AVPlayer buffering, pausing notification, and poster frame

Omer Waqas Khan picture Omer Waqas Khan · May 18, 2012 · Viewed 20.3k times · Source

I have some questions related to AVPlayer which are:

  1. When we pause the AVPlayer through [player pause] does the AVPlayer keep buffering the video from the network or does it just stop? I couldn't get any info related to this in apple's documentation. Also, is it possible to force the AVPlayer to keep buffering while in pause, so that if we have the paused video is in waiting for the first video to be ended then we wouldn't find any gap in between the videos?

  2. On pausing the AVPlayer can we have any event on [player pause].

  3. Can we show still image on AVPlayer for some seconds?

Thanks

Answer

djromero picture djromero · May 18, 2012

1) AVPlayer will buffer the video in several cases, none cleary documented. I'd say you can expect buffering when you init the video, and when you replace the current item. You can observe currentItem.loadedTimeRanges to know what's going on. That property will tell you which video time ranges has been loaded.

Also, there is a few other currentItem properties that may help you: playbackLikelyToKeepUp, playbackBufferFull and playbackBufferEmpty.

Achieving a perfect gapless playback is not easy.

/* player is an instance of AVPlayer */
[player addObserver:self 
         forKeyPath:@"currentItem.loadedTimeRanges" 
            options:NSKeyValueObservingOptionNew 
            context:kTimeRangesKVO];    

In observeValueForKeyPath:ofObject:change:context::

if (kTimeRangesKVO == context) {
   NSArray *timeRanges = (NSArray *)[change objectForKey:NSKeyValueChangeNewKey];
   if (timeRanges && [timeRanges count]) {
       CMTimeRange timerange = [[timeRanges objectAtIndex:0] CMTimeRangeValue];
       NSLog(@" . . . %.5f -> %.5f", CMTimeGetSeconds(timerange.start), CMTimeGetSeconds(CMTimeAdd(timerange.start, timerange.duration)));
   }
}

2) Just keep an eye on player.rate.

[player addObserver:self 
         forKeyPath:@"rate" 
            options:NSKeyValueObservingOptionNew 
            context:kRateDidChangeKVO];

Then in your observeValueForKeyPath:ofObject:change:context::

    if (kRateDidChangeKVO == context) {
        NSLog(@"Player playback rate changed: %.5f", player.rate);
        if (player.rate == 0.0) {
            NSLog(@" . . . PAUSED (or just started)");
        }
    }

3) You can build a movie of a given length using a still image but it's easier to use a regular UIImageView on top of the player. Hide/show it when needed.

Sample project: feel free to play with the code I wrote to support my answer.