]] is configured (if true) or compound RTCP as specified in [[RFC3550]] (if false). Read-only parameter.
dictionary RTCRtpHeaderExtensionParameters {
DOMString uri;
unsigned short id;
boolean encrypted;
};
uri of type DOMStringThe URI of the RTP header extension, as defined in [[RFC5285]]. Read-only parameter.
id of type unsigned shortThe value put in the RTP packet to identify the header extension. Read-only parameter.
encrypted of type booleanWhether the header extension is encryted or not. Read-only parameter.
dictionary RTCRtpCodecParameters {
unsigned short payloadType;
DOMString mimeType;
unsigned long clockRate;
unsigned short channels = 1;
DOMString sdpFmtpLine;
};
payloadType of type unsigned shortThe RTP payload type. This value can be set to control which codec should be used to send a given encoding.
mimeType of type DOMStringThe codec MIME media type/subtype. Valid media types and subtypes are listed in [[IANA-RTP-2]].
clockRate of type unsigned longThe codec clock rate expressed in Hertz.
channels of type unsigned short, defaulting to
1The number of channels (mono=1, stereo=2).
sdpFmtpLine of type DOMStringThe a=fmtp line in the SDP corresponding to the codec, as defined by [[!JSEP]].
dictionary RTCRtpCapabilities {
sequence<RTCRtpCodecCapability> codecs;
sequence<RTCRtpHeaderExtensionCapability> headerExtensions;
};
codecs of type sequence<RTCRtpCodecCapability>
Supported media codecs as well as entries for RTX, RED and FEC mechanisms.
There will only be a single entry in codecs[] for retransmission
via RTX.
headerExtensions of type sequence<RTCRtpHeaderExtensionCapability>Supported RTP header extensions.
dictionary RTCRtpCodecCapability {
DOMString mimeType;
};
mimeType of type DOMStringThe codec MIME media type/subtype. Valid media types and subtypes are listed in [[IANA-RTP-2]].
dictionary RTCRtpHeaderExtensionCapability {
DOMString uri;
};
uri of type DOMStringThe URI of the RTP header extension, as defined in [[RFC5285]].
The RTCRtpReceiver interface allows an application to
control the receipt of a MediaStreamTrack. When attributes
on an RTCRtpReceiver are modified, a negotiation is
triggered to signal the changes regarding what the application wants to
receive to the other side.
To create an RTCRtpReceiver with kind, kind, and optionally an id string, id, run the following steps:
Let sender be a new RTCRtpSender
object.
Let track be a new MediaStreamTrack
object [[!GETUSERMEDIA]].
Initialize track.kind to kind.
If an id, id, was given as input to this algorithm, initialize track.id to id. (Otherwise the value generated when track was created will be used.)
Initialize track.label to the result of concatenating
the string "remote " with kind.
Initialize track.readyState to live.
initialize track.muted to true. See the
MediaStreamTrack section about how the
muted attribute reflects if a
MediaStreamTrack is receiving media data or not.
Set sender.track to track.
Return sender.
interface RTCRtpReceiver {
readonly attribute MediaStreamTrack track;
readonly attribute RTCDtlsTransport? transport;
readonly attribute RTCDtlsTransport? rtcpTransport;
static RTCRtpCapabilities getCapabilities (DOMString kind);
RTCRtpParameters getParameters ();
sequence<RTCRtpContributingSource> getContributingSources ();
};
track of type MediaStreamTrack, readonly
The track
attribute is the track that is associated with this
RTCRtpReceiver object. Note that
track.stop() is final, although clones
are not affected. Since receiver.track.stop() does
not implicitly stop receiver,
Receiver Reports continue to be sent.
transport of type RTCDtlsTransport, readonly, nullableThe transport attribute is the
transport over which media for the receiver's track
is received in the form of RTP packets. Prior to construction of the
RTCDtlsTransport object, the transport
attribute will be null. When BUNDLE is used, multiple
RTCRtpReceiver objects will share one
transport and will all receive RTP and RTCP over
the same transport.
rtcpTransport of type RTCDtlsTransport, readonly ,
nullableThe rtcpTransport attribute is the
transport over which RTCP is sent and received. Prior to
construction of the RTCDtlsTransport object,
the rtcpTransport attribute will be null. When
RTCP mux is used (or BUNDLE, which mandates RTCP mux),
rtcpTransport will be null, and both RTP and
RTCP traffic will flow over transport.
getCapabilities, staticThe RTCRtpReceiver.getCapabilities
method returns the most optimistic view of the capabilities of
the system for receiving media of the given kind. It does not
reserve any resources, ports, or other state but is meant to
provide a way to discover the types of capabilities of the
browser including which codecs may be supported.
These capabilities provide generally persistent cross-origin information on the device and thus increases the fingerprinting surface of the application. In privacy-sensitive contexts, browsers can consider mitigations such as reporting only a common subset of the capabilities.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| kind | DOMString |
✘ | ✘ |
RTCRtpCapabilities
getParametersThe getParameters method returns the
RTCRtpReceiver object's current parameters for how
track is decoded.
RTCRtpParameters
getContributingSourcesReturns an RTCRtpContributingSource for
each unique CSRC or SSRC received by this RTCRtpReceiver in the
last 10 seconds.
sequence<RTCRtpContributingSource>
The RTCRtpContributingSource objects contain information
about a given contributing source, including the time the most recent
time a packet was received from the source. The browser MUST keep
information from RTP packets received in the previous 10 seconds. Each
time an RTP packet is received, the
RTCRtpContributingSource objects are updated. If the
RTP packet contains CSRCs, then the
RTCRtpContributingSource objects corresponding to
those CSRCs are updated. If the RTP packet contains no CSRCs, then the
RTCRtpContributingSource object corresponding to the
SSRC is updated.
interface RTCRtpContributingSource {
readonly attribute DOMHighResTimeStamp timestamp;
readonly attribute unsigned long source;
readonly attribute byte? audioLevel;
readonly attribute boolean? voiceActivityFlag;
};
timestamp of type DOMHighResTimeStamp, readonlyThe timestamp of type DOMHighResTimeStamp [[!HIGHRES-TIME]], indicating the time of reception of the most recent RTP packet containing the source. The timestamp is defined in [[!HIGHRES-TIME]] and corresponds to a local clock.
source of type unsigned long, readonlyThe CSRC or SSRC value of the contributing source.
audioLevel of type byte, readonly , nullableThe audio level contained in the last RTP packet received from this source. If the source was set from an SSRC, this will be the level value defined in [[!RFC6464]]. If an RFC 6464 extension header is not present, the browser will compute the value as if it had come from RFC 6464 and use that. If the source was set from a CSRC, this will be the level value defined in [[!RFC6465]]. RFC 6464 and 6465 define the level as a integral value from 0 to 127 representing the audio level in negative decibels relative to the loudest signal that they system could possibly encode. Thus, 0 represents the loudest signal the system could possibly encode, and 127 represents silence.
voiceActivityFlag of type boolean, readonly , nullableWhether the last RTP packet received from this source contains voice activity (true) or not (false). Since the "V" bit is supported in [[!RFC6464]] but not [[!RFC6465]], the voiceActivityFlag attribute will only be set for RTP packets received from peers enabling the client-mixer header extension with the "vad" extension set to "on".
The RTCRtpTransceiver interface represents a
combination of an RTCRtpSender and an
RTCRtpReceiver that share a common
mid.
The transceiver kind of an
RTCRtpTransceiver is defined by the kind of the
associated RTCRtpReceiver's
MediaStreamTrack object.
To create an RTCRtpTransceiver with an
RTCRtpReceiver object, receiver, and an
RTCRtpSender object, sender, run the following
steps:
Let transceiver be a new
RTCRtpTransceiver object.
Set transceiver.sender to sender.
Set transceiver.receiver to receiver.
Set transceiver.stopped to false.
Return transceiver.
interface RTCRtpTransceiver {
readonly attribute DOMString? mid;
[SameObject]
readonly attribute RTCRtpSender sender;
[SameObject]
readonly attribute RTCRtpReceiver receiver;
readonly attribute boolean stopped;
readonly attribute RTCRtpTransceiverDirection direction;
void setDirection (RTCRtpTransceiverDirection direction);
void stop ();
void setCodecPreferences (sequence<RTCRtpCodecCapability> codecs);
};
mid of type DOMString, readonly , nullableThe mid
attribute is the mid negotatiated and present in the
local and remote descriptions as defined in
[[!JSEP]].
Before negotiation is complete, the mid value may
be null. If there is no MID value in the remote SDP, and no MID
value was previously assigned, a random value will be created for
the mid as described in [[!JSEP]] when the remote SDP is
set. After rollbacks, the value may change from a non-null value
to null.
sender of type RTCRtpSender, readonlyThe sender attribute is the
RTCRtpSender corresponding to the RTP media
that may be sent with mid = mid.
receiver of type RTCRtpReceiver, readonlyThe receiver attribute is the
RTCRtpReceiver corresponding to the RTP media
that may be received with mid = mid.
stopped of type boolean, readonlyThe stopped attribute indicates that the sender
of this transceiver will no longer send, and that the receiver
will no longer receive. It is true if either stop
has been called or if setting the local or remote description has
caused the RTCRtpReceiver to be stopped.
direction of type RTCRtpTransceiverDirection,
readonlyThe direction attribute indicates the direction of
this transceiver. The value of direction is
independent of the value of encodings[].active since
one cannot be deduced from the other. If the stop()
method is called, direction retains the value it had
prior to calling stop().
setDirectionThe setDirection
method sets the direction of the RTCRtpTransceiver.
Calls to setDirection() do not take effect immediately.
Instead, future calls to createOffer and
createAnswer mark the corresponding media
description as sendrecv, sendonly,
recvonly or inactive as defined in
[[!JSEP]]. Calling
setDirection() sets the negotiation-needed flag.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| direction |
RTCRtpTransceiverDirection |
✘ | ✘ |
void
stopThe stop method stops the
RTCRtpTransceiver. The sender of this
transceiver will no longer send, the receiver will no longer
receive, and the negotiation-needed flag is set.
void
setCodecPreferencesThe setCodecPreferences method overrides the
default codec preferences used by the user agent. When
generating a session description using either
createOffer or createAnswer, the
user agent MUST use the indicated codecs, in the order
specified in the codecs argument, for the media
section corresponding to this RTCRtpTransceiver.
Note that calls to createAnswer will use only the
common subset of these codecs and the codecs that appear in the
offer.
This method allows applications to disable the negotiation of specific codecs. It also allows an application to cause a remote peer to prefer the codec that appears first in the list for sending.
Codec preferences remain in effect for all calls to
createOffer and createAnswer that
include this RTCRtpTransceiver until this method is
called again. Setting codecs to an empty sequence
resets codec preferences to any default value.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| codecs |
sequence<RTCRtpCodecCapability> |
✘ | ✘ |
void
Together, the setDirection, getParameters,
setParameters and replaceTrack methods enable
developers to implement "hold" scenarios.
To send music to a peer and cease rendering received audio:
// Assume we have an audio transceiver and a music track named musicTrack
audio.sender.replaceTrack(musicTrack);
// Set the direction to send-only (requires negotiation)
audio.setDirection("sendonly");
To stop sending audio to a peer:
var params = audio.sender.getParameters();
params.encodings[0].active = false;
audio.sender.setParameters(params);
To re-enable sending audio captured from a microphone as well as rendering of received audio:
//assume we have an audio transceiver and a microphone track named micTrack
audio.sender.replaceTrack(micTrack);
// Set the direction to sendrecv (requires negotiation)
audio.setDirection("sendrecv");
To re-enable sending audio to a peer:
var params = audio.sender.getParameters();
params.encodings[0].active = true;
audio.sender.setParameters(params);
The RTCDtlsTransport interface allows an
application access to information about the Datagram Transport Layer
Security (DTLS) transport over which RTP and RTCP packets are sent and
received by RTCRtpSender and
RTCRtpReceiver objects, as well other data such as
SCTP packets sent and received by data channels. In particular, DTLS adds
security to an underlying transport, and the
RTCDtlsTransport interface allows access to information
about the underlying transport and the security added.
