Kelvinadon is a cross-platform streaming library for working with Material Exchange Format (MXF) files or streams in Node.js. Kelvinadon works with highland.js to provide a means to process MXF data in stream form with back pressure.
The library supports reading MXF data as a stream to a stream of Javascript objects - easy to format as JSON - and writing the same streams of Javascript objects back to MXF. The benefits of this approach are:
- easy to examine and fix up and make small changes to MXF data from Javascript environments - streaming from and to files, object storage and even HTTP(S);
- stream essence out of an MXF container for playing of transformation to other formats;
- making MXF data accessible in large-scale artificial intelligence environments for machine learning and deep learning capabilities.
An MXF file dumper CLI tool kelvinadump
is provided. Reading part of a stream, say just a single partition, will also work subject to sufficient metadata being provided. Otherwise, this package is a low-level library and does not contain any of the following facilities:
- from just raw essence payload(s) and limited technical description, create a correctly structured MXF file, files or data stream;
- resolve index tables to byte offsets in the stream;
- contain any logic for processing multi-file MXF formats such as AMWA AS-02 of SMPTE IMF.
All of the above features can be built out of this package much more easily than starting from scratch and Streampunk Media will be considering how to build these as user requirements emerge. This implementation was created to allow MXF files to be used from the dynamorse file nodes of an IoT framework for professional media processing. Another appliation is an example byte-to-time API (byzantime)[https://github.com/Streampunk/byzantime] that provides RESTful access to the contents of an MXF file using PTP timestamps.
One particular feature of this application is that the metadata dictionaries are loaded on-the-fly and can be changed or updated. A utility script provided with kelvinadon can be used to update the metadata dictionaries from the online sources. This means that any recently added registered metadata, including updates to AS-11 metadata structures and descriptive frameworks such as EBU core, can be viewed as JSON without being dark.
The name kelvinadon is a play on the format of MXF files using a KLV structure and a nod to Sir William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin - this library being developed in Scotland and Northern Ireland based on the highland library. This is an add on module for other Streampunk Media projects.
Kelvinadon is intended for use with the latest long term support (LTS) version of Node.js, which must be installed first. Otherwise, the library is pure Javascript and does not require a binding to C++ library. To install kelvinadon globally and use the simple MXF file dumper kelvinadump
:
npm install -g kelvinadon
Users of Mac or Linux platforms may need to prepend sudo
to the above.
To install locally for use in your own project:
npm install --save kelvinadon
To dump an MXF File myfile.mxf
and see all the KLV structures inside of it, install kelvinadon as a global dependency and run:
kelvinadump myfile.mxf
Here is an example output for one KLV packet:
KLVPacket {
key: '060e2b34-0205-0101-0d01-020101020400',
length: 136,
value: [ <Buffer 00 01 00 03 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 03 2a 7c 15 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 70 c3 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ... > ],
lengthLength: 4,
filePos: 0,
meta:
{ Symbol: 'HeaderPartitionClosedComplete',
Name: 'Header Partition Closed Complete',
Identification: 'urn:smpte:ul:060e2b34.027f0101.0d010201.01020400',
UUID: '060e2b34-027f-0101-0d01-020101020400',
Description: 'Header Partition Closed Complete',
Kind: 'LEAF',
NamespaceName: 'http://www.smpte-ra.org/reg/395/2014/13/1/aaf',
MetaType: 'ClassDefinition',
ParentClass: 'HeaderPartitionPack',
KLVSyntax: '05' },
detail:
{ ObjectClass: 'HeaderPartitionClosedComplete',
MajorVersion: 1,
MinorVersion: 3,
KAGSize: 1,
ThisPartition: 0,
PreviousPartition: 0,
FooterPartition: 13597676801,
HeaderByteCount: 28867,
IndexByteCount: 0,
IndexStreamID: 0,
BodyOffset: 0,
EssenceStreamID: 0,
OperationalPattern: 'MXFOP1aSingleItemSinglePackageMultiTrackStreamInternal',
EssenceContainers:
[ 'MXFGCFrameWrappedBroadcastWaveAudioData',
'MXFGCGenericEssenceMultipleMappings',
'MXFGCAVCByteStreamWithVideoStream0SIDFrameWrapped' ] } }
Each packet has:
key
16-byte identifier;length
length of the following value;value
array of chunks of data that make up the value of the packet;lengthLength
number of bytes used to carry the length value;filePos
absolute file position of this KLV packet in the overall stream;meta
if the key is recognized, the meta definition of the corresponding data type;detail
application of the meta definition used to decode the buffer and interpret the data it contains;props
(not shown) for local sets, an array or arrays describing each local tag found in a local set.
Some command line options have been provided to enable a user to configure the structure of the output. Run kelvinadump --help
for more details.
Kelvinadon has two modes that it can be used in within an application:
- As an event emitter, with the data within the stream split into partitions, metadata, indexes and essence by track.
