WebRTC API
WebRTC (Web Real-Time Communication) is a technology that enables Web applications and sites to capture and optionally stream audio and/or video media, as well as to exchange arbitrary data between browsers without requiring an intermediary. The set of standards that comprise WebRTC makes it possible to share data and perform teleconferencing peer-to-peer, without requiring that the user install plug-ins or any other third-party software.
WebRTC consists of several interrelated APIs and protocols which work together to achieve this. The documentation you'll find here will help you understand the fundamentals of WebRTC, how to set up and use both data and media connections, and more.
Interoperability
Because implementations of WebRTC are still evolving, and because each browser has different levels of support for codecs and WebRTC features, you should strongly consider making use of the Adapter.js library provided by Google before you begin to write your code.
Adapter.js uses shims and polyfills to smooth over the differences among the WebRTC implementations across the environments supporting it. Adapter.js also handles prefixes and other naming differences to make the entire WebRTC development process easier, with more broadly compatible results. The library is also available as an NPM package.
To learn more about Adapter.js, see Improving compatibility using WebRTC adapter.js.
WebRTC concepts and usage
WebRTC serves multiple purposes; together with the Media Capture and Streams API, they provide powerful multimedia capabilities to the Web, including support for audio and video conferencing, file exchange, screen sharing, identity management, and interfacing with legacy telephone systems including support for sending DTMF (touch-tone dialing) signals. Connections between peers can be made without requiring any special drivers or plug-ins, and can often be made without any intermediary servers.
Connections between two peers are represented by the RTCPeerConnection
interface. Once a connection has been established and opened using RTCPeerConnection
, media streams (MediaStream
s) and/or data channels (RTCDataChannel
s) can be added to the connection.
Media streams can consist of any number of tracks of media information; tracks, which are represented by objects based on the MediaStreamTrack
interface, may contain one of a number of types of media data, including audio, video, and text (such as subtitles or even chapter names). Most streams consist of at least one audio track and likely also a video track, and can be used to send and receive both live media or stored media information (such as a streamed movie).
You can also use the connection between two peers to exchange arbitrary binary data using the RTCDataChannel
interface. This can be used for back-channel information, metadata exchange, game status packets, file transfers, or even as a primary channel for data transfer.
more details and links to relevant guides and tutorials needed
WebRTC reference
Because WebRTC provides interfaces that work together to accomplish a variety of tasks, we have divided up the reference by category. Please see the sidebar for an alphabetical list.
Connection setup and management
These interfaces, dictionaries, and types are used to set up, open, and manage WebRTC connections. Included are interfaces representing peer media connections, data channels, and interfaces used when exchanging information on the capabilities of each peer in order to select the best possible configuration for a two-way media connection.
Interfaces
RTCPeerConnection
-
Represents a WebRTC connection between the local computer and a remote peer. It is used to handle efficient streaming of data between the two peers.
RTCDataChannel
-
Represents a bi-directional data channel between two peers of a connection.
RTCDataChannelEvent
-
Represents events that occur while attaching a
RTCDataChannel
to aRTCPeerConnection
. The only event sent with this interface isdatachannel
. RTCSessionDescription
-
Represents the parameters of a session. Each
RTCSessionDescription
consists of a descriptiontype
indicating which part of the offer/answer negotiation process it describes and of the SDP descriptor of the session. RTCStatsReport
-
Provides information detailing statistics for a connection or for an individual track on the connection; the report can be obtained by calling
RTCPeerConnection.getStats()
. Details about using WebRTC statistics can be found in WebRTC Statistics API. RTCIceCandidate
-
Represents a candidate Interactive Connectivity Establishment (ICE) server for establishing an
RTCPeerConnection
. RTCIceTransport
-
Represents information about an ICE transport.
RTCPeerConnectionIceEvent
-
Represents events that occur in relation to ICE candidates with the target, usually an
RTCPeerConnection
. Only one event is of this type:icecandidate
. RTCRtpSender
-
Manages the encoding and transmission of data for a
MediaStreamTrack
on anRTCPeerConnection
. RTCRtpReceiver
-
Manages the reception and decoding of data for a
MediaStreamTrack
on anRTCPeerConnection
. RTCTrackEvent
-
The interface used to represent a
track
event, which indicates that anRTCRtpReceiver
object was added to theRTCPeerConnection
object, indicating that a new incomingMediaStreamTrack
was created and added to theRTCPeerConnection
. RTCSctpTransport
-
Provides information which describes a Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP) transport and also provides a way to access the underlying Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS) transport over which SCTP packets for all of an
RTCPeerConnection
's data channels are sent and received.
