Testing Widevine CDM

In Electron you can use the Widevine CDM library shipped with Chrome browser.

Widevine Content Decryption Modules (CDMs) are how streaming services protect content using HTML5 video to web browsers without relying on an NPAPI plugin like Flash or Silverlight. Widevine support is an alternative solution for streaming services that currently rely on Silverlight for playback of DRM-protected video content. It will allow websites to show DRM-protected video content in Firefox without the use of NPAPI plugins. The Widevine CDM runs in an open-source CDM sandbox providing better user security than NPAPI plugins.

Note on VMP

As of Electron v1.8.0 (Chrome v59), the below steps are may only be some of the necessary steps to enable Widevine; any app on or after that version intending to use the Widevine CDM may need to be signed using a license obtained from Widevine itself.

Per Widevine:

Chrome 59 (and later) includes support for Verified Media Path (VMP). VMP provides a method to verify the authenticity of a device platform. For browser deployments, this will provide an additional signal to determine if a browser-based implementation is reliable and secure.

The proxy integration guide has been updated with information about VMP and how to issue licenses.

Widevine recommends our browser-based integrations (vendors and browser-based applications) add support for VMP.

To enable video playback with this new restriction, castLabs has created a fork that has implemented the necessary changes to enable Widevine to be played in an Electron application if one has obtained the necessary licenses from widevine.

Getting the library

Open chrome://components/ in Chrome browser, find Widevine Content Decryption Module and make sure it is up to date, then you can find the library files from the application directory.

On Windows

The library file widevinecdm.dll will be under Program Files(x86)/Google/Chrome/Application/CHROME_VERSION/WidevineCdm/_platform_specific/win_(x86|x64)/ directory.

On macOS

The library file libwidevinecdm.dylib will be under /Applications/Google Chrome.app/Contents/Versions/CHROME_VERSION/Google Chrome Framework.framework/Versions/A/Libraries/WidevineCdm/_platform_specific/mac_(x86|x64)/ directory.

Note: Make sure that chrome version used by Electron is greater than or equal to the min_chrome_version value of Chrome’s widevine cdm component. The value can be found in manifest.json under WidevineCdm directory.

Using the library

After getting the library files, you should pass the path to the file with --widevine-cdm-path command line switch, and the library’s version with --widevine-cdm-version switch. The command line switches have to be passed before the ready event of app module gets emitted.

Example code:

  1. const { app, BrowserWindow } = require('electron')
  2. // You have to pass the directory that contains widevine library here, it is
  3. // * `libwidevinecdm.dylib` on macOS,
  4. // * `widevinecdm.dll` on Windows.
  5. app.commandLine.appendSwitch('widevine-cdm-path', '/path/to/widevine_library')
  6. // The version of plugin can be got from `chrome://components` page in Chrome.
  7. app.commandLine.appendSwitch('widevine-cdm-version', '1.4.8.866')
  8. let win = null
  9. app.whenReady().then(() => {
  10. win = new BrowserWindow()
  11. win.show()
  12. })

Verifying Widevine CDM support

To verify whether widevine works, you can use following ways: