As I understand it, Android will only play AAC format audio if it\'s encoded as MPEG-4 or 3GPP.
I\'m able to play AAC audio encoded as M4A when it\'s local to the ap
This is a wild shot in the dark, but I have seen similar behavior with the flash player where it actually ignores the file name and only relies on the MIME type sent by the server. Any idea what headers are being sent down from example.com? You might want to try wrapping your blah.m4a in a page that can set the headers and then stream the binary data. Give these types a shot and the community would appreciate a confirmation of what works:
audio/mpeg audio/mp4a audio/mp4a-latm audio/aac audio/x-aac
I tried it too but I could not find out the solution!
At the last Google I/O I saw something that helped me a lot. It is Extending from MediaPlayer and improve a lot of things! Take a look.
EXOPLAYER CAN HELP YOU A LOT
Check this part of the example:
private static final int BUFFER_SEGMENT_SIZE = 64 * 1024;
private static final int BUFFER_SEGMENT_COUNT = 256;
...
// String with the url of the radio you want to play
String url = getRadioUrl();
Uri radioUri = Uri.parse(url);
// Settings for exoPlayer
Allocator allocator = new DefaultAllocator(BUFFER_SEGMENT_SIZE);
String userAgent = Util.getUserAgent(context, "ExoPlayerDemo");
DataSource dataSource = new DefaultUriDataSource(context, null, userAgent);
ExtractorSampleSource sampleSource = new ExtractorSampleSource(
radioUri, dataSource, allocator, BUFFER_SEGMENT_SIZE * BUFFER_SEGMENT_COUNT);
audioRenderer = new MediaCodecAudioTrackRenderer(sampleSource);
// Prepare ExoPlayer
exoPlayer.prepare(audioRenderer);
EXOPLAYER- I can play anything from streamings (video and audio)!
LET ME KNOW IF YOU NEED HELP TO IMPLEMENT IT! :)
try --
1) MP.prepareAsync()
2) onPrepared() { mp.start() }
This work-around allows you to play M4A files from the net (and AAC files in other containers such as MP4 & 3GP). It simply downloads the file and plays from the cache.
private File mediaFile;
private void playAudio(String mediaUrl) {
try {
URLConnection cn = new URL(mediaUrl).openConnection();
InputStream is = cn.getInputStream();
// create file to store audio
mediaFile = new File(this.getCacheDir(),"mediafile");
FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream(mediaFile);
byte buf[] = new byte[16 * 1024];
Log.i("FileOutputStream", "Download");
// write to file until complete
do {
int numread = is.read(buf);
if (numread <= 0)
break;
fos.write(buf, 0, numread);
} while (true);
fos.flush();
fos.close();
Log.i("FileOutputStream", "Saved");
MediaPlayer mp = new MediaPlayer();
// create listener to tidy up after playback complete
MediaPlayer.OnCompletionListener listener = new MediaPlayer.OnCompletionListener() {
public void onCompletion(MediaPlayer mp) {
// free up media player
mp.release();
Log.i("MediaPlayer.OnCompletionListener", "MediaPlayer Released");
}
};
mp.setOnCompletionListener(listener);
FileInputStream fis = new FileInputStream(mediaFile);
// set mediaplayer data source to file descriptor of input stream
mp.setDataSource(fis.getFD());
mp.prepare();
Log.i("MediaPlayer", "Start Player");
mp.start();
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
I found that if you record the audio file on Android with the following properties, you are then able to play it on your server. It also plays well in the HTML Audio Element, however only on Firefox at the moment. This may change in the future.
Android (JAVA):
mediaRecorder = new MediaRecorder();
mediaRecorder.setAudioSource(MediaRecorder.AudioSource.MIC);
mediaRecorder.setOutputFormat(MediaRecorder.OutputFormat.MPEG_4);
mediaRecorder.setAudioEncoder(MediaRecorder.AudioEncoder.HE_AAC);
mediaRecorder.setAudioSamplingRate(44100);
mediaRecorder.setAudioChannels(1);
mediaRecorder.setOutputFile(filePath);
HTML:
<audio id="audioMediaControl" controls src="yourfile.m4a"> Your browser does not support the audio element. </audio>