I'm testing the video capabilities of HTML5. With a directive userMedia, I'm able to switch on my camera on my MacBook via navigator.getUserMedia() (actually via an adapter to make it cross browser - at least those who support it).
But when I change my $route, I don't see myself anymore (hurray), but the camera does not switch off (the green light stays on). Only refreshing the page resets everything (which is normal).
I was hoping that watching for a change in $location.path() would do the trick:
link: function(scope, elm, attrs, ctrl) {
...
var path = $location.path();
scope.$watch(function() {
return $location.path();
}, function(value) {
if (value && value !== path) {
$log.info('Location changed, switching off camera');
webRTCAdapter.detachMediaStream(elm[0]);
}
}, true);
}
detachMediaStream (Chrome):
webRTCAdapter.detachMediaStream = function(element) {
console.log("Detaching media stream");
element.pause();
element.src = '';
element.parentNode.removeChild(element);
};
Html:
<video id="localVideo" width="100%" autoplay="autoplay" user-media="user-media"></video>
detachMediaStream gets executed (I see the necessary logs in console.log), but the camera does not switch off.
Any idea how to solve this? Should I unload the element somehow?
I found the cause of the problem. The LocalMediaStream which was created when the camera switches on, needs to be stopped by using the stop() function.
A reference to the created LocalMediaStream object has to be kept, when attaching it to the video element:
controller: function($element) {
var self = this;
self.onUserMediaSuccess = function(stream) {
$log.info("User has granted access to local media.");
webRTCAdapter.attachMediaStream($element[0], stream);
// keep a reference
self.localStream = stream;
};
This LocalMediaStream reference has to added to detachMediaStream function, when the $destroy event occurs (thank you for that, Joseph Silber):
scope.$on('$destroy', function() {
$log.info('Location changed, switching off camera');
webRTCAdapter.detachMediaStream( elm[0], ctrl.localStream);
});
On the LocalMediaStream object I need to execute the stop() function:
webRTCAdapter.detachMediaStream = function(element, stream) {
console.log("Detaching media stream");
element.pause();
element.src = '';
element.parentNode.removeChild(element);
// stopping stream (camera, ...)
stream.stop();
};
In Firefox, we already support element.mozSrcObject = stream (to become element.srcObject, and which Chrome should have soon though I don't know if they'll prefix it for the time being). That makes it easier to handle since you don't need to keep a second reference to it. (element.mozSrcObject.stop(); element.mozSrcObject = null)