I have the following HTML5 video code on my homepage and it acts strange in Firefox 11.
<video width="900" height="508" autoplay="autoplay" controls="controls">
<source type="video/webm" src="http://www.mysite.com/MovieClip.webm"></source>
<source type="video/mp4" src="http://www.mysite.com/MovieClip.mp4"></source>
</video>
When the homepage on my site loads, I see in the place of the video the following error message:
"No video with supported format and MIME type found."
However, when I open up the media path "http://www.mysite.com/MovieClip.webm" directly, in a new tab, it loads the media just fine (using the internal Firefox HTML5 video player)!
Then, right afterwards when I go back to my homepage and refresh the page, it now loads the video just fine! Any ideas on why this is happening and how to fix?
Thanks in advance!
Be certain that your web server is configured to deliver WebM video as MIME type "video/webm". You can quickly and manually check if this is the case by telnetting to your web server and issuing a HEAD request:
telnet www.mysite.com 80
[after connection...]
HEAD /MovieClip.webm HTTP/1.1
Host: www.mysite.com
And finish the request with 2 carriage returns. The HTTP response header should contain a "Content-Type:" line. If it doesn't say "video/webm", Firefox won't accept your WebM file.
Regardng to Multimedia Mikes answer. If your server delivers the wrong mime type to the videos just put a htaccess file with following content into your videos directory:
AddType video/mp4 mp4
AddType video/ogg ogg
AddType video/webm webm
This worked out well.
If, please rate his answer ;)
Greetings
func0der
I am not entirely sure this will solve your problem, but we also have noticed erratic behavior with .webm movies in Firefox 11 (only on Windows): The video element's playhead automatically jumps to the end of the movie, even if you open the file explicitly, i.e. without a surrounding HTML page. This of course renders all autoplay settings unusable.
Our solution was to change the order of the sources, so that Firefox would prefer .ogg files over .webm - there was no need to change anything else in the HTML code.