Difference between revisions of "Video textures and alpha transparency"
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The latest Safari 15 browser introduces performance regression with slow video texture rendering. Among devices affected by this issue: Intel and M1-based Macs, as well as iPhones/iPads. Track updates on this issue on WebKit Bugzilla: [https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=223740 223740], [https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=232235 232235]. | The latest Safari 15 browser introduces performance regression with slow video texture rendering. Among devices affected by this issue: Intel and M1-based Macs, as well as iPhones/iPads. Track updates on this issue on WebKit Bugzilla: [https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=223740 223740], [https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=232235 232235]. | ||
UPDATE: The issue was fixed in the recent updates of Safari 15 |
Revision as of 11:39, 1 June 2022
Supported formats
WebM and HEVC/MOV formats are the only video formats that can be used on the web to display textures with alpha transparency.
WebM is supported in Chrome/Firefox/Edge/Samsung/Opera/Brave while HEVC/MOV should be used on Safari (both desktop and mobile).
Selecting appropriate format
Use can use the following Puzzles snippet to select the video:
Converting WebM to HEVC (macOS)
At the time of the writing, transparent videos are not supported in the stock libx265 encoder. Still you can use ffmpeg on Mac devices with hardware encoder called VideoToolbox to convert your videos:
ffmpeg -c:v libvpx-vp9 -i movie-webm.webm -c:v hevc_videotoolbox -alpha_quality 0.75 -vtag hvc1 movie-hevc.mov
You can install FFmpeg with Homebrew:
brew install ffmpeg
Converting video with chromakey (green screen) to WebM with alpha
To convert any video with chromakey (e.g MP4 which does not support alpha) to semi-transparent WebM:
ffmpeg -i movie-mp4.mp4 -vf "chromakey=0x2a9a2e:0.01:0.2" movie-webm.webm
Where 0x2a9a2e is the HEX-color of the green (use color picker to find it), 0.01 — similarity factor, 0.2 — blend factor. See here for more info.
Known Issues
Performance regression in Safari 15
The latest Safari 15 browser introduces performance regression with slow video texture rendering. Among devices affected by this issue: Intel and M1-based Macs, as well as iPhones/iPads. Track updates on this issue on WebKit Bugzilla: 223740, 232235.
UPDATE: The issue was fixed in the recent updates of Safari 15