We fixed an important bug that impacted a very small number of assets with Mux Player. The bug is that the player would send hundreds of unnecessary requests for the `0.ts`segment.
This impacted certain assets on production Next.js deployments and Chrome browsers. Other build environments might be impacted too.
Mux Player v1.11.0 is released. This update includes an upgrade to hls.js v1.4.1 and a no-volume-pref attribute to turn off saving the user selected volume in local storage. Additional links:
Mux Player v1.9.0 is released. This update includes an upgrade to hls.js v1.4.0-beta.2, Themes support, updated configs for low latency, and other bug fixes and improvements.
Mux Player v1.8.0 is released. This update includes support for specifying a maximum resolution. For more information, see the Release Notes: HTML Element, the Release Notes: React, the Max Resolution documentation, and our Resolution-Based Pricing blog post.
Mux Player v1.7.0 is released. This update includes support for CuePoints, which allows you to associate generic metadata with your stream's timeline and playback. Multiple captions/subtitle track selection has also been added – users can now choose from a menu which track they want to use. For more information, see the Release Notes: HTML Element, the Release Notes: React, and the CuePoints Documentation.
Mux Player v1.4.0 is released. This update includes a prefer CMCD prop and UI updates to improve: overlay behavior, icon size, control spacing and behavior, and positioning of the Live indicator.
As part of 0.7.0, tighter error handling integration with hls.js
made all errors be triggered on the player. This meant that errors that don't inhibit playback and that hls.js
handled automatically were treated the same as fatal errors that hls.js
doesn't handle automatically. Now, only errors that hls.js
considers fatal will trigger an error event. See the Release Notes for more info.
You can now pass in the start-time
attribute to make playback start at a certain timestamp. For example <mux-video start-time="4" ...>
will start playback at the 4 second mark. See the Release Notes for additional information.
You can now pass in the startTime
prop to make playback start at a certain timestamp. For example <MuxVideo startTime={4} ...>
will start playback at the 4 second mark. See the Release Notes for additional improvements.
You can now pass in the start-time
attribute to make playback start at a certain timestamp. For example, <mux-audio start-time="4" ...>
will start playback at the 4 second mark. See the Release Notes for additional improvements.