RTCDtlsTransport objects are constructed
as a result of calls to setLocalDescription()
and setRemoteDescription().
interface RTCDtlsTransport {
readonly attribute RTCIceTransport transport;
readonly attribute RTCDtlsTransportState state;
sequence<ArrayBuffer> getRemoteCertificates ();
attribute EventHandler onstatechange;
};
transport of type RTCIceTransport, readonlyThe transport attribute is the underlying
transport that is used to send and receive packets. The
underlying transport may not be shared between multiple active
RTCDtlsTransport objects.
state of type RTCDtlsTransportState, readonlyThe state attribute MUST return the state of the
transport.
onstatechange of type EventHandlerstatechange, MUST be fired any time the
RTCDtlsTransport
state changes.
getRemoteCertificatesReturns the certificate chain in use by the remote side, with
each certificate encoded in binary Distinguished Encoding Rules
(DER) [[!X690]]. getRemoteCertificates() will return
an empty list prior to selection of the remote certificate, which
will be completed by the time
RTCDtlsTransportState transitions to
"connected".
sequence<ArrayBuffer>
enum RTCDtlsTransportState {
"new",
"connecting",
"connected",
"closed",
"failed"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
new |
DTLS has not started negotiating yet. |
connecting |
DTLS is in the process of negotiating a secure connection. |
connected |
DTLS has completed negotiation of a secure connection. |
closed |
The transport has been closed. |
failed |
The transport has failed as the result of an error (such as a failure to validate the remote fingerprint). |
The RTCDtlsFingerprint object includes the hash function
algorithm and certificate fingerprint as described in [[!RFC4572]].
dictionary RTCDtlsFingerprint {
DOMString algorithm;
DOMString value;
};
algorithm of type DOMStringOne of the the hash function algorithms defined in the 'Hash function Textual Names' registry, initially specified in [[!RFC4572]] Section 8. As noted in [[!JSEP]] Section 5.2.1, the digest algorithm used for the fingerprint matches that used in the certificate signature.
value of type DOMStringThe value of the certificate fingerprint in lowercase hex string as expressed utilizing the syntax of 'fingerprint' in [[!RFC4572]] Section 5.
The RTCIceTransport interface allows an
application access to information about the ICE transport over which
packets are sent and received. In particular, ICE manages peer-to-peer
connections which involve state which the application may want to
access. RTCIceTransport objects are constructed
as a result of calls to setLocalDescription()
and setRemoteDescription().
interface RTCIceTransport {
readonly attribute RTCIceRole role;
readonly attribute RTCIceComponent component;
readonly attribute RTCIceTransportState state;
readonly attribute RTCIceGatheringState gatheringState;
sequence<RTCIceCandidate> getLocalCandidates ();
sequence<RTCIceCandidate> getRemoteCandidates ();
RTCIceCandidatePair? getSelectedCandidatePair ();
RTCIceParameters? getLocalParameters ();
RTCIceParameters? getRemoteParameters ();
attribute EventHandler onstatechange;
attribute EventHandler ongatheringstatechange;
attribute EventHandler onselectedcandidatepairchange;
};
role of type RTCIceRole, readonlyThe role
attribute MUST return the ICE role of the transport.
component of type RTCIceComponent, readonlyThe component
attribute MUST return the ICE component of the transport. When
RTP/RTCP mux is used, a single
RTCIceTransport transports both RTP and RTCP
and component is set to "RTP".
state of type RTCIceTransportState, readonlyThe state
attribute MUST return the state of the transport.
gatheringState of type RTCIceGatheringState, readonlyThe gathering
state attribute MUST return the gathering state of
the transport.
onstatechange of type EventHandlerstatechange, MUST be fired any time the
RTCIceTransport
state changes.
ongatheringstatechange of type
EventHandlergatheringstatechange, MUST be fired any time
the RTCIceTransportgathering state
changes.
onselectedcandidatepairchange of type
EventHandlerselectedcandidatepairchange, MUST be fired any
time the RTCIceTransport's selected candidate
pair changes.getLocalCandidatesReturns a sequence describing the local ICE candidates
gathered for this RTCIceTransport and sent in
onicecandidate
sequence<RTCIceCandidate>
getRemoteCandidatesReturns a sequence describing the remote ICE candidates
received by this RTCIceTransport via
addIceCandidate()
sequence<RTCIceCandidate>
getSelectedCandidatePairReturns the selected candidate pair on which packets are sent,
or null if there is no such pair.
RTCIceCandidatePair,
nullable
getLocalParametersReturns the local ICE parameters received by this
RTCIceTransport via setLocalDescription, or
null if the parameters have not yet been
received.
RTCIceParameters, nullable
getRemoteParametersReturns the remote ICE parameters received by this
RTCIceTransport via setRemoteDescription or
null if the parameters have not yet been
received.
RTCIceParameters, nullable
dictionary RTCIceParameters {
DOMString usernameFragment;
DOMString password;
};
dictionary RTCIceCandidatePair {
RTCIceCandidate local;
RTCIceCandidate remote;
};
local of type RTCIceCandidateThe local ICE candidate.
remote of type RTCIceCandidateThe remote ICE candidate.
enum RTCIceTransportState {
"new",
"checking",
"connected",
"completed",
"failed",
"disconnected",
"closed"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
new |
The RTCIceTransport is gathering
candidates and/or waiting for remote candidates to be supplied,
and has not yet started checking. |
checking |
The RTCIceTransport has received at least
one remote candidate and is checking candidate pairs and has
either not yet found a connection or consent checks [[!RFC7675]]
have failed on all previously successful candidate pairs. In
addition to checking, it may also still be gathering. |
connected |
The RTCIceTransport has found a usable
connection, but is still checking other candidate pairs to see if
there is a better connection. It may also still be gathering
and/or waiting for additional remote candidates. If consent
checks [[!RFC7675]] fail on the connection in use, and there are
no other successful candidate pairs available, then the state
transitions to "checking" (if there are candidate pairs remaining
to be checked) or "disconnected" (if there are no candidate pairs
to check, but the peer is still gathering and/or waiting for
additional remote candidates). |
completed |
The RTCIceTransport has finished
gathering, received an indication that there are no more remote
candidates, finished checking all candidate pairs and found a
connection. If consent checks [[!RFC7675]] subsequently fail on
all successful candidate pairs, the state transitions to
"failed". |
failed |
The RTCIceTransport has finished
gathering, received an indication that there are no more remote
candidates, finished checking all candidate pairs, and all pairs
have either failed connectivity checks or have lost consent. |
disconnected |
The ICE agent has determined that connectivity is currently
lost for this RTCIceTransport. This is more
aggressive than failed, and may trigger
intermittently (and resolve itself without action) on a flaky
network. The way this state is determined is implementation
dependent. Examples include:
RTCIceTransport has
finished checking all existing candidates pairs and failed to find
a connection (or consent checks [[!RFC7675]] once successful, have
now failed), but it is still gathering and/or waiting for
additional remote candidates. |
closed |
The RTCIceTransport has shut down and is
no longer responding to STUN requests. |
The failed and completed states require an
indication that there are no additional remote candidates. This can be
indicated either by canTrickleIceCandidates being set to
false, or the processing of an end-of-candidates indication
as described in [[!JSEP]].
Some example transitions might be:
RTCIceTransport first created, as a result of
setLocalDescription or setRemoteDescription):
newnew, remote candidates received):
checkingchecking, found usable connection):
connectedchecking, checks fail but gathering still in
progress): disconnectedchecking, gave up): faileddisconnected, new local candidates):
checkingconnected, finished all checks):
completedcompleted, lost connectivity):
disconnectednewRTCPeerConnection.close(): closedenum RTCIceRole {
"controlling",
"controlled"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
controlling |
A controlling agent as defined by [[!ICE]], Section 3. |
controlled |
A controlled agent as defined by [[!ICE]], Section 3. |
enum RTCIceComponent {
"RTP",
"RTCP"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
RTP |
The ICE Transport is used for RTP (or RTP/RTCP-multiplexing), as defined in [[!ICE]], Section 4.1.1.1. Protocols multiplexed with RTP (e.g. data channel) share its component ID. |
RTCP |
The ICE Transport is used for RTCP as defined by [[!ICE]], Section 4.1.1.1. |
The track event uses the
RTCTrackEvent interface.
Firing an
RTCTrackEvent event named e with an
RTCRtpReceiver receiver, a
MediaStreamTrack track and a
MediaStream[] streams, means that an event with
the name e, which does not bubble (except where otherwise
stated) and is not cancelable (except where otherwise stated), and which
uses the RTCTrackEvent interface with the
receiver attribute set to
receiver, track
attribute set to track, streams attribute set to streams,
MUST be created and dispatched at the given target.
[ Constructor (DOMString type, RTCTrackEventInit eventInitDict)]
interface RTCTrackEvent : Event {
readonly attribute RTCRtpReceiver receiver;
readonly attribute MediaStreamTrack track;
readonly attribute FrozenArray<MediaStream> streams;
readonly attribute RTCRtpTransceiver transceiver;
};
RTCTrackEvent| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| type | DOMString |
✘ | ✘ | |
| eventInitDict | RTCTrackEventInit |
✘ | ✘ |
receiver of type RTCRtpReceiver, readonlyThe receiver attribute
represents the RTCRtpReceiver object
associated with the event.
track of type MediaStreamTrack, readonlyThe track attribute represents the
MediaStreamTrack object that is associated
with the RTCRtpReceiver identified by
receiver.
streams of type FrozenArray<MediaStream>,
readonlyThe streams attribute returns an array
of MediaStream objects representing the
MediaStreams that this event's
track is a part of.
transceiver of type RTCRtpTransceiver, readonlyThe transceiver
attribute represents the RTCRtpTransceiver
object associated with the event.
dictionary RTCTrackEventInit : EventInit {
required RTCRtpReceiver receiver;
required MediaStreamTrack track;
sequence<MediaStream> streams = [];
required RTCRtpTransceiver transceiver;
};
receiver of type RTCRtpReceiver, requiredThe receiver attribute represents the
RTCRtpReceiver object associated with the
event.
track of type MediaStreamTrack, requiredThe track attribute represents the
MediaStreamTrack object that is associated
with the RTCRtpReceiver identified by
receiver.
streams of type sequence<MediaStream>,
defaulting to []The streams attribute returns an array of
MediaStream objects representing the
MediaStreams that this event's
track is a part of.
transceiver of type RTCRtpTransceiver, requiredThe transceiver attribute represents the
RTCRtpTransceiver object associated with the
event.
The Peer-to-peer Data API lets a web application send and receive generic application data peer-to-peer. The API for sending and receiving data models the behavior of WebSockets [[WEBSOCKETS-API]].
The Peer-to-peer data API extends the
RTCPeerConnection interface as described below.
partial interface RTCPeerConnection {
readonly attribute RTCSctpTransport? sctp;
RTCDataChannel createDataChannel ([TreatNullAs=EmptyString] USVString label, optional RTCDataChannelInit dataChannelDict);
attribute EventHandler ondatachannel;
};
sctp of type RTCSctpTransport, readonly ,
nullableThe SCTP transport over which SCTP data is sent and received. If SCTP has not been negotiated, the value is null.
ondatachannel of type EventHandlerdatachannel.createDataChannelCreates a new RTCDataChannel object with
the given label. The RTCDataChannelInit
dictionary can be used to configure properties of the underlying
channel such as data reliability.
When the createDataChannel
method is invoked, the user agent MUST run the following
steps.
Let connection be the
RTCPeerConnection object on which the
method is invoked.
If connection's [[isClosed]] slot is
true, throw an InvalidStateError
exception and abort these steps.
Let channel be a newly created
RTCDataChannel object.
Initialize channel's label attribute to the value of
the first argument.
If the second (dictionary) argument is present, set
channel's ordered, maxPacketLifeTime,
maxRetransmits,
protocol,
negotiated and
id attributes
to the values of their corresponding dictionary members (if
present in the dictionary).
negotiated is false and label
is longer than 65535 bytes long, throw a
TypeError.
negotiated is false and
protocol is longer than 65535 bytes long,
throw
a TypeError.
If both the maxPacketLifeTime and
maxRetransmits
attributes are set (not null), then throw a
SyntaxError exception and abort these steps.
If an attribute, either maxPacketLifeTime or
maxRetransmits,
has been set to indicate unreliable mode, and that value
exceeds the maximum value supported by the user agent, the
value MUST be set to the user agents maximum value.
