/livekit-react

React component and library for LiveKit

Primary LanguageTypeScriptApache License 2.0Apache-2.0

LiveKit React Component Library

This package provides React components that makes it easier to use LiveKit in a React app.

Install

npm install --save livekit-react

Demo

https://example.livekit.io.

Source available in example

Usage

Video room with built-in UI

Without customization, the component would use a default skin as seen in the demo above.

import { LiveKitRoom } from 'livekit-react'
// CSS should be explicitly imported if using the default UI
import 'livekit-react/dist/index.css'
// used by the default ParticipantView to maintain video aspect ratio.
// this CSS must be imported globally
// if you are using a custom Participant renderer, this import isn't necessary.
import "react-aspect-ratio/aspect-ratio.css";

export const RoomPage = () => {
  const url = 'wss://your_host'
  const token = 'your_token'
  return (
    <div className="roomContainer">
      <LiveKitRoom url={url} token={token} onConnected={room => onConnected(room)}/>
    </div>
  )
}

async function onConnected(room) {
  await room.localParticipant.setCameraEnabled(true)
  await room.localParticipant.setMicrophoneEnabled(true)
}

Customize rendering

To provide your own rendering, override one or more of stageRenderer, participantRenderer, and controlRenderer. It's possible customize a single renderer and use defaults for the others.

export const RoomPage = () => {
  const url = 'wss://your_host'
  const token = 'your_token'
  return (
    <LiveKitRoom url={url} token={token}
      // stageRenderer renders the entire stage
      stageRenderer={(props: StageProps) => { return <div/> }}
      // participantRenderer renders a single participant
      participantRenderer={(props: ParticipantProps) => { return <div/> }}
      // controlRenderer renders the control bar
      controlRenderer={(props: ControlsProps) => { return <div/> }}
    />
  )
}

Using custom hooks

The provided components make use of two hooks: useRoom and useParticipant, they will help you manage internal LiveKit callbacks and map them into state variables that are ready-to-use from React components.

Using the connect function returned by useRoom will ensure that callbacks are registered automatically and the other state variables are updated when changes take place in the room.

import { useRoom, useParticipant } from 'livekit-react'

export const MyComponent = () => {
  const roomOptions: RoomOptions = {
    adaptiveStream: true,
    dynacast: true,
  }
  const { connect, isConnecting, room, error, participants, audioTracks } = useRoom(roomOptions);
  // initiate connection to the livekit room
  await connect(livekitUrl, livekitToken);
  // request camera and microphone permissions and publish tracks
  room.localParticipant.enableCameraAndMicrophone();
  ...
}

export const ParticipantRenderer = ({ participant }) => {
  const { isSpeaking, subscribedTracks } = useParticipant(participant)
  ...
}

Rendering video and audio

When building your custom UI, it's helpful to use track renderers that are provided in this library. AudioRenderer and VideoRenderer would render an audio and video track, respectively.