Introduction
AminoTV supports helping clients track concurrent viewing across multiple devices by providing an API for them to interact with.
Clients can use this API to give an approximation to how many streams a user account is watching.
It's not possible for AminoTV to track the actual stream consumption because we do not always have control over the distribution network. For example when using a CDN or third party backend we have no sight of what streams are currently active.
Implementation
The MediaPlaySession entity
Amino models a MediaPlaySession in the domain language as an entity that can be used to track playback sessions for a user.
An example of the API response representing this resource is:
{ "data": [ { "type": "MediaPlaySession", "id": "6b6bf3e1-555b-45cb-b5d3-63a2ff7be9e3 ", "attributes": { "service": "live", "ip4_address": "86.190.137.158", "user_agent": "Set Top Box", "play_started_timestamp": 1551091684, "last_updated_timestamp": 1551091736 } } ] }
Note that the IP address is not sufficient to identify a session; A person watching on the STB at home may have the same IP address as somebody watching on their mobile phone upstairs on the same home router Wi-Fi network.
Managing sessions
The client should call the MediaPlaySession based on user activity, as below:
User action | API calls | Any additional logic to perform | Endpoint |
---|---|---|---|
Before the user is able to play media | GET an index of the current sessions | Check that the number of sessions does not equal or exceed the configured system value | Media play sessions#/Media%20Play%20Sessions/indexMediaPlaySession |
When the user starts to play media | POST to create a new session | Store the id of the media playback session locally | Media play sessions#/Media%20Play%20Sessions/postMediaPlaySession |
When the user stops playing media | DELETE the session | Use the id that was returned to you in the POST response to identify the resource | Media play sessions#/Media%20Play%20Sessions/deleteMediaPlaySession |
Periodically | PATCH the session | Media play sessions#/Media%20Play%20Sessions/patchMediaPlaySession |
Periodical PATCH calls to the session
The client is expected to periodically PATCH the session to update the "last_updated_timestamp" field to the current unix timestamp.
This is used by the server to determine if a particular session is being actively watched.
Sessions that are not updated will be removed by the server after a set interval. Note that this will not affect playback, the client will still be able to watch the stream even if the MediaPlaybackSession is removed.
Therefore, it is essential that the client calls PATCH in order to prevent the server from incorrectly assuming the session is no longer active.
Example flow
Description | URL | Number of MediaPlaySessions after call is made |
---|---|---|
User account is not watching anything | 0 | |
User starts watching something on their set top box | POST /users/{user_id}/media_play_sessions | 1 |
Another person in the household starts watching something on a their mobile | POST /users/{user_id}/media_play_sessions | 2 |
Each device periodically tells the server that the session is still active | PATCH /media_play_sessions/{media_play_session_id} | 2 |
The second user presses stop on their mobile device | 2 | |
The first user switches off the set top box without giving the client a chance to delete their session | DELETE /media_play_sessions/{media_play_session_id} | 1 (zombie session) |
Some time later the periodic clean up job runs on the server and deletes the zombie session | 0 |