If id
attribute is uninitialized (not set via the dictionary),
initialize it to a value generated by the user agent,
according to the WebRTC DataChannel Protocol specification,
and skip to the next step. Otherwise, if the value of the
id attribute is
taken by an existing RTCDataChannel,
throw a ResourceInUse exception and abort these
steps.
Return channel and continue the following steps in the background.
Create channel's associated underlying data transport and configure it according to the relevant properties of channel.
If channel was the first RTCDataChannel created on connection, mark connection as needing negotiation.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| label | USVString |
✘ | ✘ | |
| dataChannelDict | RTCDataChannelInit |
✘ | ✔ |
RTCDataChannel
The RTCSctpTransport interface allows an
application access to information about the SCTP data channels tied to
a particular SCTP association.
interface RTCSctpTransport {
readonly attribute RTCDtlsTransport transport;
readonly attribute unsigned long maxMessageSize;
};
transport of type RTCDtlsTransport, readonlyThe transport over which all SCTP packets for data channels will be sent and received.
maxMessageSize of type unsigned long, readonlyThe maximum size of data that can be passed to
RTCDataChannel's send() method.
The RTCDataChannel interface represents a
bi-directional data channel between two peers. A
RTCDataChannel is created via a factory method on an
RTCPeerConnection object. The messages sent between
the browsers are described in [[!RTCWEB-DATA]] and
[[!RTCWEB-DATA-PROTOCOL]].
There are two ways to establish a connection with
RTCDataChannel. The first way is to simply create a
RTCDataChannel at one of the peers with the
negotiated
RTCDataChannelInit dictionary member unset or set to
its default value false. This will announce the new channel in-band and
trigger a RTCDataChannelEvent with the corresponding
RTCDataChannel object at the other peer. The second
way is to let the application negotiate the
RTCDataChannel. To do this, create a
RTCDataChannel object with the negotiated
RTCDataChannelInit dictionary member set to true, and
signal out-of-band (e.g. via a web server) to the other side that it
SHOULD create a corresponding RTCDataChannel with the
negotiated
RTCDataChannelInit dictionary member set to true and
the same id. This will
connect the two separately created RTCDataChannel
objects. The second way makes it possible to create channels with
asymmetric properties and to create channels in a declarative way by
specifying matching ids.
Each RTCDataChannel has an associated
underlying data transport that is
used to transport actual data to the other peer. The transport properties
of the underlying data transport, such as in order delivery
settings and reliability mode, are configured by the peer as the channel
is created. The properties of a channel cannot change after the channel
has been created. The actual wire protocol between the peers is specified
by the WebRTC DataChannel Protocol specification [[RTCWEB-DATA]].
A RTCDataChannel can be configured to operate in
different reliability modes. A reliable channel ensures that the data is
delivered at the other peer through retransmissions. An unreliable
channel is configured to either limit the number of retransmissions (
maxRetransmits ) or set
a time during which transmissions (including retransmissions) are allowed
( maxPacketLifeTime ).
These properties can not be used simultaneously and an attempt to do so
will result in an error. Not setting any of these properties results in a
reliable channel.
A RTCDataChannel, created with createDataChannel or dispatched via a
RTCDataChannelEvent, MUST initially be in the
connecting state. When the
RTCDataChannel object's underlying data
transport is ready, the user agent MUST announce the
RTCDataChannel as open.
When the user agent is to announce a RTCDataChannel as
open, the user agent MUST queue a task to run the following
steps:
If the associated RTCPeerConnection object's
[[isClosed]] slot is true, abort these steps.
Let channel be the RTCDataChannel
object to be announced.
Set channel's readyState attribute to
open.
Fire a simple event named open at
channel.
When an underlying data transport is to be announced (the other
peer created a channel with negotiated unset or set to false), the
user agent of the peer that did not initiate the creation process MUST
queue a task to run the following steps:
If the associated RTCPeerConnection object's
[[isClosed]] slot is true, abort these steps.
Let channel be a newly created
RTCDataChannel object.
Let configuration be an information bundle received from the other peer as a part of the process to establish the underlying data transport described by the WebRTC DataChannel Protocol specification [[!RTCWEB-DATA-PROTOCOL]].
Initialize channel's label, ordered, maxPacketLifeTime, maxRetransmits, protocol, negotiated and id attributes to their corresponding
values in configuration.
Set channel's readyState attribute to
connecting.
Fire a datachannel event named
datachannel with channel at the
RTCPeerConnection object.
An RTCDataChannel object's underlying data
transport may be torn down in a non-abrupt manner by running the
closing procedure. When
that happens the user agent MUST, unless the procedure was initiated by
the close method, queue a
task that sets the object's readyState attribute to closing.
This will eventually render the data transport closed.
When a RTCDataChannel object's underlying data
transport has been closed, the
user agent MUST queue a task to run the following steps:
Let channel be the RTCDataChannel
object whose transport was
closed.
Set channel's readyState attribute to
closed.
If the transport was closed with an error, fire an NetworkError event at channel.
Fire a simple event named close at
channel.
interface RTCDataChannel : EventTarget {
readonly attribute USVString label;
readonly attribute boolean ordered;
readonly attribute unsigned short? maxPacketLifeTime;
readonly attribute unsigned short? maxRetransmits;
readonly attribute USVString protocol;
readonly attribute boolean negotiated;
readonly attribute unsigned short id;
readonly attribute RTCDataChannelState readyState;
readonly attribute unsigned long bufferedAmount;
attribute unsigned long bufferedAmountLowThreshold;
attribute EventHandler onopen;
attribute EventHandler onbufferedamountlow;
attribute EventHandler onerror;
attribute EventHandler onclose;
void close ();
attribute EventHandler onmessage;
attribute DOMString binaryType;
void send (USVString data);
void send (Blob data);
void send (ArrayBuffer data);
void send (ArrayBufferView data);
};
label of type USVString, readonlyThe label
attribute represents a label that can be used to distinguish this
RTCDataChannel object from other
RTCDataChannel objects. Scripts are allowed
to create multiple RTCDataChannel objects
with the same label. The attribute MUST return the value to which
it was set when the RTCDataChannel object was
created.
ordered of type boolean, readonlyThe ordered attribute
returns true if the RTCDataChannel is
ordered, and false if other of order delivery is allowed. The
attribute MUST be initialized to true by default and MUST return
the value to which it was set when the
RTCDataChannel was created.
maxPacketLifeTime of type unsigned short, readonly ,
nullableThe maxPacketLifeTime
attribute returns the length of the time window (in milliseconds)
during which transmissions and retransmissions may occur in
unreliable mode, or null if unset. The attribute MUST be
initialized to null by default and MUST return the value to which
it was set when the RTCDataChannel was
created.
maxRetransmits of type unsigned short, readonly ,
nullableThe maxRetransmits
attribute returns the maximum number of retransmissions that are
attempted in unreliable mode, or null if unset. The attribute
MUST be initialized to null by default and MUST return the value
to which it was set when the RTCDataChannel
was created.
protocol of type USVString, readonlyThe protocol attribute
returns the name of the sub-protocol used with this
RTCDataChannel if any, or the empty string
otherwise. The attribute MUST be initialized to the empty string
by default and MUST return the value to which it was set when the
RTCDataChannel was created.
negotiated of type boolean, readonlyThe negotiated
attribute returns true if this RTCDataChannel
was negotiated by the application, or false otherwise. The
attribute MUST be initialized to false by default and MUST return
the value to which it was set when the
RTCDataChannel was created.
id of type unsigned short, readonlyThe id attribute returns the id for this
RTCDataChannel. The id was either assigned by
the user agent at channel creation time or selected by the
script. The attribute MUST return the value to which it was set
when the RTCDataChannel was created.
readyState of type RTCDataChannelState, readonlyThe readyState
attribute represents the state of the RTCDataChannel
object. It MUST return the value to which the user agent last set
it (as defined by the processing model algorithms).
bufferedAmount of type unsigned long, readonlyThe bufferedAmount
attribute MUST return the number of bytes of application data
(UTF-8 text and binary data) that have been queued using
send() but that, as
of the last time the event loop started executing a task, had not
yet been transmitted to the network. (This thus includes any text
sent during the execution of the current task, regardless of
whether the user agent is able to transmit text asynchronously
with script execution.) This does not include framing overhead
incurred by the protocol, or buffering done by the operating
system or network hardware. If the channel is closed, this
attribute's value will only increase with each call to the
send() method (the
attribute does not reset to zero once the channel closes).
bufferedAmountLowThreshold of type unsigned longThe bufferedAmountLowThreshold
attribute sets the threshold at which the bufferedAmount is considered to be
low. When the bufferedAmount decreases from above
this threshold to equal or below it, the bufferedamountlow
event fires. The bufferedAmountLowThreshold is
initially zero on each new RTCDataChannel,
but the application may change its value at any time.
onopen of type EventHandleropen.onbufferedamountlow of type
EventHandlerbufferedamountlow.onerror of type EventHandlererror.onclose of type EventHandlerclose.onmessage of type EventHandlermessage.binaryType of type DOMStringThe binaryType
attribute MUST, on getting, return the value to which it was last
set. On setting, the user agent MUST set the IDL attribute to the
new value. When a RTCDataChannel object is
created, the binaryType attribute MUST be
initialized to the string "blob".
This attribute controls how binary data is exposed to scripts. See the [[WEBSOCKETS-API]] for more information.
closeCloses the RTCDataChannel. It may be
called regardless of whether the
RTCDataChannel object was created by this
peer or the remote peer.
When the close method is called, the user agent MUST run the following steps:
Let channel be the
RTCDataChannel object which is about to
be closed.
If channel's readyState is
closing or closed, then abort these
steps.
Set channel's readyState attribute to
closing.
If the closing procedure has not
started yet, start it.
void
sendRun the steps described by the send() algorithm with argument type
string object.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| data | USVString |
✘ | ✘ |
void
sendRun the steps described by the send() algorithm with argument type
Blob object.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| data | Blob |
✘ | ✘ |
void
sendRun the steps described by the send() algorithm with argument type
ArrayBuffer object.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| data | ArrayBuffer |
✘ | ✘ |
void
sendRun the steps described by the send() algorithm with argument type
ArrayBufferView object.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| data | ArrayBufferView |
✘ | ✘ |
void
dictionary RTCDataChannelInit {
boolean ordered = true;
unsigned short maxPacketLifeTime;
unsigned short maxRetransmits;
USVString protocol = "";
boolean negotiated = false;
unsigned short id;
};
ordered of type boolean, defaulting to
trueIf set to false, data is allowed to be delivered out of order. The default value of true, guarantees that data will be delivered in order.
maxPacketLifeTime of type unsigned shortLimits the time during which the channel will transmit or retransmit data if not acknowledged. This value may be clamped if it exceeds the maximum value supported by the user agent.
maxRetransmits of type unsigned shortLimits the number of times a channel will retransmit data if not successfully delivered. This value may be clamped if it exceeds the maximum value supported by the user agent.
protocol of type USVString, defaulting to
""Subprotocol name used for this channel.
negotiated of type boolean, defaulting to
falseThe default value of false tells the user agent to announce
the channel in-band and instruct the other peer to dispatch a
corresponding RTCDataChannel object. If set
to true, it is up to the application to negotiate the channel and
create a RTCDataChannel object with the same
id at the other
peer.
id of type unsigned shortOverrides the default selection of id for this channel.
The send() method is overloaded to handle
different data argument types. When any version of the method is called,
the user agent MUST run the following steps:
Let channel be the RTCDataChannel
object on which data is to be sent.
If channel's readyState attribute is
connecting, throw an InvalidStateError
exception and abort these steps.
Execute the sub step that corresponds to the type of the methods argument:
string object:
Let data be the object and increase the
bufferedAmount
attribute by the number of bytes needed to express
data as UTF-8.
Blob object:
Let data be the raw data represented by the
Blob object and increase the bufferedAmount attribute by the size
of data, in bytes.
ArrayBuffer object:
Let data be the data stored in the buffer described
by the ArrayBuffer object and increase the
bufferedAmount
attribute by the length of the ArrayBuffer in
bytes.
ArrayBufferView object:
Let data be the data stored in the section of the
buffer described by the ArrayBuffer object that the
ArrayBufferView object references and increase the
bufferedAmount
attribute by the length of the ArrayBufferView in
bytes.