- Via highland.js, allowing back pressure to be applied via the building blocks provided.
To use kelvinadon as a Node.js event emitter, install it as a local dependency and follow the example below:
var klv = require('kelvinadon');
var fs = require('fs');
// Create a new MXF event emitter for a Node.js readable stream
// Files, HTTP and other stream sources are possible.
var mxfEvents = new klv.MXFEmitter(fs.createReadStream('myfile.mxf'));
// Listen for errors
mxfEvents.on('error', function (e) { console.error(e); });
// Receive any header metadata sets (optional)
mxfEvents.on('metadata', function (preface) {
// Process a structured object containing the metadata preface & its children
});
// Listen for information on a picture track
mxfEvents.on('picture0', function (data) {
// Data is an object containing the Buffer value, length, track details, descriptor and
// associated timecode track for the media
});
// Listen for information on a sound track
mxfEvents.on('sound0', function (data) {
// Data is an object containing the Buffer value, length, track details, descriptor and
// associated timecode track for the media
});
// Event called at the end of the stream
mxfEvents.on('done', function () { console.log('Streaming complete.'); });
The track names are available with the metadata event by calling mxfEvents.getTrackList()
. Typically, these are picture0
, sound0
, sound1
, ... , data0
etc.. Alternatively, you can use the essence
event to listen for all essence elements in the stream. Note that a sound track may contain more than one channel.
The design is such that events are fairly self-contained, providing enough information that a decoder could process them standalone, including the count of the index of this element within its stream, the source package identifier, file descriptor, track details and the start timecode of the same package. Here is an example of the event data sent for picture data:
{ trackNumber: '15010500',
value: <Buffer 00 00 00 01 09 10 00 00 00 01 67 7a 10 29 b6 cf 01 e0 11 3f 2e 03 c6 02 02 02 80 00 00 03 00 80 00 00 19 42 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ... >,
length: 568832,
element: [ 0, 1 ],
sourcePackageID:
[ '060a2b34-0101-0105-0101-0f2013000000',
'1831346c-5001-254c-a5b7-c5e06f674dde' ],
count: 0,
track:
{ ObjectClass: 'TimelineTrack',
InstanceID: '52598e7a-ed47-7640-80f4-6e2e2edc789d',
TrackName: 'V1',
TrackID: 1001,
EssenceTrackNumber: 352388352,
EditRate: [ 25, 1 ],
Origin: 0,
TrackSegment:
{ ObjectClass: 'Sequence',
InstanceID: '30a3d791-5bfb-6a47-aca1-0970ed3582ae',
ComponentDataDefinition: 'PictureEssenceTrack',
ComponentLength: 20561,
ComponentObjects:
[ { ObjectClass: 'SourceClip',
InstanceID: '761faa1f-3a79-cf4b-a527-1290027a91d8',
ComponentDataDefinition: 'PictureEssenceTrack',
ComponentLength: 20561,
StartPosition: 0,
SourceTrackID: 0,
SourcePackageID:
[ '00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000',
'00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000' ] } ] } },
description:
{ ObjectClass: 'MPEGVideoDescriptor',
InstanceID: 'fdbf8fda-54c5-9244-952f-bc1ac12261c4',
ContainerFormat: 'MXFGCAVCByteStreamWithVideoStream0SIDFrameWrapped',
SampleRate: [ 25, 1 ],
ImageAspectRatio: [ 16, 9 ],
ActiveFormatDescriptor: 84,
PictureCompression: 'H264MPEG4AVCHigh422IntraRP2027ConstrainedClass100108050iCoding',
SignalStandard: 'SignalStandard_SMPTE274M',
FrameLayout: 'SeparateFields',
ColorSiting: 'CoSiting',
ComponentDepth: 10,
BlackRefLevel: 64,
WhiteRefLevel: 940,
ColorRange: 897,
CodingEquations: 'CodingEquations_ITU709',
StoredWidth: 1920,
StoredHeight: 540,
VideoLineMap: [ 21, 584 ],
DisplayWidth: 1920,
DisplayHeight: 540,
SampledWidth: 1920,
SampledHeight: 540,
HorizontalSubsampling: 2,
VerticalSubsampling: 1,
LinkedTrackID: 1001,
EssenceLength: 20561 },
startTimecode:
{ ObjectClass: 'Timecode',
InstanceID: 'a2f8e74e-6008-3b4e-bc05-9dbcfe43b392',
ComponentDataDefinition: 'SMPTE12MTimecodeTrackInactiveUserBits',
ComponentLength: 20561,
FramesPerSecond: 25,
DropFrame: false,
StartTimecode: 899250 } }
Note that kelvinadon looks up any label definitions, converting them to their more readable symbols.
