This folder contains mojo interfaces, clients and implementations that extend the core “media” target to support most out-of-process use cases, including Media Player, Metrics (WatchTime), etc.
Currently the “media” target does not depend on mojo, so that other applications can use the “media” target without having to pull in mojo dependency.
Media Player (WebMediaPlayer
) supports HTML5 <video> playback in Chromium. Internally, it depends on many media components to perform some specific tasks, e.g. media renderer, audio decoder, video decoder, and content decryption module (CDM). A CDM is required for a media renderer, audio decoder or video decoder to handle protected content. See more details in the general media documentation.
While most of HTML5 media player stack and Encrypted Media Extensions (EME) stack live in the sandboxed render process (e.g. for security reasons), there are some cases where some media components must live in a different process. For example:
Here we provide a generic framework to support most out-of-process (OOP) media component use cases in Chromium.
We use mojom interfaces as the transport layer of each media component to support hosting them remotely. These interfaces are called media player mojo interfaces. They are very similar to their C++ counterparts:
media::Renderer
-> media::mojom::Renderer
media::AudioDecoder
-> media::mojom::AudioDecoder
media::VideoDecoder
-> media::mojom::VideoDecoder
media::ContentDecryptionModule
-> media::mojom::ContentDecryptionModule
media::Decryptor
-> media::mojom::Decryptor
Standard clients and implementations of these interfaces are provided. For example, for media::Renderer
, MojoRenderer
implements media::Renderer
, and forwards calls to a media::mojom::RendererPtr
. MojoRendererService
implements media::mojom::Renderer
, and can host any media::Renderer
implementation.
Remote media components can be easily enabled and seamlessly integrated in the current media pipeline. Simply set the gn argument mojo_media_services
to specify which remote media components you want to enable. For example, with the following gn arguments, the media pipeline will enable MojoRenderer
and MojoCdm
:
mojo_media_services = ["renderer", "cdm"]
media::mojom::InterfaceFactory
has factory methods like CreateRenderer()
, CreateCdm()
etc. It is used to request media player mojo interfaces.
In the render process, each RenderFrameImpl
has a mojo::PendingRemote<media::mojom::InterfaceFactory>
which is used to request all media player mojo interfaces for that frame from the browser process. In the browser process, each RenderFrameHostImpl
owns a MediaInterfaceProxy
, which implements media::mojom::InterfaceFactory
.
MediaInterfaceProxy
is a central hub for handling media player mojo interface requests. By default it will forward all the requests to the MediaService
. But it also has the flexibility to handle some special or more complicated use cases. For example:
media::mojom::ContentDecryptionModule
request will be forwarded to the CdmService
running in its own CDM (utility) process.media::mojom::Renderer
request is handled in the RenderFrameHostImpl
context directly by creating MediaPlayerRenderer
in the browser process, even though the MediaService
is configured to run in the GPU process.media::mojom::Renderer
and media::mojom::ContentDecryptionModule
requests are handled by MediaRendererService
which runs in the browser process. The media::mojom::VideoDecoder
request is handled by the default MediaService
which runs in the GPU process.Note that media::mojom::InterfaceFactory
interface is reused in the communication between MediaInterfaceProxy
and MediaService
(see below).
The MediaService is a mojo service_manager::Service
that provides media player mojo interface implementations. It comes with some nice benefits.
Different platforms or products have different requirements on where the remote media components should run. For example, a hardware decoder typically should run in the GPU process. The ServiceManagerContext
provides the ability to run a service in-process (browser) or in the GPU process. Therefore, by using a MediaService
, it’s very easy to support hosting remote media components interfaces in most common Chromium process types (Browser/GPU). This can by set using the gn argument mojo_media_host
, e.g.
mojo_media_host = "browser" or “gpu”
MediaService is registered in ServiceManagerContext
using kMediaServiceName
. mojo_media_host
is checked to decide in which process the service is registered to run.