If channel's underlying data transport is not
established yet, or if the closing procedure has
started, then abort these steps.
Attempt to send data on channel's underlying data transport; if the data cannot be sent, e.g. because it would need to be buffered but the buffer is full, the user agent MUST abruptly close channel's underlying data transport with an error.
enum RTCDataChannelState {
"connecting",
"open",
"closing",
"closed"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
connecting |
The user agent is attempting to establish the underlying
data transport. This is the initial state of a
|
open |
The underlying data transport is established and
communication is possible. This is the initial state of a
|
closing |
The |
closed |
The underlying data transport has been
|
The datachannel event uses the
RTCDataChannelEvent interface.
Firing a datachannel event named
e with a RTCDataChannel
channel means that an event with the name e, which
does not bubble (except where otherwise stated) and is not cancelable
(except where otherwise stated), and which uses the
RTCDataChannelEvent interface with the
channel attribute set
to channel, MUST be created and dispatched at the given
target.
[ Constructor (DOMString type, RTCDataChannelEventInit eventInitDict)]
interface RTCDataChannelEvent : Event {
readonly attribute RTCDataChannel channel;
};
RTCDataChannelEvent| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| type | DOMString |
✘ | ✘ | |
| eventInitDict |
RTCDataChannelEventInit |
✘ | ✘ |
channel of type RTCDataChannel, readonlyThe channel
attribute represents the RTCDataChannel
object associated with the event.
dictionary RTCDataChannelEventInit : EventInit {
RTCDataChannel channel;
};
channel of type RTCDataChannelTODO
A RTCDataChannel object MUST not be garbage
collected if its
readyState is
connecting and at least one event listener is registered
for open events, message events,
error events, or close events.
readyState is
open and at least one event listener is registered for
message events, error events, or
close events.
readyState is
closing and at least one event listener is registered
for error events, or close events.
underlying data transport is established and data is queued to be transmitted.
This section describes an interface on RTCRtpSender
to send DTMF (phone keypad) values across an
RTCPeerConnection. Details of how DTMF is sent to the
other peer are described in [[!RTCWEB-AUDIO]].
The Peer-to-peer DTMF API extends the RTCRtpSender
interface as described below.
partial interface RTCRtpSender {
readonly attribute RTCDTMFSender? dtmf;
};
dtmf of type RTCDTMFSender, readonly , nullableThe dtmf attribute returns a RTCDTMFSender which can be used to send DTMF. A null value indicates that this RTCRtpSender cannot send DTMF.
interface RTCDTMFSender : EventTarget {
void insertDTMF (DOMString tones, optional unsigned long duration = 100, optional unsigned long interToneGap = 70);
attribute EventHandler ontonechange;
readonly attribute DOMString toneBuffer;
readonly attribute unsigned long duration;
readonly attribute unsigned long interToneGap;
};
ontonechange of type EventHandlerThe event type of this event handler is
tonechange.
toneBuffer of type DOMString, readonlyThe toneBuffer
attribute MUST return a list of the tones remaining to be played
out. For the syntax, content, and interpretation of this list,
see insertDTMF.
duration of type long, readonlyThe duration
attribute MUST return the current tone duration value. This value
will be the value last set via the insertDTMF
method, or the default value of 100 ms if
insertDTMF was called without specifying the
duration.
interToneGap of type long, readonlyThe interToneGap
attribute MUST return the current value of the between-tone gap.
This value will be the value last set via the
insertDTMF method, or the default value of 70
ms if insertDTMF was called without
specifying the interToneGap.
insertDTMFAn RTCDTMFSender object's insertDTMF
method is used to send DTMF tones.
The tones parameter is treated as a series of characters. The characters 0 through 9, A through D, #, and * generate the associated DTMF tones. The characters a to d (normalized to uppercase on entry) are equivalent to A to D. As noted in [[RTCWEB-AUDIO]] Section 3, support for the characters 0 through 9, A through D, #, and * are required. The character ',' MUST be supported, and indicates a delay of 2 seconds before processing the next character in the tones parameter. All other characters (and only those other characters) MUST be considered unrecognized.
The duration parameter indicates the duration in ms to use for each character passed in the tones parameters. The duration cannot be more than 8000 ms or less than 40 ms. The default duration is 100 ms for each tone.
The interToneGap parameter indicates the gap between tones. The user agent clamps it to at least 30 ms. The default value is 70 ms.
The browser MAY increase the duration and interToneGap times to cause the times that DTMF start and stop to align with the boundaries of RTP packets but it MUST not increase either of them by more than the duration of a single RTP audio packet.
When the insertDTMF() method is invoked,
the user agent MUST run the following steps:
RTCRtpSender
used to send DTMF.
InvalidStateError exception.
tones argument contains any
unrecognized characters, throw an
InvalidCharacterError exception and abort these
steps.
toneBuffer attribute to the value of
the first argument, the duration attribute to the value of
the second argument, and the interToneGap attribute to the value
of the third argument.toneBuffer
is an empty string, return.duration attribute is less than 40,
set it to 40. If, on the other hand, the value is greater than
6000, set it to 6000.interToneGap attribute is less than
30, set it to 30.toneBuffer is an empty string,
fire an event named tonechange with an
empty string at the RTCDTMFSender
object and abort these steps.toneBuffer and let that
character be tone.duration ms on the associated
RTP media stream, using the appropriate codec.duration + interToneGap ms from now that
runs the steps labelled Playout task.tonechange with
a string consisting of tone at the
RTCDTMFSender object.Calling insertDTMF with an empty tones
parameter can be used to cancel all tones queued to play after
the currently playing tone.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| tones | DOMString |
✘ | ✘ | |
| duration | unsigned long = 100 |
✘ | ✔ | |
| interToneGap | unsigned long = 70 |
✘ | ✔ |
void
The tonechange event uses the
RTCDTMFToneChangeEvent interface.
Firing a tonechange event named
e with a DOMString tone means
that an event with the name e, which does not bubble (except
where otherwise stated) and is not cancelable (except where otherwise
stated), and which uses the RTCDTMFToneChangeEvent
interface with the tone attribute set to
tone, MUST be created and dispatched at the given target.
[ Constructor (DOMString type, RTCDTMFToneChangeEventInit eventInitDict)]
interface RTCDTMFToneChangeEvent : Event {
readonly attribute DOMString tone;
};
RTCDTMFToneChangeEvent| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| type | DOMString |
✘ | ✘ | |
| eventInitDict |
RTCDTMFToneChangeEventInit |
✘ | ✘ |
tone of type DOMString, readonlyThe tone attribute contains the
character for the tone that has just begun playout (see
insertDTMF ). If the value is the empty
string, it indicates that the previous tones have completed
playback.
dictionary RTCDTMFToneChangeEventInit : EventInit {
required DOMString tone;
};
tone of type DOMStringThe tone attribute contains the
character for the tone that has just begun playout (see
insertDTMF ). If the value is the empty
string, it indicates that the previous tone has completed
playback.
The basic statistics model is that the browser maintains a set of
statistics referenced by a selector. The
selector may, for example, be a MediaStreamTrack. For a
track to be a valid selector, it MUST be a MediaStreamTrack
that is sent or received by the RTCPeerConnection
object on which the stats request was issued. The calling Web application
provides the selector to the getStats() method and the browser emits
(in the JavaScript) a set of statistics that it believes is relevant to
the selector.
The statistics returned are designed in such a way that repeated
queries can be linked by the RTCStats id dictionary member. Thus, a Web application can make
measurements over a given time period by requesting measurements at the
beginning and end of that period.
The Statistics API extends the RTCPeerConnection
interface as described below.
partial interface RTCPeerConnection {
Promise<RTCStatsReport> getStats (optional MediaStreamTrack? selector = null);
};
getStatsGathers stats for the given selector and reports the result asynchronously.
When the
getStats() method is invoked, the user agent
MUST run the following steps:
Let selectorArg be the methods first argument.
If selectorArg is neither null nor
a valid selector, return a promise rejected with a
TypeError.
Let p be a new promise.
Run the following steps in parallel:
Start gathering the stats indicated by
selectorArg. If selectorArg is
null, stats MUST be gathered for the whole
RTCPeerConnection object.
When the relevant stats have been gathered, resolve
p with a new
RTCStatsReport object, representing
the gathered stats.
Return p.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| selector | MediaStreamTrack =
null |
✔ | ✔ |
Promise<RTCStatsReport>
callback RTCStatsCallback = void (RTCStatsReport report);
report of type RTCStatsReportA RTCStatsReport representing the gathered
stats.
The getStats() method
delivers a successful result in the form of an
RTCStatsReport object. An
RTCStatsReport object is a map between strings that
identify the inspected objects (id attribute in RTCStats
instances), and their corresponding RTCStats-derived
dictionaries.
An RTCStatsReport may be composed of several
RTCStats-derived dictionaries, each reporting stats
for one underlying object that the implementation thinks is relevant for
the selector. One achieves the total for the selector by
summing over all the stats of a certain type; for instance, if a
MediaStreamTrack is carried by multiple SSRCs over the
network, the RTCStatsReport may contain one
RTCStats-derived dictionary per SSRC (which can be
distinguished by the value of the "ssrc" stats attribute).
interface RTCStatsReport {
readonly maplike<DOMString, object>;
};
This interface has "entries", "forEach", "get", "has", "keys",
"values", @@iterator methods and a "size" getter brought by
readonly maplike.
Use these to retrieve the various dictionaries descended from
RTCStats that this stats report is composed of. The
set of supported property names [[!WEBIDL-1]] is defined as the ids of
all the RTCStats-derived dictionaries that have
been generated for this stats report.
An RTCStats dictionary represents the stats
gathered by inspecting a specific object relevant to a selector.
The RTCStats dictionary is a base type that specifies
as set of default attributes, such as timestamp and type. Specific
stats are added by extending the RTCStats
dictionary.
Note that while stats names are standardized, any given implementation may be using experimental values or values not yet known to the Web application. Thus, applications MUST be prepared to deal with unknown stats.
Statistics need to be synchronized with each other in order to yield
reasonable values in computation; for instance, if "bytesSent" and
"packetsSent" are both reported, they both need to be reported over the
same interval, so that "average packet size" can be computed as "bytes /
packets" - if the intervals are different, this will yield errors. Thus
implementations MUST return synchronized values for all stats in an
RTCStats-derived dictionary.
dictionary RTCStats {
DOMHighResTimeStamp timestamp;
RTCStatsType type;
DOMString id;
};
timestamp of type DOMHighResTimeStampThe timestamp, of type
DOMHighResTimeStamp [[!HIGHRES-TIME]], associated
with this object. The time is relative to the UNIX epoch (Jan 1,
1970, UTC).
type of type RTCStatsTypeThe type of this object.
The type attribute MUST be initialized
to the name of the most specific type this
RTCStats dictionary represents.
id of type DOMStringA unique id that is associated with
the object that was inspected to produce this
RTCStats object. Two
RTCStats objects, extracted from two
different RTCStatsReport objects, MUST have
the same id if they were produced by inspecting the same
underlying object. User agents are free to pick any format for
the id as long as it meets the requirements above.
enum RTCStatsType {
"inboundrtp",
"outboundrtp"
};
| Enumeration description | |
|---|---|
inboundrtp |
Inbound RTP. |
outboundrtp |
Outbound RTP. |
dictionary RTCRTPStreamStats : RTCStats {
unsigned long ssrc;
DOMString remoteId;
};
ssrc of type unsigned long...
remoteId of type DOMStringThe remoteId can be used to look up the
corresponding RTCStats object that represents
stats reported by the other peer.
dictionary RTCInboundRTPStreamStats : RTCRTPStreamStats {
unsigned long packetsReceived;
unsigned long bytesReceived;
};
packetsReceived of type unsigned long...
bytesReceived of type unsigned long...
dictionary RTCOutboundRTPStreamStats : RTCRTPStreamStats {
unsigned long packetsSent;
unsigned long bytesSent;
};
packetsSent of type unsigned long...
bytesSent of type unsigned long...
