WebRTC is an open framework for the web that enables Real Time Communications in the browser. It includes the fundamental building blocks for high-quality communications on the web, such as network, audio and video components used in voice and video chat applications.
These components, when implemented in a browser, can be accessed through a JavaScript API, enabling developers to easily implement their own RTC web app.
The WebRTC effort is being standardized on an API level at the W3C and at the protocol level at the IETF.
We think you‘ll want to build your next video-chat style application using WebRTC. Here’s why:
A key factor in the success of the web is that its core technologies -- such as HTML, HTTP, and TCP/IP -- are open and freely implementable. Currently, there is no free, high-quality, complete solution available that enables communication in the browser. WebRTC enables this.
Already integrated with best-of-breed voice and video engines that have been deployed on millions of endpoints over the last 8+ years. Google does not charge royalties for WebRTC.
Includes and abstracts key NAT and firewall traversal technology, using STUN, ICE, TURN, RTP-over-TCP and support for proxies.
Builds on the strength of the web browser: WebRTC abstracts signaling by offering a signaling state machine that maps directly to PeerConnection
. Web developers can therefore choose the protocol of choice for their usage scenario (for example, but not limited to, SIP, XMPP/Jingle, et al.).
Opus is a royalty-free audio codec defined by IETF RFC 6176. It supports constant and variable bitrate encoding from 6 kbit/s to 510 kbit/s, frame sizes from 2.5 ms to 60 ms, and various sampling rates from 8 kHz (with 4 kHz bandwidth) to 48 kHz (with 20 kHz bandwidth, where the entire hearing range of the human auditory system can be reproduced).
iSAC is a robust, bandwidth-adaptive, wideband and super-wideband voice codec developed by Global IP Solutions, and is used in many Voice over IP (VoIP) and streaming audio applications. iSAC is used by industry leaders in hundreds of millions of VoIP endpoints. This codec is included as part of the WebRTC project.
iLBC is a free narrowband voice codec that was developed by Global IP Solutions, and is used in many Voice over IP (VoIP) and streaming audio applications. In 2004, the final IETF RFC versions of the iLBC codec specification and the iLBC RTP Profile draft became available. This codec is included as part of the WebRTC project.
VP8 is a highly-efficient video compression technology developed by the WebM Project. It is the video codec included with WebRTC.
Similar to VP8, VP9 is also from the WebM Project. Its a next-generation open video codec. From Chrome 48 on desktop and Android, VP9 will be an optional video codec for video calls. More details in Google Developers.
WebRTC offers a complete stack for voice communications. It includes not only the necessary codecs, but other components necessary to great user experiences. This includes software-based acoustic echo cancellation (AEC), automatic gain control (AGC), noise reduction, noise suppression, and hardware access and control across multiple platforms.
The WebRTC project builds on the VP8 codec, introduced in 2010 as part of the WebM Project. It includes components to conceal packet loss and clean up noisy images, as well as capture and playback capabilities across multiple platforms.
Dynamic jitter buffers and error concealment techniques are included for audio and video, which help mitigate the effects of packet loss and unreliable networks. Also included are components for establishing a peer-to-peer connection using ICE / STUN / Turn / RTP-over-TCP and support for proxies.
Go to https://webrtc.googlesource.com/src.
We have put sample applications here.
WebRTC is based on a API that is still under development through efforts at WHATWG, W3C and IETF. We hope to get to a stable API once a few browser vendors have implementations ready for testing. Once the API is stable, our goal will be to offer backwards compatibility and interoperability. The WebRTC API layer will be our main focus for stability and interoperability. The components under it may be modified to improve quality, performance and feature set.
Please see Getting Started and Contributing bug fixes for more information.
Yes, each Contributor must sign and return the Contributor License Agreement
The process of becoming a committer is documented in a separate page.
Yes, to build WebRTC support into a software application or contribute improvements, programming skills are required. However, usage of the JavaScript APIs that call WebRTC in the browsers will only require typical web development skills.
WebRTC is an open-source project supported by Google, Mozilla and Opera. The API and underlying protocols are being developed jointly at the W3C and IETF.
Yes. Some components, such as VoiceEngine, VideoEngine, NetEQ, AEC, et al. all stem from the GIPS acquisition.
The currently supported voice codecs are G.711, G.722, iLBC, and iSAC, and VP8 is the supported video codec. The list of supported codecs may change in the future.
Some software frameworks, voice and video codecs require end-users, distributors and manufacturers to pay patent royalties to use the intellectual property within the software technology and/or codec. Google is not charging royalties for WebRTC and its components including the codecs it supports (VP8 for video and iSAC and iLBC for audio). For more information, see the License page.
Like most BSD licenses, this license allows you to use the WebRTC code with a minimum of restrictions on your use. You can use the code in proprietary software as well as open source software.
No, the license does not require you to release source if you make changes. However, we would love to see any changes you make and possibly incorporate them, so if you want to participate please visit the code review page and submit some patches.
In order to decouple patents from copyright, thus preserving the pure BSD nature of the copyright license, the license and the patent grant are separate. This means we are using a standard (BSD) open source copyright license, and the patent grant can exist on its own. This makes WebRTC compatible with all major license scenarios.
Yes, you still have the right to redistribute and you still have a patent license for Google's patents that cover the code that Google released.
You still have the right to redistribute but no patent license for the changes (if there are any patents covering it). We can't give patent licenses for changes people make after we distribute the code, as we have no way to predict what those changes will be. Other common licenses take the same approach, including the Apache license.
Yes, you still have the right to redistribute and you still have a patent license for Google's patents that cover the code that Google released.
Yes, they still have the right to redistribute and they still have a patent license for Google's patents that cover the code that Google released.