Some remote media components depend on other components to work. For example, a Renderer, an audio decoder or a video decoder needs a CDM to be able to handle encrypted streams. Typically there's a SetCdm()
call to connect the renderer or decoder with the CDM. If, for example, a Renderer interface and a CDM interface are hosted separately, then it will be hard to implement the SetCdm()
call. It would require an object or entity that are aware of both sides to be able to connect them. MediaService
handles this internally, and is actually serving as such an object or entity, so you don’t have to reinvent the wheel. See more details below.
MediaService
provides everything needed to host an OOP media component, but it doesn’t provide the media component itself. It’s up to the client of MediaService
to provide the concrete media component implementations.
The MojoMediaClient
interface provides a way for MediaService
clients to provide concrete media components’ implementations. When MediaService
is created, a MojoMediaClient
must be passed in so that MediaService
knows how to create the media components.
For example, ChromeCast uses MediaService
to host a media Renderer and a CDM in the browser process, and it provides the CastRenderer
and CastCdm
through CastMojoMediaClient
, a MojoMediaClient
implementation. Note that this overriding mechanism is not implemented everywhere. It’s trivial to add the support and we’ll only add it when we need it.
In Blink, both media element and EME MediaKeys belong to a WebLocalFrame
. In Chromium, this translates to media player and CDM belonging to a RenderFrame
. In the render process, this is clear. However, when hosting all remote media components in a single MediaService
(service manager only supports one service instance per process), the Frame boundary could get fuzzy. This will be especially dangerous for media components that interact with each other. For example, a Renderer from foo.com lives in the same MediaService instance as a CDM from bar.net. It would be wrong if the bar.net CDM is set on the foo.com Renderer to handle decryption.
To prevent this from happening, we introduce an additional layer to simulate the RenderFrame
boundary. A MediaService hosts multiple InterfaceFactory (one per RenderFrame
), and each InterfaceFactory creates and manages media components it creates.
For this reason, media::mojom::InterfaceFactory
interface is reused in the communication between MediaInterfaceProxy
and MediaService
.
Note: there are plans to split apart the responsibilities of
media::mojom::InterfaceFactory
to make it clear which interfaces are used where.
The media::Renderer
interface is a simple API, which is general enough to capture the essence of high level media playback commands. This allows us to extend the functionality of the WebMediaPlayer
via specialized renderers. Specifically, we can build a sub-component that encapsulates the complexities of an advanced scenario, write a small adapter layer that exposes the component as a media::Renderer
, and embed it within the existing media::Pipeline
state machine. Specialized Renderers reduce technical complexity costs, by limiting the scope of details to the files and classes need them, by requiring little control flow boilerplate, and by generally having little impact on the default paths that WebMediaPlayer
uses most of the time.
Two examples of complex scenarios enabled by specialized renderers are: handling HLS playback on Android by delegating it to the Android Media Player (see MediaPlayerRenderer
) and casting “src=” media from an Android phone to a cast device (see FlingingRenderer
). Both of these examples have sub-components that need to live in the Browser process. We therefore proxy the MediaPlayerRenderer
and FlingingRenderer
to the Browser process, using the Mojo interfaces defined in renderer.mojom and renderer_extensions.mojom. This idea can be generalized to handle any special case Foo scenario as a specialized OOP FooRenderer.