Consider the case where the user is experiencing bad sound and the application wants to determine if the cause of it is packet loss. The following example code might be used:
var baselineReport, currentReport;
var selector = pc.getSenders()[0].track;
pc.getStats(selector).then(function (report) {
baselineReport = report;
})
.then(function() {
return new Promise(function(resolve) {
setTimeout(resolve, aBit); // ... wait a bit
});
})
.then(function() {
return pc.getStats(selector);
})
.then(function (report) {
currentReport = report;
processStats();
})
.catch(function (error) {
log(error.toString());
});
function processStats() {
// compare the elements from the current report with the baseline
currentReport.forEach (now => {
if (now.type != "outboundrtp")
return;
// get the corresponding stats from the baseline report
base = baselineReport.get(now.id);
if (base) {
remoteNow = currentReport.get(now.remoteId);
remoteBase = baselineReport.get(base.remoteId);
var packetsSent = now.packetsSent - base.packetsSent;
var packetsReceived = remoteNow.packetsReceived - remoteBase.packetsReceived;
// if fractionLost is > 0.3, we have probably found the culprit
var fractionLost = (packetsSent - packetsReceived) / packetsSent;
}
}
}
WebRTC offers and answers (and hence the channels established by
RTCPeerConnection objects) can be authenticated by
using a web-based Identity Provider (IdP). The idea is that the entity
sending an offer or answer acts as the Authenticating Party (AP) and
obtains an identity assertion from the IdP which it attaches to the
session description. The consumer of the session description (i.e., the
RTCPeerConnection on which
setRemoteDescription is called) acts as the Relying Party
(RP) and verifies the assertion.
The interaction with the IdP is designed to decouple the browser from any particular identity provider; the browser need only know how to load the IdP's JavaScript, the location of which is determined by the IdP's identity, and the generic interface to generating and validating assertions. The IdP provides whatever logic is necessary to bridge the generic protocol to the IdP's specific requirements. Thus, a single browser can support any number of identity protocols, including being forward compatible with IdPs which did not exist at the time the browser was written.
An IdP is used to generate an identity assertion as follows:
setIdentityProvider() method has been called,
the IdP provided shall be used.setIdentityProvider() method has not been
called, then the user agent MAY use an IdP configured into the
browser.In order to verify assertions, the IdP domain name and protocol are
taken from the domain and protocol fields of
the identity assertion.
In order to communicate with the IdP, the user agent loads the IdP
JavaScript from the IdP. The URI for the IdP script is a well-known URI
formed from the domain
and protocol
fields, as specified
in [[!RTCWEB-SECURITY-ARCH]].
The IdP MAY generate an HTTP redirect to another "https" origin, the browser MUST treat a redirect to any other scheme as a fatal error.
The user agent instantiates an isolated interpreted context, a JavaScript realm that operates in the origin of the loaded JavaScript. Note that a redirect will change the origin of the loaded script.
The realm is populated with a global that implements
both the RTCIdentityProviderGlobalScope and
WorkerGlobalScope [[!WEBWORKERS]] interfaces.
The user agent provides an instance of
RTCIdentityProviderRegistrar named
rtcIdentityProvider in the global scope of the realm.
This object is used by the IdP to interact with the user agent.
[Global, Exposed=RTCIdentityProviderGlobalScope]
interface RTCIdentityProviderGlobalScope : WorkerGlobalScope {
readonly attribute RTCIdentityProviderRegistrar rtcIdentityProvider;
};
rtcIdentityProvider of type
RTCIdentityProviderRegistrar,
readonlyRTCIdentityProvider instance with the
browser.An environment that mimics the identity provider realm can be provided by any script. However, only scripts running in the origin of the IdP are able to generate an identical environment. Other origins can load and run the IdP proxy code, but they will be unable to replicate data that is unique to the origin of the IdP.
This means that it is critical that an IdP use data that is restricted to its own origin when generating identity assertions. Otherwise, another origin could load the IdP script and use it to impersonate users.
The data that the IdP script uses could be stored on the client (for example, in IndexedDB) or loaded from servers. Data that is acquired from a server SHOULD require credentials and be protected from cross-origin access.
There is no risk to the integrity of identity assertions if an IdP validates an identity assertion without using origin-private data.
An IdP proxy implements the RTCIdentityProvider
methods, which are the means by which the user agent is able to request
that an identity assertion be generated or validated.
Once instantiated, the IdP script is executed. The IdP MUST call the
register() function on the
RTCIdentityProviderRegistrar instance during script
execution. If an IdP is not registered during this script execution, the
user agent cannot use the IdP proxy and MUST fail any future attempt to
interact with the IdP.
[Exposed=RTCIdentityProviderGlobalScope]
interface RTCIdentityProviderRegistrar {
void register (RTCIdentityProvider idp);
};
registerThis method is invoked by the IdP when its script is first
executed. This registers RTCIdentityProvider
methods with the user agent.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| idp | RTCIdentityProvider |
✘ | ✘ |
void
The callback functions in RTCIdentityProvider are
exposed by identity providers and is called by
RTCPeerConnection to acquire or validate identity
assertions.
dictionary RTCIdentityProvider {
required GenerateAssertionCallback generateAssertion;
required ValidateAssertionCallback validateAssertion;
};
generateAssertion of type
GenerateAssertionCallback,
requiredA user agent invokes this method on the IdP to request the generation of an identity assertion.
The IdP provides a promise that resolves to an
RTCIdentityAssertionResult to successfully
generate an identity assertion. Any other value, or a rejected
promise, is treated as an error.
validateAssertion of type
ValidateAssertionCallback,
requiredA user agent invokes this method on the IdP to request the validation of an identity assertion.
The IdP returns a Promise that resolves to an
RTCIdentityValidationResult to successfully
validate an identity assertion and to provide the actual
identity. Any other value, or a rejected promise, is treated as
an error.
callback GenerateAssertionCallback = Promise<RTCIdentityAssertionResult> (DOMString contents, DOMString origin, optional DOMString usernameHint);
contents of type DOMStringorigin of type DOMStringRTCPeerConnection that triggered this
request. An IdP can use this information as input to policy
decisions about use. This value is generated by the user
agent based on the origin of the document that created the
RTCPeerConnection and therefore can be trusted to
be correct.
usernameHint of type DOMStringsetIdentityProvider.
callback ValidateAssertionCallback = Promise<RTCIdentityValidationResult> (DOMString assertion, DOMString origin);
assertion of type DOMStringa=identity in the session
description; that is, the value that was part of the
RTCIdentityAssertionResult provided by the
IdP that generated the assertion.origin of type DOMStringRTCPeerConnection that triggered this
request. An IdP can use this information as input to policy
decisions about use.dictionary RTCIdentityAssertionResult {
required RTCIdentityProviderDetails idp;
required DOMString assertion;
};
idp of type RTCIdentityProviderDetails,
requiredAn IdP provides these details to identify the IdP that
validates the identity assertion. This struct contains the same
information that is provided to
setIdentityProvider.
assertion of type DOMString, requiredAn identity assertion. This is an opaque string that MUST contain all information necessary to assert identity. This value is consumed by the validating IdP.
dictionary RTCIdentityProviderDetails {
required DOMString domain;
DOMString protocol = "default";
};
dictionary RTCIdentityValidationResult {
required DOMString identity;
required DOMString contents;
};
identity of type DOMString, requiredThe validated identity of the peer.
contents of type DOMString, requiredThe payload of the identity assertion. An IdP that validates an identity assertion MUST return the same string that was provided to the original IdP that generated the assertion.
The user agent uses the contents string to determine if the identity assertion matches the session description.
The identity assertion request process is triggered by a call to
createOffer, createAnswer, or
getIdentityAssertion. When these calls are invoked and an
identity provider has been set, the following steps are executed:
The RTCPeerConnection instantiates an IdP as
described in Identity
Provider Selection and Registering an
IdP Proxy. If the IdP cannot be loaded, instantiated, or the IdP
proxy is not registered, this process fails.
The RTCPeerConnection invokes the generateAssertion method on the
RTCIdentityProvider methods registered by the
IdP.
The RTCPeerConnection generates the
contents parameter to this method as described in
[[!RTCWEB-SECURITY-ARCH]]. The value of contents includes
the fingerprint of the certificate that was selected or generated
during the construction of the RTCPeerConnection. The
origin parameter contains the origin of the script that
calls the RTCPeerConnection method that triggers this
behavior. The usernameHint value is the same value that is
provided to setIdentityProvider, if any such value was
provided.
The IdP proxy returns a Promise to the
RTCPeerConnection. The IdP proxy is expected to
generate the identity assertion asynchronously.
If the user has been authenticated by the IdP, and the IdP is
able to generate an identity assertion, the IdP resolves the
promise with an identity assertion in the form of an
RTCIdentityAssertionResult.
This step depends entirely on the IdP. The methods by which an IdP authenticates users or generates assertions is not specified, though they could involve interacting with the IdP server or other servers.
If the IdP proxy produces an error or returns a promise that does
not resolve to a valid
RTCIdentityValidationResult (see ), then identity validation fails.
The RTCPeerConnection MAY store the identity
assertion for use with future offers or answers. If a fresh identity
assertion is needed for any reason, applications can create a new
RTCPeerConnection.
If the identity request was triggered by a
createOffer() or createAnswer(), then the
assertion is converted to a JSON string, base64-encoded and inserted
into an a=identity attribute in the session
description.
If assertion generation fails, then the promise for the corresponding
function call is rejected with a DOMException that has the
name OperationError.
An IdP MAY reject an attempt to generate an identity assertion if it is unable to verify that a user is authenticated. This might be due to the IdP not having the necessary authentication information available to it (such as cookies).
Rejecting the promise returned by generateAssertion will cause the error
to propagate to the application. Login errors are indicated by
rejecting the promise with an object that has a name
attribute set to "IdpLoginError".
If the rejection object also contains a loginUrl
attribute, this value will be passed to the application in the
idpLoginUrl attribute. This URL might link to page where a
user can enter their (IdP) username and password, or otherwise provide
any information the IdP needs to authorize a assertion request.
An application can load the login URL in an IFRAME or popup window; the resulting page then SHOULD provide the user with an opportunity to enter any information necessary to complete the authorization process.
Once the authorization process is complete, the page loaded in the IFRAME or popup sends a message using postMessage [[!webmessaging]] to the page that loaded it (through the window.opener attribute for popups, or through window.parent for pages loaded in an IFRAME). The message MUST consist of the DOMString "LOGINDONE". This message informs the application that another attempt at generating an identity assertion is likely to be successful.
Identity assertion validation happens when setRemoteDescription is invoked on
RTCPeerConnection. The process runs asynchronously,
meaning that validation of an identity assertion might not block the
completion of setRemoteDescription.
The identity assertion request process involves the following asynchronous steps:
The RTCPeerConnection awaits any prior identity
validation. Only one identity validation can run at a time for an
RTCPeerConnection. This can happen because the
resolution of setRemoteDescription is not blocked by
identity validation unless there is a target peer
identity.
The RTCPeerConnection loads the identity assertion
from the session description and decodes the base64 value, then
parses the resulting JSON. The idp parameter of the
resulting dictionary contains a domain and an optional
protocol value that identifies the IdP, as described in
[[!RTCWEB-SECURITY-ARCH]].
The RTCPeerConnection instantiates the identified IdP
as described in and
. If the IdP cannot be loaded,
instantiated or the IdP proxy is not registered, this process
fails.
The RTCPeerConnection invokes the validateAssertion method registered
by the IdP.
The assertion parameter is taken from the decoded
identity assertion. The origin parameter contains the
origin of the script that calls the RTCPeerConnection
method that triggers this behavior.
The IdP proxy returns a promise and performs the validation process asynchronously.
The IdP proxy verifies the identity assertion using whatever means necessary. Depending on the authentication protocol this could involve interacting with the IdP server.
If the IdP proxy produces an error or returns a promise that does
not resolve to a valid
RTCIdentityValidationResult (see ), then identity validation fails.
Once the assertion is successfully verified, the IdP proxy
resolves the promise with an
RTCIdentityValidationResult containing the
validated identity and the original contents that are the payload of
the assertion.
The RTCPeerConnection decodes the contents and validates that
it contains a fingerprint value for every a=fingerprint
attribute in the session description. This ensures that the
certificate used by the remote peer for communications is covered by
the identity assertion.
A user agent is required to fail to
communicate with peers that offer a certificate that doesn't match an
a=fingerprint line in the negotiated session
description.
