There may be other bridges may not need to force relay traffic on
firefox as @prlanzarin pointed out. So set the default to a
configuration that works out of the box but leave other choices for the
operator.
The option is moved from kurento namespace to media next to the general
forceRelay option.
Firefox has a buggy ICE implementation and needs WebRTC media traffic to
be routed through a turn server to work reliably with mediasoup.
Use the information fetched by the STUN API to determine if the operator
has configured a turn server. If there is one force firefox to use it.
Closes#16164
When BBB is run as a single node or in a scaleout setup with a cluster
proxy in front (see https://docs.bigbluebutton.org/admin/clusterproxy.html) it
is useful to store client settings in browser localStorage instead of
sessionStorage. If localStorage is configured then the client will keep seetings
like notifications for user joining, chat etc across meetings.
It is not advisable to set the setting to `local` in a setup of multiple BBB
nodes without a cluster proxy in front of it because this would lead to
unexpected behaviour at users. The browser would store settings for each server
and for users it would look like BBB is sometimes store the settings and
sometimes not.
It adds the new setting
```yaml
public:
app:
userSettingsStorage: (session|local)
```
RTCRTPSender exposes DSCP marking via `networkPriority` in the encodings
configuration dictionaries. That should allow us to control
QoS priorities for different media streams, eg audio with higher network
priority than video. The only browser that implements that right
now is Chromium.
To use this, the public.app.media.networkPriorities configuration in
settings.yml. Audio, camera and screenshare priorities can be controlled
separately. For further info on the possible values, see:
- https://www.w3.org/TR/webrtc-priority/
- https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc8837#section-5
Mobile endpoints are flaky with the WebSpeechAPI:
- iOS versions that support it are borking our outbound audio when it's
enabled
- Android speech recognition has flaky locale detection and speech
transcription
Additionally: the support check is not checking the WebSpeechAPI
availability properly, so older devices (eg iOS 12) are flagged as
supported even though they aren't.
This commit adds a configuration flag (public.audioCaptions.mobile) to
control transcription availability on mobile. False by default.
Also extends the setSpeechVoices support check and
hasSpeechRecognitionSupport method to prevent false positives.
Adds two new flags to the settings file which change the way the locale
flag is used:
- forceLocale: (true/false) => If true, enforces the transcription
language to be the locale content field and jumps the language
selector
in audio modal.
- defaultSelectLocale: (true/false) => If true, the default selected
value in the dropdown language selector in audio modal will be defined
by the locale content field.
In any case, if the locale flag holds an invalid value, it defaults to
disabled.