RTCInboundRtpStreamStats: qpSum property
The qpSum
property of the
RTCInboundRtpStreamStats
dictionary is a value generated by adding the
Quantization Parameter (QP) values for every frame
sent or received to date on the video track corresponding to this
RTCInboundRtpStreamStats
object.
In general, the higher this number is, the more heavily compressed the video data is.
Value
An unsigned 64-bit integer value which indicates the sum of the quantization parameter
(QP) value for every frame sent or received so far on the track described by the
RTCInboundRtpStreamStats
object. Since the value of QP is typically
larger to indicate higher compression factors, the larger this sum is, the more heavily
compressed the stream generally has been.
Note: This value is only available for video media.
Usage notes
Quantization is the process of applying lossy compression to a range of values, resulting in a single quantum value. This value takes the place of the range of values, thereby reducing the number of different values that appear in the overall data set, making the data more compressible. The quantization process and the amount of compression can be controlled using one or more parameters.
It's important to keep in mind that the value of QP can change periodically—even every
frame—so it's difficult to know for certain how substantial the compression is. The best
you can do is make an estimate. You can, for example, use the value of
RTCReceivedRtpStreamStats.framesDecoded
if receiving the media or
RTCSentRtpStreamStats.framesEncoded
if sending it to get the number of
frames handled so far, and compute an average from there. See Calculating average quantization below for a function that does this.
Also, the exact meaning of the QP value depends on the codec being
used. For example, for the VP8 codec, the QP value can be anywhere from 1 to 127 and is
found in the frame header element "y_ac_qi"
, whose value is defined in
RFC 6386, section 19.2. H.264 uses a QP which ranges from 0 to 51; in this case, it's an
index used to derive a scaling matrix used during the quantization process.
Additionally, QP is not likely to be the only parameter the codec uses to adjust the
compression. See the individual codec specifications for details.
Examples
Calculating average quantization
The calculateAverageQP()
function shown below computes the average QP for
the given RTCStats
object that contains RTP stream statistics, returning
0 if the object doesn't describe an RTP stream.
js
function calculateAverageQP(stats) {
let frameCount = 0;
switch (stats.type) {
case "inbound-rtp":
case "remote-inbound-rtp":
frameCount = stats.framesDecoded;
break;
case "outbound-rtp":
case "remote-outbound-rtp":
frameCount = stats.framesEncoded;
break;
default:
return 0;
}
return status.qpSum / frameCount;
}
Specifications
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.
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