Content Steering provides content creators a method of runtime control over the location from which segments are fetched via a content steering server and pathways defined in the content manifest. For a working example visit https://www.content-steering.com/.
HLS and DASH each define their own specific Content Steering tags and properties
that prescribe how the client should fetch the content steering manifest as well
as make steering decisions. #EXT-X-CONTENT-STEERING
and <ContentSteering>
respectively.
For reference, HLS spec section 4.4.6.6: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-pantos-hls-rfc8216bis#section-4.4.6.6
DASH-IF: https://dashif.org/docs/DASH-IF-CTS-00XX-Content-Steering-Community-Review.pdf
Both protocols rely on a content steering server to provide steering guidance.
VHS will request the content steering manifest from the location defined in the
content steering tag in the .m3u8
or .mpd
and refresh the steering manifest
at an interval defined in that manifest.
A content steering manifest response will look something like this:
{
"VERSION": 1,
"TTL": 300,
"RELOAD-URI": "https://steeringservice.com/app/instance12345?session=abc",
"CDN-PRIORITY": ["beta","alpha"]
}
CDN-PRIORITY
represents either PATHWAY-PRIORITY
for HLS or SERVICE-LOCATION-PRIORITY
for DASH. This list of keys in priority order will match with either a PATHWAY-ID
or serviceLocation
(HLS and DASH respectively) associated with a location where VHS can fetch segments.
VHS will attempt to fetch segments from the locations defined in the steering manifest response in the order. Then, during playback, VHS will provide quality of experience metrics back to the steering server which can adjust the steering guidance accordingly.
- Pathway Cloning
- queryBeforeStart
- proxyServerURL
- Extended HTTP GET request parametrization, see: ISO/IEC 23009-1 [2], clause I.3