The RTCPeerConnection validates that the domain
portion of the identity matches the domain of the IdP as described in
[[!RTCWEB-SECURITY-ARCH]]. If this check fails then the identity
validation fails.
The RTCPeerConnection resolves the peerIdentity attribute with a new
instance of RTCIdentityAssertion that includes the IdP
domain and peer identity.
The user agent MAY display identity information to a user in its UI. Any user identity information that is displayed in this fashion MUST use a mechanism that cannot be spoofed by content.
If identity validation fails, the peerIdentity promise is rejected with a
DOMException that has a name of
OperationError.
If identity validation fails and there is a target peer
identity for the RTCPeerConnection, the promise returned
by setRemoteDescription MUST be rejected with the same
DOMException.
If identity validation fails and there is no a target peer
identity, the value of the peerIdentity MUST be set to a new,
unresolved promise instance. This permits the use of renegotiation (or a
subsequent answer, if the session description was a provisional answer)
to resolve or reject the identity.
Errors in IdP processing will - in most cases - result in the failure
of the procedure that invoked the IdP proxy. This will result in the
rejection of the promise returned by getIdentityAssertion, createOffer, or createAnswer. An IdP proxy error causes a
setRemoteDescription
promise to be rejected if there is a target peer identity; IdP
errors in calls to setRemoteDescription where there is no
target peer identity cause the peerIdentity promise to be rejected
instead.
If an error occurs these promises are rejected with a
DOMException that has a name of OperationError
if an error occurs in interacting with the IdP proxy. The following
scenarios result in errors:
A RTCPeerConnection might be configured with an
identity provider, but that identity provider could register a
RTCIdentityProvider with invalid methods. Any procedure
that attempts to invoke such an identity provider fails.
An apparently valid identity provider might fail in several ways. If an identity provider throws an exception or returns a promise that is ultimately rejected, then the procedure that depends on the IdP MUST also fail.
The user agent SHOULD limit the time that allows for an IdP to run. This includes both the loading of the IdP proxy and the identity assertion generation or validation. Failure to do so potentially causes the corresponding operation to take an indefinite amount of time. This timer can be cancelled when the IdP proxy produces a response. Expiration of this timer is treated like any other type of IdP failure.
Even when the IdP proxy produces a positive result, the procedure that uses this information might still fail. Additional validation of a RTCIdentityValidationResult value is still necessary. The procedure for validation of identity assertions describes additional steps that are required to successfully validate the output of the IdP proxy.
The Identity API extends the RTCPeerConnection
interface as described below.
partial interface RTCPeerConnection {
void setIdentityProvider (DOMString provider, optional DOMString protocol, optional DOMString usernameHint);
Promise<DOMString> getIdentityAssertion ();
readonly attribute Promise<RTCIdentityAssertion> peerIdentity;
readonly attribute DOMString? idpLoginUrl;
};
peerIdentity of type Promise<RTCIdentityAssertion>,
readonlyA promise that resolves with the identity of the peer if the identity is successfully validated.
This promise is rejected if an identity assertion is present in a remote session description and validation of that assertion fails for any reason. If the promise is rejected, a new unresolved value is created, unless there a target peer identity has been established. If this promise successfully resolves, the value will not change.
idpLoginUrl of type DOMString, readonly , nullableThe URL that an application can navigate to so that the user can login to the IdP, as described in .
setIdentityProviderSets the identity provider to be used for a given
RTCPeerConnection object. Applications need not make
this call; if the browser is already configured for an IdP, then
that configured IdP might be used to get an assertion.
When the setIdentityProvider method is
invoked, the user agent MUST run the following steps:
If the RTCPeerConnection object's
[[isClosed]] slot is true, throw an
InvalidStateError exception and abort these
steps.
Set the current identity provider values to the triplet
(provider, protocol,
usernameHint).
If any identity provider value has changed, discard any stored identity assertion.
Identity provider information is not used until an identity
assertion is required, either in response to a call to
getIdentityAssertion, or a session description is
requested with a call to either createOffer or
createAnswer.
| Parameter | Type | Nullable | Optional | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| provider | DOMString |
✘ | ✘ | |
| protocol | DOMString |
✘ | ✔ | |
| usernameHint | DOMString |
✘ | ✔ |
void
getIdentityAssertionInitiates the process of obtaining an identity assertion.
Applications need not make this call. It is merely intended to
allow them to start the process of obtaining identity assertions
before a call is initiated. If an identity is needed, either
because the browser has been configured with a default identity
provider or because the setIdentityProvider method
was called, then an identity will be automatically requested when
an offer or answer is created.
When getIdentityAssertion is invoked, queue a
task to run the following steps:
If the RTCPeerConnection object's
[[isClosed]] slot is true, throw an
InvalidStateError exception and abort these
steps.
Request an identity assertion from the IdP.
Resolve the promise with the base64 and JSON encoded assertion.
Promise<DOMString>
[Constructor(DOMString idp, DOMString name)]
interface RTCIdentityAssertion {
attribute DOMString idp;
attribute DOMString name;
};
The identity system is designed so that applications need not take any special action in order for users to generate and verify identity assertions; if a user has configured an IdP into their browser, then the browser will automatically request/generate assertions and the other side will automatically verify them and display the results. However, applications may wish to exercise tighter control over the identity system as shown by the following examples.
This example shows how to configure the identity provider and protocol.
pc.setIdentityProvider("example.com", "default", "alice@example.com");
This example shows how to consume identity assertions inside a Web application.
pc.peerIdentity.then(identity =>
console.log("IdP= " + identity.idp + " identity=" + identity.name));
The MediaStreamTrack interface, as defined in the
[[!GETUSERMEDIA]] specification, typically represents a stream of data of
audio or video. One or more MediaStreamTracks can be
collected in a MediaStream (strictly speaking, a
MediaStream as defined in [[!GETUSERMEDIA]] may contain zero
or more MediaStreamTrack objects).
A MediaStreamTrack may be extended to represent a media
flow that either comes from or is sent to a remote peer (and not just the
local camera, for instance). The extensions required to enable this
capability on the MediaStreamTrack object will be described
in this section. How the media is transmitted to the peer is described in
[[!RTCWEB-RTP]], [[!RTCWEB-AUDIO]], and [[!RTCWEB-TRANSPORT]].
A MediaStreamTrack sent to another peer will appear as
one and only one MediaStreamTrack to the recipient. A peer
is defined as a user agent that supports this specification. In addition,
the sending side application can indicate what MediaStream
object(s) the MediaStreamTrack is member of. The
corresponding MediaStream object(s) on the receiver side
will be created (if not already present) and populated accordingly.
As also described earlier in this document, the objects
RTCRtpSender and RTCRtpReceiver can be used by
the application to get more fine grained control over the transmission
and reception of MediaStreamTracks.
Channels are the smallest unit considered in the
MediaStream specification. Channels are intended to be
encoded together for transmission as, for instance, an RTP payload type.
All of the channels that a codec needs to encode jointly MUST be in the
same MediaStreamTrack and the codecs SHOULD be able to
encode, or discard, all the channels in the track.
The concepts of an input and output to a given
MediaStreamTrack apply in the case of
MediaStreamTrack objects transmitted over the network as
well. A MediaStreamTrack created by an
RTCPeerConnection object (as described previously in
this document) will take as input the data received from a remote peer.
Similarly, a MediaStreamTrack from a local source, for
instance a camera via [[!GETUSERMEDIA]], will have an output that
represents what is transmitted to a remote peer if the object is used
with an RTCPeerConnection object.
The concept of duplicating MediaStream and
MediaStreamTrack objects as described in [[!GETUSERMEDIA]]
is also applicable here. This feature can be used, for instance, in a
video-conferencing scenario to display the local video from the user's
camera and microphone in a local monitor, while only transmitting the
audio to the remote peer (e.g. in response to the user using a "video
mute" feature). Combining different MediaStreamTrack objects
into new MediaStream objects is useful in certain
situations.
In this document, we only specify aspects of the
following objects that are relevant when used along with an
RTCPeerConnection. Please refer to the original
definitions of the objects in the [[!GETUSERMEDIA]] document for general
information on using MediaStream and
MediaStreamTrack.
The id
attribute specified in MediaStream returns an id that is
unique to this stream, so that streams can be recognized at the remote
end of the RTCPeerConnection API.
When a MediaStream is created to represent a
stream obtained from a remote peer, the id
attribute is initialized from information provided by the remote
source.
The id of a MediaStream object is
unique to the source of the stream, but that does not mean it is not
possible to end up with duplicates. For example, the tracks of a
locally generated stream could be sent from one user agent to a remote
peer using RTCPeerConnection and then sent back to
the original user agent in the same manner, in which case the original
user agent will have multiple streams with the same id (the
locally-generated one and the one received from the remote peer).
A MediaStreamTrack object's reference to its
MediaStream in the non-local media source case (an RTP
source, as is the case for MediaStreamTracks received over
an RTCPeerConnection ) is always strong.
When an RTCPeerConnection receives data on an RTP
source for the first time, it MUST update the muted state of the
corresponding MediaStreamTrack with the value
false.
When an RTCPeerConnection's RTP source is
temporarily unable to receive media due to a loss of connection or if a
mute signal has been received, it MUST update the muted state of
the corresponding MediaStreamTrack with the value
true. When media data is available again, the muted state MUST be updated with the value
false.
The mute signal mentioned in the previous paragraph is yet to be defined.
The procedure update a track's muted state is specified in [[!GETUSERMEDIA]].
When a track comes from a remote peer and the remote peer has
permanently stopped sending data the ended event MUST be
fired on the track, as specified in [[!GETUSERMEDIA]].
How do you know when it has stopped? This seems like an SDP question, not a media-level question. (Suggestion: when the track is ended, either through port 0, or removing the a=msid attrib)
When a remote source is notified that a
MediaStreamTrack, using the source, has
ended [[!GETUSERMEDIA]] the User Agent MAY choose to free
resources allocated for the incoming stream, for instance turn off the
decoder.
The basics of MediaTrackSupportedConstraints,
MediaTrackCapabilites,
MediaTrackConstraints and
MediaTrackSettings is outlined in
[[!GETUSERMEDIA]]. However, the MediaTrackSettings
for a MediaStreamTrack sourced by a
RTCPeerConnection will only be populated to the
extent that data is supplied by means of the remote
RTCSessionDescription applied via
setRemoteDescription and the actual RTP data. This means
that certain settings, such as facingMode,
echoCancellation , latency,
deviceId and groupId, will
always return null.
A MediaStream acquired using getUserMedia() is, by
default, accessible to an application. This means that the application is
able to access the contents of tracks, modify their content, and send
that media to any peer it chooses.
WebRTC supports calling scenarios where media is sent to a
specifically identified peer, without the contents of media streams being
accessible to applications. This is enabled by use of the
peerIdentity parameter to getUserMedia().
An application willingly relinquishes access to media by including a
peerIdentity parameter in the
MediaStreamConstraints. This attribute is set to a
DOMString containing the identity of a specific peer.
The MediaStreamConstraints dictionary is expanded to
include the peerIdentity parameter.
partial dictionary MediaStreamConstraints {
DOMString peerIdentity;
};
peerIdentity of type DOMStringIf set, peerIdentity isolates media from the
application. Media can only be sent to the identified peer.
A user that is prompted to provide consent for access to a camera or
microphone can be shown the value of the peerIdentity
parameter, so that they can be informed that the consent is more narrowly
restricted.
When the peerIdentity option is supplied to
getUserMedia(), all of the MediaStreamTracks in
the resulting MediaStream are isolated so that content is
not accessible to any application. Isolated
MediaStreamTracks can be used for two purposes:
Displayed in an appropriate media tag (e.g., a video or audio element). The browser MUST ensure that content is inaccessible to the application by ensuring that the resulting content is given the same protections as content that is CORS cross-origin, as described in the relevant Security and privacy considerations section of [[HTML5]].
Used as the argument to addTrack on an
RTCPeerConnection instance, subject to the
restrictions in isolated streams and
RTCPeerConnection.
A MediaStreamTrack that is added to another
MediaStream remains isolated. When an isolated
MediaStreamTrack is added to a MediaStream with
a different peerIdentity, the MediaStream gets a combination
of isolation restrictions. A MediaStream containing
MediaStreamTrack instances with mixed isolation properties
can be displayed, but cannot be sent using
RTCPeerConnection.