The classes required to create a specialized OOP FooRenderer come in pairs, serving similar purposes in their respective processes. By convention, the FooRenderer
lives in the target process and the FooRendererClient
lives in the Renderer process. The MojoRenderer
and MojoRendererService
proxies media::Renderer
and media::RendererClient
calls to/from the FooRenderer[Client]
. One-off commands and events that can't be expressed as a media::Renderer[Client]
call are carried across process boundaries by renderer extensions instead (see renderer_extension.mojom
). The FooRenderer[Client]Extension
mojo interfaces are implemented by their respective FooRenderer[Client]
instances directly. The FooRenderer[Client]Factory
sets up the scenario specific boilerplate, and all of the mojo interface pointers/requests needed to talk to the other process. Interface pointers and requests are connected across process boundaries when mojom::InterfaceFactory::CreateFooRenderer() is called. The end result is illustrated below:
To allow the creation and use of a FooRenderer within WebMediaPlayer, a FooRendererClientFactory
must be built and passed to the RendererFactorySelector
. The RendererFactorySelector
must also be given a way to query if we are currently in a scenario that requires the use of the FooRenderer
. When we enter a Foo scenario, cycling the media::Pipeline
via suspend()/resume() should be enough for the next call to RendererFactorySelector::GetCurrentFactory()
to return the FooRendererClientFactory
. When RendererFactory::CreateRenderer()
is called, the pipeline will receive a FooRendererClient
as an opaque media::Renderer
. The default pipeline state machine will control the OOP FooRenderer
. When we exit the Foo scenario, cycling the pipeline once more should bring us back into the right state.
MediaService
, as a service_manager::Service
, can be used by clients other than the media player in the render process. For example, we could have another (mojo) service that handles audio data and wants to play it in a media Renderer. Since MediaService
is a mojo service, it’s very convenient for any other mojo service to connect to it through a service_manager::mojom::Connector
and use the remote media Renderer it hosts.
Although MediaService
supports media::mojom::CDM
, in some cases (e.g. library CDM on desktop) the remote CDM needs to run in its own process, typically for security reasons. CdmService
is introduced to handle this. It also implements service_manager::Service
, and is registered in ServiceManagerContext
using kCdmServiceName
. Currently it’s always registered to run in the utility process (with CDM sandbox type). CdmService
also has additional support on library CDM, e.g. loading the library CDM etc. Note that CdmService
only supports media::mojom::CDM
and does NOT support other media player mojo interfaces.
MediaRendererService
supports media::mojom::Renderer
and media::mojom::CDM
. It‘s hosted in a different process than the default MediaService
. It’s registered in ServiceManagerContext
using 'kMediaRendererServiceName. This allows to run
media::mojom::VideoDecoderand
media::mojom::Rendererin two different processes. Currently Chromecast use this to support
CastRenderer
CDM` in browser process and GPU accelerated video decoder in GPU process. The main goals are:
CastRenderer
only support one video pipeline at a time.Mojo CDM is special among all media player mojo interfaces because it is needed by all local/remote media components to handle encrypted buffers:
DecryptingDemuxerStream
, DecryptingAudioDecoder
and DecryptingVideoDecoder
.MediaService
, e.g. by MojoRendererService
, MojoAudioDecoderService
and MojoVideoDecoderService
.At the JavaScript layer, the media player and MediaKeys are connected via setMediaKeys()
. This is implemented by SetCdm()
in the render process.
A media component can use a CDM in two ways.
Some CDM provides a Decryptor
implementation, which supports decrypting methods directly, e.g. Decrypt()
, DecryptAndDecode()
etc. Both the AesDecryptor
and library CDM support the Decryptor
interface.
In the case of a remote CDM, e.g. hosted by MojoCdmService
in MediaService
or CdmService
, if the remote CDM supports the Decryptor
interface, the MojoCdm
will also support the Decryptor
interface, implemented by MojoDecryptor
, which set up a new message pipe to forward all Decryptor
calls to the Decryptor
in the remote CDM.
In some cases the media component is set to work with a specific CDM. For example, on Android, MediaCodec-based decoders (e.g. MediaCodecAudioDecoder
) can only use MediaDrm-based CDM via MediaCryptoContext
. The media component and the CDM must live in the same process because the interaction of these two are typically happening deep at the OS level. In theory, they can both live in the render process. But in practice, typically both the CDM and the media component are hosted by the MediaService in a remote (e.g. GPU) process.