Dictionaries
RTCIceServer
-
Defines how to connect to a single ICE server (such as a STUN or TURN server).
RTCRtpContributingSource
-
Contains information about a given contributing source (CSRC) including the most recent time a packet that the source contributed was played out.
Events
bufferedamountlow
-
The amount of data currently buffered by the data channel—as indicated by its
bufferedAmount
property—has decreased to be at or below the channel's minimum buffered data size, as specified bybufferedAmountLowThreshold
. close
-
The data channel has completed the closing process and is now in the
closed
state. Its underlying data transport is completely closed at this point. You can be notified before closing completes by watching for theclosing
event instead. closing
-
The
RTCDataChannel
has transitioned to theclosing
state, indicating that it will be closed soon. You can detect the completion of the closing process by watching for theclose
event. connectionstatechange
-
The connection's state, which can be accessed in
connectionState
, has changed. datachannel
-
A new
RTCDataChannel
is available following the remote peer opening a new data channel. This event's type isRTCDataChannelEvent
. error
-
An
RTCErrorEvent
indicating that an error occurred on the data channel. error
-
An
RTCErrorEvent
indicating that an error occurred on theRTCDtlsTransport
. This error will be eitherdtls-failure
orfingerprint-failure
. gatheringstatechange
-
The
RTCIceTransport
's gathering state has changed. icecandidate
-
An
RTCPeerConnectionIceEvent
which is sent whenever the local device has identified a new ICE candidate which needs to be added to the local peer by callingsetLocalDescription()
. icecandidateerror
-
An
RTCPeerConnectionIceErrorEvent
indicating that an error has occurred while gathering ICE candidates. iceconnectionstatechange
-
Sent to an
RTCPeerConnection
when its ICE connection's state—found in theiceconnectionstate
property—changes. icegatheringstatechange
-
Sent to an
RTCPeerConnection
when its ICE gathering state—found in theicegatheringstate
property—changes. message
-
A message has been received on the data channel. The event is of type
MessageEvent
. negotiationneeded
-
Informs the
RTCPeerConnection
that it needs to perform session negotiation by callingcreateOffer()
followed bysetLocalDescription()
. open
-
The underlying data transport for the
RTCDataChannel
has been successfully opened or re-opened. selectedcandidatepairchange
-
The currently-selected pair of ICE candidates has changed for the
RTCIceTransport
on which the event is fired. track
-
The
track
event, of typeRTCTrackevent
is sent to anRTCPeerConnection
when a new track is added to the connection following the successful negotiation of the media's streaming. signalingstatechange
-
Sent to the peer connection when its
signalingstate
has changed. This happens as a result of a call to eithersetLocalDescription()
orsetRemoteDescription()
. statechange
-
The state of the
RTCDtlsTransport
has changed. statechange
-
The state of the
RTCIceTransport
has changed. statechange
-
The state of the
RTCSctpTransport
has changed.
Types
RTCSctpTransport.state
-
Indicates the state of an
RTCSctpTransport
instance.
Identity and security
These APIs are used to manage user identity and security, in order to authenticate the user for a connection.
RTCIdentityProvider
-
Enables a user agent is able to request that an identity assertion be generated or validated.
RTCIdentityAssertion
-
Represents the identity of the remote peer of the current connection. If no peer has yet been set and verified this interface returns
null
. Once set it can't be changed. RTCIdentityProviderRegistrar
-
Registers an identity provider (idP).
RTCCertificate
-
Represents a certificate that an
RTCPeerConnection
uses to authenticate.
Telephony
These interfaces and events are related to interactivity with Public-Switched Telephone Networks (PTSNs). They're primarily used to send tone dialing sounds—or packets representing those tones—across the network to the remote peer.
