To support an action on a media session, such as seeking, pausing, or changing tracks, you need to call the MediaSession interface's setActionHandler() method to establish a handler for that action. The specific type of media session action to be handled on a MediaSession is identified using a string from the MediaSessionAction enumerated type.
Syntax
A media session action's type is specified using a string from the MediaSessionAction enumerated type.
Values
Each of the actions is a common media session control request. Implement support for each of these in order to allow that type of action to be performed. The following strings identify the currently available types of media session action:
nexttrack- Advances playback to the next track.
pause- Pauses playback of the media.
play- Begins (or resumes) playback of the media.
previoustrack- Moves back to the previous track.
seekbackward- Seeks backward through the media from the current position. The
MediaSessionActionDetailspropertyseekOffsetspecifies the amount of time to seek backward. seekforward- Seeks forward from the current position through the media. The
MediaSessionActionDetailspropertyseekOffsetspecifies the amount of time to seek forward. seekto- Moves the playback position to the specified time within the media. The time to which to seek is specified in the
MediaSessionActionDetailspropertyseekTime. If you intend to perform multipleseektooperations in rapid succession, you can also specify theMediaSessionActionDetailspropertyfastSeekproperty with a value oftrue. This lets the browser know it can take steps to optimize repeated operations, and is likely to result in improved performance. skipad- Skips past the currently playing advertisement or commercial. This action may or may not be available, depending on the platform and user agent, or may be disabled due to subscription level or other circumstances.
stop- Halts playback entirely.
Description
A media session action may be generated by any media session action source; these sources include anything from UI widgets within the browser itself to media control keys on the user's keyboard to buttons on the user's headset or earbuds.
Examples
Adding action handlers
This example implements seek forward and backward actions for an audio player by setting up the seekforward and seekbackward action handlers.
let skipTime = 10; // Time to skip in seconds
navigator.mediaSession.setActionHandler('seekforward', evt => {
// User clicked "Seek Forward" media notification icon.
audio.currentTime = Math.min(audio.currentTime + skipTime,
audio.duration);
});
navigator.mediaSession.setActionHandler('seekbackward', evt => {
// User clicked "Seek Backward" media notification icon.
audio.currentTime = Math.max(audio.currentTime - skipTime, 0);
});
Supporting multiple actions in one handler function
You can also, if you prefer, use a single function to handle multiple action types, by checking the value of the MediaSessionActionDetails object's action property:
let skipTime = 7;
navigator.mediaSession.setActionHandler("seekforward", handleSeek);
navigator.mediaSession.setActionHandler("seekbackward", handleSeek);
function handleSeek(details) {
switch(details.action) {
case "seekforward":
audio.currentTime = Math.min(audio.currentTime + skipTime,
audio.duration);
break;
case "seekbackward":
audio.currentTime = Math.max(audio.currentTime - skipTime, 0);
break;
}
}
Here, the handleSeek() function handles both seekbackward and seekforward actions.
Specifications
| Specification | Status | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| Media Session Standard The definition of 'Media Session action types' in that specification. |
Draft | Initial definition. |
Browser compatibility
No compatibility data found. Please contribute data for "api.MediaSessionAction" (depth: 1) to the MDN compatibility data repository.
