olly f66b90e34b Eliminate cruft from the demo apps's PlayerActivity
Useful functionality promoted to core library:

1. Management of SurfaceHolder.Callback lifecycle
   promoted to SimpleExoPlayer
2. Ability to determine whether audio/video tracks
   exist but are all unsupported promoted to
   MappingTrackSelector.TrackInfo
3. Read external storage permissions check promoted
   to Util
4. SubtitleView given ability to act directly as a
   TextRenderer.Output to remove layer of indirection
5. SubtitleView given ability to configure itself to
   user's platform wide caption styling
6. KeyCompatibleMediaController promoted to library's
   UI package.

Relocation of boring stuff:

1. ID3 frame logging moved to EventLogger.

-------------
Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=128714230
2016-07-28 20:04:41 +01:00
2016-07-28 20:04:40 +01:00
2016-07-22 22:41:35 +01:00
2016-07-28 20:04:40 +01:00
2014-06-16 12:56:04 +01:00
2015-10-27 21:03:16 +00:00
2016-06-15 19:41:32 +01:00
2014-06-16 12:56:04 +01:00
2016-07-28 20:04:40 +01:00
2016-06-15 19:43:17 +01:00

ExoPlayer

ExoPlayer is an application level media player for Android. It provides an alternative to Androids MediaPlayer API for playing audio and video both locally and over the Internet. ExoPlayer supports features not currently supported by Androids MediaPlayer API, including DASH and SmoothStreaming adaptive playbacks. Unlike the MediaPlayer API, ExoPlayer is easy to customize and extend, and can be updated through Play Store application updates.

Documentation

Using ExoPlayer

Via jCenter

The easiest way to get started using ExoPlayer is by including the following in your project's build.gradle file:

compile 'com.google.android.exoplayer:exoplayer:rX.X.X'

where rX.X.X is the your preferred version. For the latest version, see the project's Releases. For more details, see the project on Bintray.

As source

ExoPlayer can also be built from source using Gradle. You can include it as a dependent project like so:

// settings.gradle
include ':app', ':..:ExoPlayer:library'

// app/build.gradle
dependencies {
    compile project(':..:ExoPlayer:library')
}

As a jar

If you want to use ExoPlayer as a jar, run:

./gradlew jarRelease

and copy library.jar to the libs folder of your new project.

Developing ExoPlayer

Project branches

  • The project has dev-vX and release-vX branches, where X is the major version number.
  • Most development work happens on the dev-vX branch with the highest major version number. Pull requests should normally be made to this branch.
  • Bug fixes may be submitted to older dev-vX branches. When doing this, the same (or an equivalent) fix should also be submitted to all subsequent dev-vX branches.
  • A release-vX branch holds the most recent stable release for major version X.

Using Android Studio

To develop ExoPlayer using Android Studio, simply open the ExoPlayer project in the root directory of the repository.

Description
About Jetpack Media3 support libraries for media use cases, including ExoPlayer, an extensible media player for Android
Readme Apache-2.0 744 MiB
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