Any peerIdentity property MUST be retained on cloned
copies of MediaStreamTracks.
MediaStreamTrack is expanded to include an
isolated attribute and a corresponding event. This allows an
application to quickly and easily determine whether a track is
accessible.
partial interface MediaStreamTrack {
readonly attribute boolean isolated;
attribute EventHandler onisolationchange;
};
isolated of type boolean, readonlyA MediaStreamTrack is isolated (and the
corresponding isolated attribute set to
true) when content is inaccessible to the owning
document. This occurs as a result of setting the
peerIdentity option. A track is also isolated if it
comes from a cross origin source.
onisolationchange of type
EventHandlerThis event handler, of type isolationchange, is fired when the value of the isolated attribute changes.
A MediaStreamTrack with a peerIdentity
option set can be added to any RTCPeerConnection.
However, the content of an isolated track MUST NOT be transmitted
unless all of the following constraints are met:
A MediaStreamTrack from a stream acquired using the
peerIdentity option can be transmitted if the
RTCPeerConnection has successfully validated the identity of the
peer AND that identity is the same identity that was used in the
peerIdentity option associated with the track. That is,
the name attribute of the peerIdentity
attribute of the RTCPeerConnection instance
MUST match the value of the peerIdentity option passed
to getUserMedia().
Rules for matching identity are described in [[!RTCWEB-SECURITY-ARCH]].
The peer has indicated that it will respect the isolation properties of streams. That is, a DTLS connection with a promise to respect stream confidentiality, as defined in [[!RTCWEB-ALPN]] has been established.
Failing to meet these conditions means that no media can be sent for
the affected MediaStreamTrack. Video MUST be replaced by
black frames, audio MUST be replaced by silence, and equivalently
information-free content MUST be provided for other media types.
Remotely sourced MediaStreamTracks MUST be isolated if
they are received over a DTLS connection that has been negotiated with
track isolation. This protects isolated media from the application in
the receiving browser. These tracks MUST only be displayed to a user
using the appropriate media element (e.g., <video> or
<audio>).
Any MediaStreamTrack that has the
peerIdentity option set causes all tracks sent using the
same RTCPeerConnection to be isolated at the
receiving peer. All DTLS connections created for a
RTCPeerConnection with isolated local streams MUST
be negotiated so that media remains isolated at the remote peer. This
causes non-isolated media to become isolated at the receiving peer if
any isolated tracks are added to the same
RTCPeerConnection.
Tracks that are not bound to a particular peerIdentity do not cause other streams to be isolated, these tracks simply do not have their content transmitted.
If a stream becomes isolated after initially being accessible, or an isolated stream is added to an active session, then media for that stream is replaced by information-free content (e.g., black frames or silence).
Media isolation ensures that the content of a
MediaStreamTrack is not accessible to web applications.
However, to ensure that media with a peerIdentity option set
can be sent to peers, some meta-information about the media will be
exposed to applications.
Applications will be able to observe the parameters of the media
that affect session negotiation and conversion into RTP. This includes
the codecs that might be supported by the track, the bitrate, the
number of packets, and the current settings that are set on the
MediaStreamTrack.
In particular, the statistics that
RTCPeerConnection records are not reduced in
capability. New statistics that might compromise isolation MUST be
avoided, or explicitly suppressed for isolated streams.
Most of these data are exposed to the network when the media is
transmitted. Only the settings for the MediaStreamTrack
present a new source of information. This can includes the frame rate
and resolution of video tracks, the bandwidth of audio tracks, and
other information about the source, which would not otherwise be
revealed to a network observer. Since settings don't change at a high
frequency or in response to changes in media content, settings only
reveal limited reveal information about the content of a track.
However, any setting that might change dynamically in response to the
content of an isolated MediaStreamTrack MUST have changes
suppressed.
When two peers decide they are going to set up a connection to each other, they both go through these steps. The STUN/TURN server configuration describes a server they can use to get things like their public IP address or to set up NAT traversal. They also have to send data for the signaling channel to each other using the same out-of-band mechanism they used to establish that they were going to communicate in the first place.
var signalingChannel = new SignalingChannel();
var configuration = { "iceServers": [{ "urls": "stuns:stun.example.org" }] };
var pc;
// call start() to initiate
function start() {
pc = new RTCPeerConnection(configuration);
// send any ice candidates to the other peer
pc.onicecandidate = function (evt) {
signalingChannel.send(JSON.stringify({ "candidate": evt.candidate }));
};
// let the "negotiationneeded" event trigger offer generation
pc.onnegotiationneeded = function () {
pc.createOffer().then(function (offer) {
return pc.setLocalDescription(offer);
})
.then(function () {
// send the offer to the other peer
signalingChannel.send(JSON.stringify({ "desc": pc.localDescription }));
})
.catch(logError);
};
// once remote video track arrives, show it in the remote video element
pc.ontrack = function (evt) {
if (evt.track.kind === "video")
remoteView.srcObject = evt.streams[0];
};
// get a local stream, show it in a self-view and add it to be sent
navigator.mediaDevices.getUserMedia({ "audio": true, "video": true })
.then(function (stream) {
selfView.srcObject = stream;
pc.addTrack(stream.getAudioTracks()[0], stream);
pc.addTrack(stream.getVideoTracks()[0], stream);
})
.catch(logError);
}
signalingChannel.onmessage = function (evt) {
if (!pc)
start();
var message = JSON.parse(evt.data);
if (message.desc) {
var desc = message.desc;
// if we get an offer, we need to reply with an answer
if (desc.type == "offer") {
pc.setRemoteDescription(desc).then(function () {
return pc.createAnswer();
})
.then(function (answer) {
return pc.setLocalDescription(answer);
})
.then(function () {
var str = JSON.stringify({ "desc": pc.localDescription });
signalingChannel.send(str);
})
.catch(logError);
} else if (desc.type == "answer") {
pc.setRemoteDescription(desc).catch(logError);
} else {
log("Unsupported SDP type. Your code may differ here.");
}
} else
pc.addIceCandidate(message.candidate).catch(logError);
};
function logError(error) {
log(error.name + ": " + error.message);
}
When two peers decide they are going to set up a connection to each other and want to have the ICE, DTLS, and media connections "warmed up" such that they are ready to send and receive media immediately, they both go through these steps.
var signalingChannel = new SignalingChannel();
var configuration = { "iceServers": [{ "urls": "stuns:stun.example.org" }] };
var pc;
var audio = null;
var audioSendTrack = null;
var video = null;
var videoSendTrack = null;
var started = false;
// Call warmp() to warm-up ICE, DTLS, and media, but not send media yet.
function warmup(answerer) {
pc = new RTCPeerConnection(configuration);
if (!answerer) {
audio = pc.addTransceiver("audio");
video = pc.addTransceiver("video");
}
// send any ice candidates to the other peer
pc.onicecandidate = function (evt) {
signalingChannel.send(JSON.stringify({ "candidate": evt.candidate }));
};
// let the "negotiationneeded" event trigger offer generation
pc.onnegotiationneeded = function () {
pc.createOffer().then(function (offer) {
return pc.setLocalDescription(offer);
})
.then(function () {
// send the offer to the other peer
signalingChannel.send(JSON.stringify({ "desc": pc.localDescription }));
})
.catch(logError);
};
// once remote video track arrives, show it in the remote video element
pc.ontrack = function (evt) {
if (evt.track.kind === "audio") {
if (answerer) {
audio = evt.transceiver;
audio.setDirection("sendrecv");
if (started && audioSendTrack) {
audio.sender.replaceTrack(audioSendTrack);
}
}
} else if (evt.track.kind === "video") {
if (answerer) {
video = evt.transceiver;
video.setDirection("sendrecv");
if (started && videoSendTrack) {
video.sender.replaceTrack(videoSendTrack);
}
}
remoteView.srcObject = evt.streams[0];
}
};
// get a local stream, show it in a self-view and add it to be sent
navigator.mediaDevices.getUserMedia({ "audio": true, "video": true })
.then(function (stream) {
selfView.srcObject = stream;
sendAudioTrack = stream.getVideoTracks()[0];
if (started) {
audio.sender.replaceTrack(sendAudioTrack);
}
sendVideoTrack = stream.getVideoTracks()[0];
if (started) {
video.sender.replaceTrack(sendVideoTrack);
}
})
.catch(logError);
}
// Call start() to start sending media.
function start() {
started = true;
signalingChannel.send(JSON.stringify({ "start": true }));
}
signalingChannel.onmessage = function (evt) {
if (!pc)
warmup(true);
var message = JSON.parse(evt.data);
if (message.desc) {
var desc = message.desc;
// if we get an offer, we need to reply with an answer
if (desc.type == "offer") {
pc.setRemoteDescription(desc).then(function () {
return pc.createAnswer();
})
.then(function (answer) {
return pc.setLocalDescription(answer);
})
.then(function () {
var str = JSON.stringify({ "desc": pc.localDescription });
signalingChannel.send(str);
})
.catch(logError);
} else
pc.setRemoteDescription(desc).catch(logError);
} else if (message.start) {
started = true;
if (audio && sendAudioTrack) {
audio.sender.replaceTrack(sendVideoTrack);
}
if (video && sendVideoTrack) {
video.sender.replaceTrack(sendVideoTrack);
}
} else
pc.addIceCandidate(message.candidate).catch(logError);
};
function logError(error) {
log(error.name + ": " + error.message);
}
The answerer may wish to send media in parallel with sending the answer, and the offerer may wish to render the media before the answer arrives.
var signalingChannel = new SignalingChannel();
var configuration = { "iceServers": [{ "urls": "stuns:stun.example.org" }] };
var pc;
// call start() to initiate
function start() {
pc = new RTCPeerConnection(configuration);
// send any ice candidates to the other peer
pc.onicecandidate = function (evt) {
signalingChannel.send(JSON.stringify({ "candidate": evt.candidate }));
};
// let the "negotiationneeded" event trigger offer generation
pc.onnegotiationneeded = function () {
pc.createOffer().then(function (offer) {
return pc.setLocalDescription(offer);
})
.then(function () {
// send the offer to the other peer
signalingChannel.send(JSON.stringify({ "desc": pc.localDescription }));
})
.catch(logError);
};
// get a local stream, show it in a self-view and add it to be sent
navigator.mediaDevices.getUserMedia({ "audio": true, "video": true })
.then(function (stream) {
selfView.srcObject = stream;
var remoteStream = new MediaStream();
var audioSender = pc.addTrack(stream.getAudioTracks()[0], stream);
var videoSender = pc.addTrack(stream.getVideoTracks()[0], stream);
[audioSender, videoSender].forEach(function(sender) {
remoteStream.addTrack(pc.getReceivers.find(function (receiver) {
return receiver.mid == sender.mid;
}).track);
});
// Render the media even before ontrack fires.
remoteView.srcObject = remoteStream;
})
.catch(logError);
}
signalingChannel.onmessage = function (evt) {
if (!pc)
start();
var message = JSON.parse(evt.data);
if (message.desc) {
var desc = message.desc;
// if we get an offer, we need to reply with an answer
if (desc.type == "offer") {
pc.setRemoteDescription(desc).then(function () {
return pc.createAnswer();
})
.then(function (answer) {
return pc.setLocalDescription(answer);
})
.then(function () {
var str = JSON.stringify({ "desc": pc.localDescription });
signalingChannel.send(str);
})
.catch(logError);
} else
pc.setRemoteDescription(desc).catch(logError);
} else
pc.addIceCandidate(message.candidate).catch(logError);
};
function logError(error) {
log(error.name + ": " + error.message);
}
A client wants to send multiple RTP encodings (simulcast) to a server.
var signalingChannel = new SignalingChannel();
var configuration = { "iceServers": [{ "urls": "stuns:stun.example.org" }] };
var pc;
// call start() to initiate
function start() {
pc = new RTCPeerConnection(configuration);
// let the "negotiationneeded" event trigger offer generation
pc.onnegotiationneeded = function () {
pc.createOffer().then(function (offer) {
return pc.setLocalDescription(offer);
})
.then(function () {
// send the offer to the other peer
signalingChannel.send(JSON.stringify({ "desc": pc.localDescription }));
})
.catch(logError);
};
// get a local stream, show it in a self-view and add it to be sent
navigator.mediaDevices.getUserMedia({ "audio": true, "video": true })
.then(function (stream) {
selfView.srcObject = stream;
pc.addTransceiver(stream.getAudioTracks()[0], {direction: "sendonly"});
pc.addTransceiver(stream.getVideoTracks()[0], {
direction: "sendonly",
sendEncodings: [
{
rid: "f",
},
{
rid: "h",
scaleDownResolutionBy: 2.0
},
{
rid: "q",
scaleDownResolutionBy: 4.0
}
]
});
})
.catch(logError);
}
signalingChannel.onmessage = function (evt) {
var message = JSON.parse(evt.data);
if (message.desc)
pc.setRemoteDescription(message.desc).catch(logError);
else
pc.addIceCandidate(message.candidate).catch(logError);
};
function logError(error) {
log(error.name + ": " + error.message);
}
This example shows the more complete functionality.
