Note: This is README for development
branch. See the version for latest stable release.
Web player for terminal session recordings (as produced
by asciinema recorder) that you can
use on your website by simply adding <asciinema-player>
tag.
asciinema player is an open-source terminal session player written in
ClojureScript. Contrary to other video players asciinema player doesn't play
heavy-weight video files (.mp4
, .webm
etc) but instead it plays light-weight
terminal session files called
asciicasts.
Asciicast is a capture of terminal's raw output, which has to be interpreted during the playback, so the player comes with its own interpreter based on Paul Williams' parser for ANSI-compatible video terminals. Its output is fully compatible with most widely used terminal emulators like xterm, Gnome Terminal, iTerm etc.
You can see the player in action on asciinema.org.
If you don't want to depend on asciinema.org and you prefer to host the player and the recordings yourself then read on, it's very simple.
- HTML5
<asciinema-player>
element you can use in your website's markup, - copy-paste of terminal content (it's just a text after all!),
- idle time optimization,
- predefined and custom font sizes,
- custom poster,
- custom playback speeds,
- looped playback,
- starting playback at specific time,
- programmatic control via methods/events/properties on the HTML element,
- keyboard shortcuts,
- multiple color schemes for standard 16 colors,
- 256 color palette / 24-bit true color (ISO-8613-3),
- full-screen mode.
The following example shows how to use asciinema player on your own website, without depending on asciinema.org.
It assumes you have obtained terminal session recording file by either:
- recording terminal session to a local file with
asciinema rec demo.cast
(more details on recording), - downloading an existing recording from asciinema.org by appending
.cast
to the asciicast page URL (for example: https://asciinema.org/a/28307.cast).
Download latest version of the player from
releases page. You
only need asciinema-player.js
and asciinema-player.css
files.
First, add asciinema-player.js
, asciinema-player.css
and the .cast
file
with your recording to your site's assets.
Then add necessary includes to your HTML document:
<html>
<head>
...
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/asciinema-player.css" />
...
</head>
<body>
...
<asciinema-player src="/demo.cast"></asciinema-player>
...
<script src="/asciinema-player.js"></script>
</body>
</html>
Number of columns of player's terminal.
When not set it defaults to 80 (until asciicast gets loaded) and to terminal width saved in the asciicast file (after it gets loaded).
It's recommended to set it to the same value as in asciicast file to prevent player to resize itself from 80x24 to the actual dimensions of the asciicast when it gets loaded.
Number of lines of player's terminal.
When not set it defaults to 24 (until asciicast gets loaded) and to terminal height saved in the asciicast file (after it gets loaded).
Same recommendation as for cols
applies here.
Set this attribute to any value if playback should start automatically. Defaults to no autoplay.
Set this attribute to any value if the recording should be preloaded on player's initialization. Defaults to no preload.
Set this attribute to any value if playback should be looped. Defaults to no looping.
Start playback at given time.
Supported formats:
- 123 (number of seconds)
- 2:03 ("mm:ss")
- 1:02:03 ("hh:mm:ss")
Defaults to 0.
Playback speed. Defaults to 1 (normal speed). 2 means 2x faster.
Limit terminal inactivity to given number of seconds.
For example, when set to 2
any inactivity longer than 2 seconds will be
"compressed" to 2 seconds.
Defaults to:
idle_time_limit
from asciicast header (saved when passing-i <sec>
toasciinema rec
),- no limit, when it was not specified at the time of recording.
Poster (preview) to display before playback start.
The following poster specifications are supported:
npt:2:34
- show recording "frame" at given timedata:text/plain,Poster text
- show given text
The easiest way of specifying a poster is to use npt:2:34
format. This will
preload the recording and display terminal contents from the recording at 2 min
34 s.
Example:
<asciinema-player src="..." poster="npt:2:34"></asciinema-player>
Alternatively, a poster
value of data:text/plain,This will be printed as poster\n\rThis in second line
will display arbitrary text. All ANSI escape
codes can be used to add color
and move the cursor around to produce good looking poster.
Example of using text poster with cursor positioning:
<asciinema-player src="..." poster="data:text/plain,I'm regular \x1b[1;32mI'm bold green\x1b[3BI'm 3 lines down"></asciinema-player>
Defaults to screen contents at start-at
(or blank terminal when start-at
is
0).
