autobuffer is a small utility you can use to automatically buffer and stream video files over HTTP. It streams to a local, on-disk file. It is only concerned with streaming the data and makes no assumptions about video format. As such, you must provide autobuffer with the -duration
flag to receive accurate feedback on how long you should wait to play the streamed file. Durations are parsed using golang's time
, so values like 30m
, 1h50m
, etc, all work as expected. HTTP basic auth is also supported.
./autobuffer -duration 1h47m -out hackers.mkv -url http://localhost:8080/hackers.mkv
autobuffer
will measure your available downstream bandwidth with the remote url, calculate how long it will take to buffer sufficiently to play without interruption, and start streaming the target file from the server to your local disk. To play the video, simply use any video player (I tested mplayer, mpv, and VLC) to open the file at the -out
path you specified. Note that you must use the correct extension in -out
or some players may have trouble playing the file. For all the available flags, just run autobuffer
with no arguments.
This is a weekend (6 hours on a sunday) hack I put together because of how absolutely terrible VLC is at streaming high-bitrate video over HTTP.
The MIT License (MIT)