Difference between revisions of "Feature:Audio/video communication"
(IRC is the way to go for prototype) |
m (Administrator moved page Feature: Audio/video communication to Feature2:Audio/video communication) |
Revision as of 18:04, 23 March 2015
Contents
Summary
67P comes with integrated video- and audio chat capabilities. In the beginning, this is limited to 1on1 calls, but we will support conferencing and/or broadcasting at a later point. WebRTC ("Web Real-time Communication") is used to enable this. WebRTC currently works in Firefox, Chrome, FF and Chrome on Android, Opera and some lesser known browsers (e.g. Bowser on iOS). We might switch to ORTC ("Object RTC") at some point, which is a lower-level standard that will be supported in Internet Explorer also.
Features
67P RTC is an integrated featuren in HyperChannel. Only direct 1on1 calls will be implemented for now.
HyperChannel Integration
A video stream (or audio symbol for non-video) will be integrated into the 67P UI (maybe in an extra tab?) You can also "pop-out" this UI component, which makes working on multiple screens easier (and requesting full screen simpler).
Feature Ideas for Later™
- Screensharing
- Conferencing
- Broadcasting
- Call in to a WebRTC call via plain old phone system
Stand Alone Application
The WebRTC Stand Alone Application will be needed in the following cases:
- One of the participants is not on HC, but using an IRC Client
- Both parties are using IRC. The Server/Mod generates a room link on the SA app for them. Or maybe: Don't support this scenario?
- Inviting people to an 1on1 chat that are not part of the current 67P organisation (maybe via email)
The SA application displays the video stream of the other party, however, some kind of text communication channel is still needed (people want to exchange links etc) - This will be done via IRC or WebRTC's DataChannels.
Technical Implementation
Components: Client/UI Integration, Signaling Backend (might be IRC/SH), TURN Relay, SFU/MCU for Conferencing > 4
Signaling
WebRTC requires "signaling" which serves two purposes:
- Peers meet each other
- Peers can exchange some messages w/ each other (like "offer: i can do this codec" or "ice: i have this kind of nat")
It is implemented on top of the existing IRC channels (via SockerHub) using special message formats, which will get parsed by the HC Client. For backwards compat (later), it could include a link to the SA app:
A → B [67p-rtc-invite] Here is your video call: https://playground.p67.io/rtc/bilfgneehlrieli B → A [67p-rtc-accept] Accepted A → B [67p-rtc-params] (Signaling messages) ...