Under the bonnet, the file dumper kelvinadump
and event emitter are highland streams. The building blocks of these streams are pipelines exposed by the kelvinadon module. For example, to build a highland version of the event emitter example:
var H = require('highland');
var fs = require('fs');
var klv = require('klevinadon');
var base = H(fs.createReadStream(process.argv[2]))
.through(klv.kelviniser())
.through(klv.metatiser())
.through(klv.stripTheFiller())
.through(klv.detailing())
.through(klv.puppeteer())
.through(klv.trackCacher());
base.fork()
.through(klv.essenceFilter('picture0')) // Track names as per event model
.doto(H.log)
.errors(function (e) { console.error(e); })
.done(function () { console.log('Finished reading picture data.'); });
base.fork()
.through(klv.essenceFilter('sound0')) // Track names as per event model
.doto(H.log)
.errors(function (e) { console.error(e); })
.done(function () { console.log('Finished reading sound data.') });
base.resume();
The highland pipeline reading stages available are described below and should be applied in the given order:
kelviniser
Turns a byte stream into a stream of raw KLV packets. The input stream is any node readable stream, including HTTP response objects. Also tried with FTP streams.metatiser
Reads the keys of the KLV stream and adds meta definitions to the KLV packets. See the lib folder for the meta dictionaries in use.stripTheFiller
Remove any filler elements from the stream (optional).detailing
Use the meta definition to extract the details from the Buffer value, such as decoding a local set to a metadata value.puppeteer
Collapse metadata classes into a single preface-object-with-children by resolving local references. The children are removed from the stream and the preface is sent on down the stream without its KLV wrapper.trackCacher
Cache track details and give names to each metadata track. An object with classTrackCache
is created and sent on down the stream.partitionFilter
,metadataFilter
,indexFilter
andessenceFilter
. Filter the stream so that it contains only KLV packets of the given type. A track name can be passed toessenceFilter
to make it track specific.
If a consumer that is slower than the producer is added to the stream, the producer (e.g. file reader stream) will be slowed down via back pressure.
Also provided is emmyiser
, the highland side-effect that is the basis of event emitter. This must be placed in the pipeline after the trackCacher
.
Most highland pipeline reading stages have mirror writing stages that can be used to convert a stream of Javascript objects with embedded buffers back to binary KLV. For example, the kelviniser
stage has a mirror state kelvinator
that takes the key, length and value of a KLVPacket
object and converts it to a Javascript Buffer
. The writing stages are:
kelvinator
mirrorskelviniser
: Convert a stream of KLVPacket objects into a stream of Javascript buffers that can be piped into a Node.JS stream, such as a file writing stream, HTTP response or streaming object store API.packetator
mirrorsdetailing
: Convert a stream of detail objects representing local sets, fixed-length packs and essence elements into a stream of KLV packets, creating the key, length and value from the detail.pieceMaker
mirrorspuppeteer
: Explode a nested preface-object-with-children into a primer pack, a flat preface with instance uid references and a sequence of separate local sets.
The aim is that a stream of MXF can be passed through kelviniser
to puppeteer
(without stripTheFiller
) to make Javascript objects and back through pieceMaker
to kelvinator
and the same stream of MXF is produced. Minor tweaks could be made in the middle but note that at this time, no logic is provided to fix up fillers and calculate the impact of a change of offset values or index tables.
Some reading functions have no mirror and that is because they don't need one. Also note that the writing functions are not currently setting the file position property (filePos
) of KLV packets.
The dictionary used to read the files is stored in file lib/RegDefs.json.gz
. This is generated automatically from the published registers using script util/updateRegisters.js
, e.g.:
node util/updateRegisters.js
If you have a local clone of this repository, you can update this metadata.
Some additional definitions are required to override some shortcomings in the published registers and enable full MXF data processing. These are stored in file lib/OverrideDefs.json
which is in turn generated by script util/makeMXFDefs.js
. A user may add their own extensions on file lib/ExtensionDefs.json
following the patterns established in the other two files.
With this approach, kelvinadump can encode and decode registered descriptive frameworks, for example:
{ ObjectClass: 'DM_AS_11_UKDPP_Framework',
InstanceID: 'b8743c4a-5ab4-5b41-af46-1b8b95c0e090',
UKDPP_Audio_Loudness_Standard: 'Loudness_EBU_R_128',
UKDPP_Textless_Elements_Exist: false,
UKDPP_Picture_Ratio: [ 16, 9 ],
UKDPP_Tertiary_Audio_Language: 'zxx',
UKDPP_PSE_Pass: 'PSE_Not_tested',
UKDPP_Total_Number_Of_Parts: 1,
UKDPP_Programme_Text_Language: 'eng',
UKDPP_Genre: 'Test Material',
...
}
This is prototype software that is not yet suitable for production use. The software is being actively tested and developed.
Contributions can be made via pull requests and will be considered by the author on their merits. Enhancement requests and bug reports should be raised as github issues. For support, please contact Streampunk Media. For updates follow @StrmPunkd on Twitter.
Some basic tests are provided and can be run as follows:
npm test
This software is released under the Apache 2.0 license. Copyright 2017 Streampunk Media Ltd.