libdash is the official reference software of the ISO/IEC MPEG-DASH standard and is an open-source library that provides an object orient (OO) interface to the MPEG-DASH standard, developed by Bitmovin.
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The Bitmovin Adaptive HTML5 Video Player enables HTML5 adaptive streaming with MPEG-DASH native in your browser with no need for plugins like Flash or Silverlight. Due to the native integration with the browser it is possible to play back very high resolutions such as 4K or very high frame rates like 60fps.
In addition to the public available open source resources and the mailing list support, we provide professional development and integration services, consulting, high-quality streaming componentes/logics, relicensing of libdash etc. based on your individual needs. Feel free to contact us via [email protected] so we can discuss your requirements and provide you an offer.
The general architecture of MPEG-DASH is depicted in the figure below where the orange parts are standardized, i.e., the MPD and segment formats. The delivery of the MPD, the control heuristics and the media player itself, are depicted in blue in the figure. These parts are not standardized and allow the differentiation of industry solutions due to the performance or different features that can be integrated at that level. libdash is also depicted in blue and encapsulates the MPD parsing and HTTP part, which will be handled by the library. Therefore the library provides interfaces for the DASH Streaming Control and the Media Player to access MPDs and downloadable media segments. The download order of such media segments will not be handled by the library this is left to the DASH Streaming Control, which is an own component in this architecture but it could also be included in the Media Player. In a typical deployment, a DASH server provides segments in several bitrates and resolutions. The client initially receives the MPD through libdash which provides a convenient object oriented interface to that MPD. The MPD contains the temporal relationships for the various qualities and segments. Based on that information the client can download individual media segments through libdash at any point in time. Therefore varying bandwidth conditions can be handled by switching to the corresponding quality level at segment boundaries in order to provide a smooth streaming experience. This adaptation is not part of libdash and the MPEG-DASH standard and will be left to the application which is using libdash.
The doxygen documentation availalbe in the repo.
You can find the latest sources and binaries on github.
- Download the tarball or clone the repository from github (git://github.com/bitmovin/libdash.git)
- Open the libdash.sln with Visual Studio 2010
- Build the solution
- After that all files will be provided in the bin folder
- You can test the library with the sampleplayer.exe. This application simply downloads the lowest representation of one of our dataset MPDs.
- sudo apt-get install git-core build-essential cmake libxml2-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev
- git clone git://github.com/bitmovin/libdash.git
- cd libdash/libdash
- mkdir build
- cd build
- cmake ../
- make
- cd bin
- The library and a simple test of the network part of the library should be available now. You can test the network part of the library with
- ./libdash_networkpart_test
Prerequisite: libdash must be built as described in the previous section. Tested using cmake version 2.8.12.2.
- sudo apt-add-repository ppa:ubuntu-sdk-team/ppa
- sudo apt-add-repository ppa:canonical-qt5-edgers/qt5-proper
- sudo apt-get update
- sudo apt-get install qtmultimedia5-dev qtbase5-dev libqt5widgets5 libqt5core5a libqt5gui5 libqt5multimedia5 libqt5multimedia5-plugins libqt5multimediawidgets5 libqt5opengl5 libav-tools libavcodec-dev libavdevice-dev libavfilter-dev libavformat-dev libavutil-dev libpostproc-dev libswscale-dev
- cd libdash/libdash/qtsampleplayer
- mkdir build
- cd build
- cmake ../
- make
- ./qtsampleplayer
If some issues arise regarding the make installation, please make sure to be using the right kernel and cmake version. It is important to run cmake with the appropriate version in order to avoid linking problems that can fail the make process.
libdash is open source available and licensed under LGPL:
“This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA“
As libdash is licensed under LGPL, changes to the library have to be published again to the open-source project. As many user and companies do not want to publish their specific changes, libdash can be also relicensed to a commercial license on request. Please contact [email protected] to provide you an offer.
We specially want to thank our passionate developers at Bitmovin as well as the researchers at the Institute of Information Technology (ITEC) from the Alpen Adria Universitaet Klagenfurt (AAU)!
Furthermore we want to thank the Netidee initiative from the Internet Foundation Austria for partially funding the open source development of libdash.
We kindly ask you to refer the following paper in any publication mentioning libdash:
Christopher Mueller, Stefan Lederer, Joerg Poecher, and Christian Timmerer, “libdash – An Open Source Software Library for the MPEG-DASH Standard”, in Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Multimedia and Expo 2013, San Jose, USA, July, 2013