Unable to recover audio from Amazon Connect via kinesis video client in boto3 in Python
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I'm trying to get an audio file from kinesis video stream in Python in AWS-Lambda instance.

To get the audio i'm using this snippet of code:

 def download_stream(self, streamARM, ms_start_timestamp):
        tmpfile = os.path.join('/tmp', str(uuid.uuid4()) + '.mkv')

        logger.debug("get_data_endpoint", tmpfile=tmpfile, streamARM=streamARM, ms_start_timestamp=ms_start_timestamp)
        response = self._kinesisvideo_client.get_data_endpoint(
           StreamARN=streamARM,
           APIName='GET_MEDIA')

        data_endpoint = response['DataEndpoint']
        logger.debug("get_data_endpoint", endpoint_url=data_endpoint)
        video_client = boto3.client('kinesis-video-media', endpoint_url=data_endpoint)
        stream = video_client.get_media(
           StreamARN=streamARM,
           StartSelector={'StartSelectorType': 'EARLIEST'})

        time.sleep(1)
        logger.debug("stream", stream=stream)
        streamingBody = stream['Payload']

        # This write a mkv chunk, seems corrupted
        with open(tmpfile, 'w+b') as f:
            f.write(streamingBody.read())

        logger.debug("recorded_file", tmpfile=tmpfile)
        return True, tmpfile

To consume it you just need a valid streamARM created by Amazon connect when you call start streaming and stop streaming, the relevant Amazon connect integration is this:

Amazon connect integration

After calling call center, and process the stream in an AWS Lambda, I can get a file foo.flv. According to Amazon Kinesis Video Streams PUT_MEDIA documentation it is a Matroska (MKV) container format with a track with audio in AAC format.

Using OpenSource tools like MKVToolNix, GStreamer and vlc I cannot play the file to listen the audio and I cannot figure why not. If I force the file as a wav (without decoding) I listen the recorded audio very noisy (the info is there). The payload parsed contain AWS tags and some info, mkvinfo test_03s_current.mkv gives as output:

+ EBML head
|+ EBML version: 1
|+ EBML read version: 1
|+ Maximum EBML ID length: 4
|+ Maximum EBML size length: 8
|+ Document type: matroska
|+ Document type version: 2
|+ Document type read version: 2
+ Segment: size unknown
|+ Tags
| + Tag
|  + Simple
|   + Name: ContactId
|   + String: b1e0f302-2d60-4dcf-98af-77ef3baa0b0b
|+ Tags
| + Tag
|  + Simple
|   + Name: InstanceId
|   + String: f1f87e8c-ae31-4f00-86dd-ea630fcd9fe5
|+ Tags
| + Tag
|  + Simple
|   + Name: MimeType
|   + String: audio/L16;rate=8000;channels=1;
|+ Tags
| + Tag
|  + Simple
|   + Name: AUDIO_FROM_CUSTOMER
|   + String: 1
|+ Segment information
| + Segment UID: 0xc0 0x54 0x2a 0xab 0xba 0x4e 0xf8 0xf6 0xc7 0x16 0x9e 0x73 0x11 0x08 0xdb 0x04
| + Timestamp scale: 1000000
| + Title: Kinesis Video SDK
| + Multiplexing application: Kinesis Video SDK 1.0.0 JNI 2.0
| + Writing application: Kinesis Video SDK 1.0.0 JNI 2.0
|+ Tracks
| + Track
|  + Track number: 1 (track ID for mkvmerge & mkvextract: 0)
|  + Track UID: 1
|  + Track type: audio
|  + Name: AUDIO_FROM_CUSTOMER
|  + Codec ID: A_AAC
|  + Codec's private data: size 2
|+ Tags
| + Tag
|  + Simple
|   + Name: AWS_KINESISVIDEO_FRAGMENT_NUMBER
|   + String: 91343852333181432392682062632260670078128844116
|  + Simple
|   + Name: AWS_KINESISVIDEO_SERVER_TIMESTAMP
|   + String: 1603184119.798
|  + Simple
|   + Name: AWS_KINESISVIDEO_PRODUCER_TIMESTAMP
|   + String: 1603184119.671
|+ Cluster

Theorically (this GStreamer pipeline works with a valid mkv file with track 0 audio) shall work, because it works:

gst-launch-1.0 filesrc location=test.mkv ! queue ! matroskademux name=dmux dmux.audio_0 ! queue ! aacparse ! faad ! audioconvert ! alsasink

You can generate a pulse to test it using GStreamer with the command: gst-launch-1.0 -v audiotestsrc num-buffers=100 ! audioconvert ! voaacenc ! matroskamux ! filesink location=foo.mkv

GStreamer seems to be a good candidate because it have a wrapper to Python, in this issue in stream parser library lherman-cs explains how the binary format shall arrive.

Using mkvextract test_03s_current.mkv tracks 0:audio.aac I'm be able to generate the aac file (It detect Container format: raw AAC file with ADTS headers) but it doesn't work neither.

How can I parse the MKV chunks to generate one or more AAC/WAV files correctly without use dirty hacks?

Impolitic answered 20/10, 2020 at 10:1 Comment(4)
hey @vgonisanz, did you find any workaround for this?Hicks
The workaround is to use the Amazon Kinesis parser (in Java) to generate a wav file in order to use in your application. By now I have not an alternative to parse it with a python tool, gstreamer, of another tool. Reference: github.com/aws/amazon-kinesis-video-streams-parser-libraryImpolitic
Hi @vgonisanz, did you use this "amazon-kinesis-video-streams-parser-library" in AWS lambda function or in ec2Aegis
I used it in ec2Impolitic

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