TODO
This example shows how to create a
RTCDataChannel object and perform the offer/answer
exchange required to connect the channel to the other peer. The
RTCDataChannel is used in the context of a simple
chat application and listeners are attached to monitor when the channel
is ready, messages are received and when the channel is closed.
var signalingChannel = new SignalingChannel();
var configuration = { "iceServers": [{ "urls": "stuns:stun.example.org" }] };
var pc;
var channel;
// call start(true) to initiate
function start(isInitiator) {
pc = new RTCPeerConnection(configuration);
// send any ice candidates to the other peer
pc.onicecandidate = function (evt) {
signalingChannel.send(JSON.stringify({ "candidate": evt.candidate }));
};
// let the "negotiationneeded" event trigger offer generation
pc.onnegotiationneeded = function () {
pc.createOffer().then(function (offer) {
return pc.setLocalDescription(offer);
})
.then(function () {
// send the offer to the other peer
signalingChannel.send(JSON.stringify({ "desc": pc.localDescription }));
})
.catch(logError);
};
if (isInitiator) {
// create data channel and setup chat
channel = pc.createDataChannel("chat");
setupChat();
} else {
// setup chat on incoming data channel
pc.ondatachannel = function (evt) {
channel = evt.channel;
setupChat();
};
}
}
signalingChannel.onmessage = function (evt) {
if (!pc)
start(false);
var message = JSON.parse(evt.data);
if (message.desc) {
var desc = message.desc;
// if we get an offer, we need to reply with an answer
if (desc.type == "offer") {
pc.setRemoteDescription(desc).then(function () {
return pc.createAnswer();
})
.then(function (answer) {
return pc.setLocalDescription(answer);
})
.then(function () {
var str = JSON.stringify({ "desc": pc.localDescription });
signalingChannel.send(str);
})
.catch(logError);
} else
pc.setRemoteDescription(desc).catch(logError);
} else
pc.addIceCandidate(message.candidate).catch(logError);
};
function setupChat() {
channel.onopen = function () {
// e.g. enable send button
enableChat(channel);
};
channel.onmessage = function (evt) {
showChatMessage(evt.data);
};
}
function sendChatMessage(msg) {
channel.send(msg);
}
function logError(error) {
log(error.name + ": " + error.message);
}
Editors' Note: This example flow needs to be discussed on the list and is likely wrong in many ways.
This shows an example of one possible call flow between two browsers. This does not show the procedure to get access to local media or every callback that gets fired but instead tries to reduce it down to only show the key events and messages.
Examples assume that sender is an RTCRtpSender.
Sending the DTMF signal "1234" with 500 ms duration per tone:
if (sender.dtmf) {
var duration = 500;
sender.dtmf.insertDTMF("1234", duration);
} else
log("DTMF function not available");
Send the DTMF signal "1234", and light up the active key using
lightKey(key) while the tone is playing (assuming that
lightKey("") will darken all the keys):
if (sender.dtmf) {
sender.dtmf.ontonechange = function (e) {
if (!e.tone)
return;
// light up the key when playout starts
lightKey(e.tone);
// turn off the light after tone duration
setTimeout(lightKey, sender.duration, "");
};
sender.dtmf.insertDTMF("1234");
} else
log("DTMF function not available");
Send a 1-second "1" tone followed by a 2-second "2" tone:
if (sender.dtmf) {
sender.dtmf.ontonechange = function (e) {
if (e.tone == "1")
sender.dtmf.insertDTMF("2", 2000);
};
sender.dtmf.isertDTMF("1", 1000);
} else
log("DTMF function not available");
It is always safe to append to the tone buffer. This example appends before any tone playout has started as well as during playout.
if (sender.dtmf) {
sender.dtmf.insertDTMF("123");
// append more tones to the tone buffer before playout has begun
sender.dtmf.insertDTMF(sender.toneBuffer + "456");
sender.dtmf.ontonechange = function (e) {
if (e.tone == "1")
// append more tones when playout has begun
sender.dtmf.insertDTMF(sender.toneBuffer + "789");
};
} else
log("DTMF function not available");
Send the DTMF signal "123" and abort after sending "2".
if (sender.dtmf) {
sender.dtmf.ontonechange = function (e) {
if (e.tone == "2")
// empty the buffer to not play any tone after "2"
sender.dtmf.insertDTMF("");
};
sender.dtmf.insertDTMF("123");
} else
log("DTMF function not available");
The following events fire on RTCDataChannel
objects:
| Event name | Interface | Fired when... |
|---|---|---|
open |
Event |
The RTCDataChannel object's underlying data
transport has been established (or re-established).
|
message |
MessageEvent
[[!webmessaging]] |
A message was successfully received. |
bufferedamountlow |
Event |
The RTCDataChannel object's
bufferedAmount
decreases from above its bufferedAmountLowThreshold to less than
or equal to its bufferedAmountLowThreshold. |
error |
ErrorEvent |
Any error occured from the data channel. |
close |
Event |
The RTCDataChannel object's underlying data
transport has bee closed.
|
The following events fire on RTCPeerConnection
objects:
| Event name | Interface | Fired when... |
|---|---|---|
connecting |
Event |
TODO |
track |
RTCTrackEvent |
A new incoming MediaStreamTrack has been created, and
an associated RTCRtpReceiver has been added to the
set of receivers.
|
negotiationneeded |
Event |
The browser wishes to inform the application that session negotiation needs to be done (i.e. a createOffer call followed by setLocalDescription). |
signalingstatechange |
Event |
The signaling state has changed. This state change is the
result of either setLocalDescription or
setRemoteDescription being invoked.
|
iceconnectionstatechange |
Event |
The RTCPeerConnection's ICE connection state
has changed.
|
icegatheringstatechange |
Event |
The RTCPeerConnection's ICE gathering state has
changed.
|
icecandidate |
RTCPeerConnectionIceEvent |
A new RTCIceCandidate is made available to
the script. |
connectionstatechange |
Event |
The RTCPeerConnection connectionState has changed.
|
icecandidateerror |
RTCPeerConnectionIceErrorEvent |
A failure occured when gathering ICE candidates. |
datachannel |
RTCDataChannelEvent |
A new RTCDataChannel is dispatched to the
script in response to the other peer creating a channel. |
isolationchange |
Event |
A new Event is dispatched to the script when
the isolated attribute on a MediaStreamTrack
changes. |
The following events fire on RTCDTMFSender
objects:
| Event name | Interface | Fired when... |
|---|---|---|
tonechange |
RTCDTMFToneChangeEvent |
The RTCDTMFSender object has either just
begun playout of a tone (returned as the tone attribute) or just ended
playout of a tone (returned as an empty value in the
tone
attribute). |
The following events fire on RTCIceTransport
objects:
| Event name | Interface | Fired when... |
|---|---|---|
statechange |
Event |
The RTCIceTransport state changes. |
gatheringstatechange |
Event |
The RTCIceTransport gathering state
changes. |
selectedcandidatepairchange |
Event |
The RTCIceTransport's selected candidate pair
changes. |
The following events fire on RTCDtlsTransport
objects:
| Event name | Interface | Fired when... |
|---|---|---|
statechange |
Event |
The RTCDtlsTransport state changes. |
This section is non-normative; it specifies no new behaviour, but instead summarizes information already present in other parts of the specification. The overall security considerations of the general set of APIs and protocols used in WebRTC are described in [[RTCWEB-SECURITY-ARCH]].
This document extends the Web platform with the ability to set up real time, direct communication between browsers and other devices, including other browsers.
This means that data and media can be shared between applications running in different browsers, or between an application running in the same browser and something that is not a browser, something that is an extension to the usual barriers in the Web model against sending data between entities with different origins.
The WebRTC specification provides no user prompts or chrome indicators for communication; it assumes that once the Web page has been allowed to access media, it is free to share that media with other entities as it chooses. Peer-to-peer exchanges of data view WebRTC datachannels can thus occur without any user explicit consent or involvement, similarly as a server-mediated exchange (e.g. via Web Sockets) could occur without user involvement.
The peerIdentity mechanism loads and executes
JavaScript code from a third-party server acting as an identity provider.
That code is executed in a separate JavaScript realm and does not affect
the protections afforded by the same origin policy.
Even without WebRTC, the Web server providing a Web application will know the public IP address to which the application is delivered. Setting up communications exposes additional information about the browser’s network context to the web application, and may include the set of (possibly private) IP addresses available to the browser for WebRTC use. Some of this information has to be passed to the corresponding party to enable the establishment of a communication session.
Revealing IP addresses can leak location and means of connection; this can be sensitive. Depending on the network environment, it can also increase the fingerprinting surface and create persistent cross-origin state that cannot easily be cleared by the user.
A connection will always reveal the IP addresses proposed for communication to the corresponding party. The application can limit this exposure by choosing not to use certain addresses using the settings exposed by the RTCIceTransportPolicy dictionary, and by using relays (for instance TURN servers) rather than direct connections between participants. One will normally assume that the IP address of TURN servers is not sensitive information. These choices can for instance be made by the application based on whether the user has indicated consent to start a media connection with the other party.
Mitigating the exposure of IP addresses to the application itself requires limiting the IP addresses that can be used, which will impact the ability to communicate on the most direct path between endpoints. Browsers are encouraged to provide appropriate controls for deciding which IP addresses are made available to applications, based on the security posture desired by the user. The choice of which addresses to expose is controlled by local policy (see [[RTCWEB-IP-HANDLING]] for details).
Since the browser is an active platform executing in a trusted network environment (inside the firewall), it is important to limit the damage that the browser can do to other elements on the local network, and it is important to protect data from interception, manipulation and modification by untrusted participants.
Mitigations include:
These measures are specified in the relevant IETF documents.
The fact that communication is taking place cannot be hidden from adversaries that can observe the network, so this has to be regarded as public information.
A mechanism, peerIdentity, is provided that gives
Javascript the option of requesting media that the same javascript cannot
access, but can only be sent to certain other entities.
As described above, the list of IP addresses exposed by the WebRTC API can be used as a persistent cross-origin state.
Beyond IP addresses, the WebRTC API exposes information about the
underlying media system via the RTCRtpSender.getCapabilities
and RTCRtpReceiver.getCapabilities methods, including
detailed and ordered information about the codecs that the system is able
to produce and consume. A subset of that information is likely to be
represented in the SDP session descriptions generated, exposed and
transmitted during session
negotiation. That information is in most cases persistent across time
and origins, and increases the fingerprint surface of a given device.
If set, the configured default ICE servers exposed by
defaultIceServers on
RTCPeerConnection instances also provides persistent across
time and origins information which increases the fingerprinting surface
of a given browser.
When establishing DTLS connections, the WebRTC API can generate certificates that can be persisted by the application (e.g. in IndexedDB). These certificates are not shared across origins, and get cleared when persistent storage is cleared for the origin.
This section will be removed before publication.
The editors wish to thank the Working Group chairs and Team Contact, Harald Alvestrand, Stefan Håkansson, Erik Lagerway and Dominique Hazaël-Massieux, for their support. Substantial text in this specification was provided by many people including Martin Thomson, Harald Alvestrand, Justin Uberti, Eric Rescorla, Peter Thatcher, Jan-Ivar Bruaroey and Peter Saint-Andre. Dan Burnett would like to acknowledge the significant support received from Voxeo and Aspect during the development of this specification.
The RTCRtpSender and RTCRtpReceiver objects were initially described in the W3C ORTC CG, and have been adapted for use in this specification.