Size of the terminal font.
Possible values:
small
medium
big
- any CSS
font-size
value (e.g.15px
)
Defaults to small
.
Terminal color theme.
One of:
asciinema
tango
solarized-dark
solarized-light
monokai
Defaults to asciinema
.
You can also use a custom theme.
Title of the asciicast, displayed in the titlebar in fullscreen mode.
Author of the asciicast, displayed in the titlebar in fullscreen mode.
URL of the author's homepage/profile. Author name (author
above) is linked to
this URL.
URL of the author's image, displayed in the titlebar in fullscreen mode.
<asciinema-player src="/demo.cast" speed="2" theme="solarized-dark" loop="loop" poster="data:text/plain,\e[5;5HAwesome \e[1;33mdemo!"></asciinema-player>
The player's DOM element provides several properties, methods and events mimicking HTMLVideoElement, allowing for programmatical control over the player.
duration
property gives the length of the recording in seconds, or zero if no
recording data is available (for ex. before loadedmetadata
event is
triggered).
document.getElementById('player').duration; // 123.45
currentTime
property gives the current playback time in seconds. Setting this
value seeks the recording to the new time.
document.getElementById('player').currentTime; // 1.23
document.getElementById('player').currentTime = 33;
play
method attempts to begin playback of the recording. If the recording
hasn't been preloaded then it tries to load it, and then starts the playback.
document.getElementById('player').play();
NOTE: If you want to synchronize asciinema player's playback with other elements
on the page (for example <audio>
element) then you should wait for the play
event to occur, which signifies actual start of the playback.
pause
method pauses playback.
document.getElementById('player').pause();
The loadedmetadata
, loadeddata
, canplay
and canplaythrough
events are
fired (all of them, in this order) when the recording has been loaded and is
ready to play. The recordings are always fully fetched (you can't partially load
resource with XHR) so there's no difference in the amount of metadata/data
available between these 4 events - when either event occurs the player already
has all the information for smooth playback. In other words, it's enough to
listen to only one of them, e.g. canplaythrough
(all 4 are supported to make
it more in line with HTMLVideoElement).
document.getElementById('player').addEventListener('loadedmetadata', function(e) {
console.log("duration is", this.duration);
}
document.getElementById('player').addEventListener('canplaythrough', function(e) {
console.log("all ready to play");
}
NOTE: The player starts fetching the recording either when preload
attribute
is set (in this case these events may not be immediately followed by play
event), or when user starts the playback (in this case these events are
immediately followed by play
event).
The play
event is fired when playback has begun.
document.getElementById('player').addEventListener('play', function(e) {
console.log("it's playing");
console.log("we're at", this.currentTime);
}
The pause
event is fired when playback has been paused.
document.getElementById('player').addEventListener('pause', function(e) {
console.log("it's paused");
}
The following keyboard shortcuts are currently available (when the player element is focused):
space
- play / pausef
- toggle fullscreen mode←
/→
- rewind 5 seconds / fast-forward 5 seconds0, 1, 2 ... 9
- jump to 0%, 10%, 20% ... 90%<
/>
- decrease / increase playback speed
The project uses leiningen for development and build related tasks so make sure you have it installed (as well as Java 7 or 8).
Clone this repository:
git clone https://github.com/asciinema/asciinema-player
cd asciinema-player
Make sure git submodules are fetched and up to date:
git submodule update --init --recursive
Start local web server with auto-compilation and live code reloading in the browser:
lein figwheel dev
Start auto-compilation of .less
files:
lein less auto
Once the above tasks are running, open localhost:3449
in the browser to load the player with sample asciicast. Any changes made to
.cljs
or .less
files will be automatically pushed to the browser, preserving
player's state.
Run tests with:
lein doo phantom test
To build stand-alone .js
and .css
files clone repository, initialize git
submodules (as shown above), then run:
lein cljsbuild once release
lein less once
This produces resources/public/js/asciinema-player.js
and resources/public/css/asciinema-player.css
.
If you want to contribute to this project check out Contributing page.
Developed with passion by Marcin Kulik and great open source contributors.
Copyright © 2011-2018 Marcin Kulik.
All code is licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0. See LICENSE file for details.