Interfaces
RTCDTMFSender
-
Manages the encoding and transmission of Dual-Tone Multi-Frequency (DTMF) signaling for an
RTCPeerConnection
. RTCDTMFToneChangeEvent
-
Used by the
tonechange
event to indicate that a DTMF tone has either begun or ended. This event does not bubble (except where otherwise stated) and is not cancelable (except where otherwise stated).
Events
tonechange
-
Either a new DTMF tone has begun to play over the connection, or the last tone in the
RTCDTMFSender
'stoneBuffer
has been sent and the buffer is now empty. The event's type isRTCDTMFToneChangeEvent
.
Guides
- Introduction to WebRTC protocols
-
This article introduces the protocols on top of which the WebRTC API is built.
- WebRTC connectivity
-
A guide to how WebRTC connections work and how the various protocols and interfaces can be used together to build powerful communication apps.
- Lifetime of a WebRTC session
-
WebRTC lets you build peer-to-peer communication of arbitrary data, audio, or video—or any combination thereof—into a browser application. In this article, we'll look at the lifetime of a WebRTC session, from establishing the connection all the way through closing the connection when it's no longer needed.
- Establishing a connection: The perfect negotiation pattern
-
Perfect negotiation is a design pattern which is recommended for your signaling process to follow, which provides transparency in negotiation while allowing both sides to be either the offerer or the answerer, without significant coding needed to differentiate the two.
- Signaling and two-way video calling
-
A tutorial and example which turns a WebSocket-based chat system created for a previous example and adds support for opening video calls among participants. The chat server's WebSocket connection is used for WebRTC signaling.
- Codecs used by WebRTC
-
A guide to the codecs which WebRTC requires browsers to support as well as the optional ones supported by various popular browsers. Included is a guide to help you choose the best codecs for your needs.
- Using WebRTC data channels
-
This guide covers how you can use a peer connection and an associated
RTCDataChannel
to exchange arbitrary data between two peers. - Using DTMF with WebRTC
-
WebRTC's support for interacting with gateways that link to old-school telephone systems includes support for sending DTMF tones using the
RTCDTMFSender
interface. This guide shows how to do so.
Tutorials
- Improving compatibility using WebRTC adapter.js
-
The WebRTC organization provides on GitHub the WebRTC adapter to work around compatibility issues in different browsers' WebRTC implementations. The adapter is a JavaScript shim which lets your code to be written to the specification so that it will "just work" in all browsers with WebRTC support.
- Taking still photos with WebRTC
-
This article shows how to use WebRTC to access the camera on a computer or mobile phone with WebRTC support and take a photo with it.
- A simple RTCDataChannel sample
-
The
RTCDataChannel
interface is a feature which lets you open a channel between two peers over which you may send and receive arbitrary data. The API is intentionally similar to the WebSocket API, so that the same programming model can be used for each. - Building an internet connected phone with Peer.js
-
This tutorial is a step-by-step guide on how to build a phone using Peer.js
Specifications
Specification |
---|
WebRTC: Real-Time Communication Between Browsers |
Media Capture and Streams |
Media Capture from DOM Elements |
WebRTC-proper protocols
- Application Layer Protocol Negotiation for Web Real-Time Communications
- WebRTC Audio Codec and Processing Requirements
- RTCWeb Data Channels
- RTCWeb Data Channel Protocol
- Web Real-Time Communication (WebRTC): Media Transport and Use of RTP
- WebRTC Security Architecture
- Transports for RTCWEB
Related supporting protocols
- Interactive Connectivity Establishment (ICE): A Protocol for Network Address Translator (NAT) Traversal for Offer/Answer Protocol
- Session Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN)
- URI Scheme for the Session Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN) Protocol
- Traversal Using Relays around NAT (TURN) Uniform Resource Identifiers
- An Offer/Answer Model with Session Description Protocol (SDP)
- Session Traversal Utilities for NAT (STUN) Extension for Third Party Authorization
See also
MediaDevices
MediaStreamEvent
MediaStreamConstraints
MediaStreamTrack
MessageEvent
MediaStream
- Media Capture and Streams API
- Firefox multistream and renegotiation for Jitsi Videobridge
- Peering Through the WebRTC Fog with SocketPeer
- Inside the Party Bus: Building a Web App with Multiple Live Video Streams + Interactive Graphics
- Web media technologies
- WebRTC Statistics API
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Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License v2.5 or later.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/WebRTC_API