To be able to attach a remote CDM with a remote media component, each InterfaceFactoryImpl
instance (corresponding to one RenderFrame
) in the MediaService
maintains a MojoCdmServiceContext
that keeps track of all remote CDMs created for the RenderFrame
. Each remote CDM is assigned a unique CDM ID, which is sent back to the MojoCdm
in the render process. In the render process, when SetCdm()
is called, the CDM ID is passed to the local media component (e.g. MojoRenderer
), which is forwarded the remote media component (e.g. MojoRendererService
). The remote media component will talk to MojoCdmServiceContext
to get the CdmContext
associated with the CDM ID, and complete the connection.
Media components often need other services to work. In the render process, the local media components get services from content layer through the MediaClient
interface. In MediaService
and CdmService
, remote media components get services from the through secure auxiliary services.
Some services do require RenderFrame
or user profile identity, e.g. file system. Since media components all belong to a given RenderFrame
, we must maintain the frame identity when accessing these services for security reasons. These services are called secure auxiliary services. FrameServiceBase
is a base class for all secure auxiliary services to help manage the lifetime of these services (e.g. to handle navigation).
When a MediaInterfaceProxy
is created, in addition to providing the media::mojom::InterfaceFactory
, the RenderFrame
is provisioned with a media::mojom::FrameInterfaceFactory
that exposes these secure auxiliary services on a per-frame basis. The FrameInterfaceFactory
directly provides services from //content, and it provides a way for //content embedders to register additional auxiliary services via the BindEmbedderReceiver()
method.
Currently only the remote CDM needs secure auxiliary services. This is a list of currently supported services:
OutputProtection
: to check output protection statusPlatformVerification
: to check whether the platform is secureCdmFileIO
: for the CDM to store persistent dataProvisionFetcher
: for Android MediaDrm device provisioningIn most cases, the client side runs in the renderer process which is the least trusted. Also always assume the client side code may be compromised, e.g. making calls in random order or passing in garbage parameters.
Due to the Flexible Process Model, it's sometimes hard to know in which process the service side runs. As a rule of thumb, assume all service side code may run in a privileged process (e.g. browser process), including the common supporting code like MojoVideoDecoderService
, as well as the concrete Media Component, e.g. MediaCodecVideoDecoder on Android. To know exactly which Media Component runs in which process in production, see Adoption below.
Also note that all the Secure Auxiliary Services are running in a more privileged process than the process where the media components that use them run in. For example, all of the existing services run in the browser process. They must defend against compromised media components.
MediaService
in the GPU process (registered in GpuServiceFactory
with GpuMojoMediaClient
)MojoCdm
+ MediaDrmBridge
(CDM)MediaDrmBridge
uses mojo ProvisionFetcher
service for CDM provisioningMojoAudioDecoder
+ MediaCodecAudioDecoder
MojoVideoDecoder
+ MediaCodecVideoDecoder
(in progress)MojoRenderer
+ MediaPlayerRenderer
MediaService
. Instead, MojoRendererService
is hosted by RenderFrameHostImpl
/MediaInterfaceProxy
in the browser process directly.MojoRenderer
+ FlingingRenderer
MediaService
. Instead, MojoRendererService
is hosted by RenderFrameHostImpl
/MediaInterfaceProxy
in the browser process directly.MediaService
in the Browser process (registered in CastContentBrowserClient
with CastMojoMediaClient
)MojoRenderer
+ CastRenderer
MojoCdm
+ CastCdm
CdmService
in the utility process (registered in UtilityServiceFactory
with ContentCdmServiceClient
)MojoCdm
+ CdmAdapter
+ Library CDM implementationCdmAdapter
uses various secure auxiliary servicesMediaService
in the GPU process (registered in GpuServiceFactory
with GpuMojoMediaClient
)MojoVideoDecoder
+ hardware video decoders such as D3D11VideoDecoderTODO(xhwang): Add documentation on other mojo services, e.g. remoting, etc.