fix(player): resume replay, TV surface recovery, and finite time guards

ExoPlayer:
   - Pass the resume position into setMediaSource() instead of prepare()-ing
     from 0 and then seekTo()-ing, which replayed the first few seconds before
     jumping to the resume point.
   - Drop the redundant initial seek that mirrors the resume position (fired by
     the JS direct-player layer once tracks are ready). ExoPlayer re-buffers on
     every seek — even a no-op to the current position — so it stuttered startup.

   MPV (Android TV):
   - Recover the video pipeline when returning from the screensaver / app
     background while paused. TV uses zero-copy hwdec=mediacodec, which binds
     MediaCodec directly to the display surface; when the screensaver invalidates
     that surface the decoder is left bound to dead buffers and mpv disables the
     video track. Register TV-only activity-lifecycle callbacks and reload at the
     cached position on resume to recreate the decoder against the live surface
     (Android counterpart to iOS's performDecoderReset()).

   Video time controls:
   - Initialize remainingTime to 0 instead of Infinity and guard non-finite
     values, so the first paint shows "0:00" (and "—" for the end time) rather
     than "Infinityh NaNm NaNs" and an Invalid Date before the first progress
     update

Signed-off-by: Lance Chant <13349722+lancechant@users.noreply.github.com>
This commit is contained in:
Lance Chant
2026-07-14 10:55:10 +02:00
parent c13da89307
commit 0fea901133
6 changed files with 228 additions and 21 deletions

View File

@@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ export const formatTimeString = (
t: number | null | undefined,
unit: "s" | "ms" | "tick" = "ms",
): string => {
if (t === null || t === undefined) return "0:00";
if (t === null || t === undefined || !Number.isFinite(t)) return "0:00";
let seconds: number;
switch (unit) {