EBML stands for Extensible Binary Meta-Language and is somewhat of a binary version of XML. It's used for container formats like WebM or MKV.
this version fixes just the encoder
This is for version 3.0.0
and up, which has undergone a massive rewrite and
now builds with RollupJS.
Version 2.2.4
is the last version to have guaranteed legacy semantics.
Install via NPM or Yarn:
npm install ebml --save
# or
yarn add ebml
The Decoder()
class is implemented as a Node Transform stream.
As input it takes EBML. As output it emits a sequence of chunks: two-element
arrays looking like this example.
[
'tag',
{
name: 'TimecodeScale',
type: 'u',
value: 1000000,
},
];
The first element of the array is a short text string. For tags containing
values, like this example, the string is 'tag'
. ebml also has nesting tags.
The opening of those tags has the string 'start'
and the closing has the
string 'end'
. Integers stored in 6 bytes or less are represented as numbers,
and longer integers are represented as hexadecimal text strings.
The second element of the array is an object with these members, among others:
name
is the Matroska Element Name.type
is the data type.u
: unsigned integer. Some of these are UIDs, coded as 128-bit numbers.i
: signed integer.f
: IEEE-754 floating point number.s
: printable ASCII text string.8
: printable utf-8 Unicode text string.d
: a 64-bit signed timestamp, in nanoseconds after (or before)2001-01-01T00:00UTC
.b
binary data, otherwise uninterpreted.
value
is the value of the data in the element, represented as a number or a string.data
is the binary data of the entire element stored in aUint8Array
.
Elements with the Block
and SimpleBlock
types
get special treatment. They have these additional members:
payload
is the coded information in the element, stored in aUint8Array
.track
is an unsigned integer indicating the payload's track.keyframe
is a Boolean value set to true if the payload starts an I frame (SimpleBlocks
only).discardable
is a Boolean value showing the value of the element's Discardable flag. (SimpleBlocks
only).
And the value
member shows the block's Timecode value.
This example reads a media file into memory and decodes it. The decoder
invokes its data
event for each Element.
const fs = require('fs');
const { Decoder } = require('./lib/ebml.js');
const decoder = new Decoder();
decoder.on('data', (chunk) => console.log(chunk));
fs.readFile('media/test.webm', (err, data) => {
if (err) {
throw err;
}
decoder.write(data);
});
This example does the same thing, but by piping the file stream into the decoder (a Transform stream).
const { Decoder } = require('./lib/ebml.js');
const ebmlDecoder = new Decoder();
const counts = {};
require('fs')
.createReadStream('media/test.webm')
.pipe(ebmlDecoder)
.on('data', (chunk) => {
const { name } = chunk[1];
if (!counts[name]) {
counts[name] = 0;
}
counts[name] += 1;
})
.on('finish', () => console.log(counts));
Parsing should work. If it doesn't, please create an issue.
d
-type elements (timestamps) are not yet decoded to Javascript timestamp
values.
Thanks to @chrisprice we got an encoder!
(in alphabetical order)