--- title: Track selection --- Track selection determines which of the available media tracks are played by the player. This process is configured by [`TrackSelectionParameters`][], which support many different options to specify constraints and overrides. ## Information about existing tracks The player needs to prepare the media to know which tracks are available for selection. You can listen to `Player.Listener.onTracksInfoChanged` to get notified about changes, which may happen * When preparation completes * When the available or selected tracks change * When the playlist item changes ~~~ player.addListener(new Player.Listener() { @Override public void onTracksInfoChanged(TracksInfo tracksInfo) { // Update UI using current TracksInfo. } }); ~~~ {: .language-java} You can also retrieve the current `TracksInfo` by calling `player.getCurrentTracksInfo()`. `TracksInfo` contains a list of `TrackGroupInfo`s with information about the track type, format details, player support and selection status of each available track. Tracks are grouped together into one `TrackGroup` if they represent the same content that can be used interchangeably by the player (for example, all audio tracks of a single language, but with different bitrates). ~~~ for (TrackGroupInfo groupInfo : tracksInfo.getTrackGroupInfos()) { // Group level information. @C.TrackType int trackType = groupInfo.getTrackType(); boolean trackInGroupIsSelected = groupInfo.isSelected(); boolean trackInGroupIsSupported = groupInfo.isSupported(); TrackGroup group = groupInfo.getTrackGroup(); for (int i = 0; i < group.length; i++) { // Individual track information. boolean isSupported = groupInfo.isTrackSupported(i); boolean isSelected = groupInfo.isTrackSelected(i); Format trackFormat = group.getFormat(i); } } ~~~ {: .language-java} * A track is 'supported' if the `Player` is able to decode and render its samples. Note that even if multiple track groups of the same type (for example multiple audio track groups) are supported, it only means that they are supported individually and the player is not necessarily able to play them at the same time. * A track is 'selected' if the track selector chose this track for playback using the current `TrackSelectionParameters`. If multiple tracks within one track group are selected, the player uses these tracks for adaptive playback (for example, multiple video tracks with different bitrates). Note that only one of these tracks will be played at any one time. If you want to be notified of in-playback changes to the adaptive video track you can listen to `Player.Listener.onVideoSizeChanged`. ## Modifying track selection parameters The selection process can be configured by setting `TrackSelectionParameters` on the `Player` with `Player.setTrackSelectionParameters`. These updates can be done before and during playback. In most cases, it's advisable to obtain the current parameters and only modify the required aspects with the `TrackSelectionParameters.Builder`. The builder class also allows chaining to specify multiple options with one command: ~~~ player.setTrackSelectionParameters( player.getTrackSelectionParameters() .buildUpon() .setMaxVideoSizeSd() .setPreferredAudioLanguage("hu") .build()); ~~~ {: .language-java} ### Constraint based track selection Most options in `TrackSelectionParameters` allow you to specify constraints, which are independent of the tracks that are actually available. Typical constraints are: * Maximum or minimum video width, height, frame rate, or bitrate. * Maximum audio channel count or bitrate. * Preferred MIME types for video or audio. * Preferred audio languages or role flags. * Preferred text languages or role flags. Note that ExoPlayer already applies sensible defaults for most of these values, for example restricting video resolution to the display size or preferring the audio language that matches the user's system Locale setting. There are several benefits to using constraint based track selection instead of specifying specific tracks directly: * You can specify constraints before knowing what tracks the media provides. This allows to immediately select the appropriate tracks for faster startup time and also simplifies track selection code as you don't have to listen for changes in the available tracks. * Constraints can be applied consistently across all items in a playlist. For example, selecting an audio language based on user preference will automatically apply to the next playlist item too, whereas overriding a specific track will only apply to the current playlist item for which the track exists. ### Selecting specific tracks It's possible to specify specific tracks in `TrackSelectionParameters` that should be selected for the current set of tracks. Note that a change in the available tracks, for example when changing items in a playlist, will also invalidate such a track override. The simplest way to specify track overrides is to specify the `TrackGroup` that should be selected for its track type. For example, you can specify an audio track group to select this audio group and prevent any other audio track groups from being selected: ~~~ TrackSelectionOverrides overrides = new TrackSelectionOverrides.Builder() .setOverrideForType(new TrackSelectionOverride(audioTrackGroup)) .build(); player.setTrackSelectionParameters( player.getTrackSelectionParameters() .buildUpon().setTrackSelectionOverrides(overrides).build()); ~~~ {: .language-java} ### Disabling track types or groups Track types, like video, audio or text, can be disabled completely by using `TrackSelectionParameters.Builder.setDisabledTrackTypes`. This will apply unconditionally and will also affect other playlist items. ~~~ player.setTrackSelectionParameters( player.getTrackSelectionParameters() .buildUpon() .setDisabledTrackTypes(ImmutableSet.of(C.TRACK_TYPE_VIDEO)) .build()); ~~~ {: .language-java} Alternatively, it's possible to prevent the selection of track groups for the current playlist item only by specifying empty overrides for these groups: ~~~ TrackSelectionOverrides overrides = new TrackSelectionOverrides.Builder() .addOverride( new TrackSelectionOverride( disabledTrackGroup, /* select no tracks for this group */ ImmutableList.of())) .build(); player.setTrackSelectionParameters( player.getTrackSelectionParameters() .buildUpon().setTrackSelectionOverrides(overrides).build()); ~~~ {: .language-java} ## Customizing the track selector Track selection is the responsibility of a `TrackSelector`, an instance of which can be provided whenever an `ExoPlayer` is built and later obtained with `ExoPlayer.getTrackSelector()`. ~~~ DefaultTrackSelector trackSelector = new DefaultTrackSelector(context); ExoPlayer player = new ExoPlayer.Builder(context) .setTrackSelector(trackSelector) .build(); ~~~ {: .language-java} `DefaultTrackSelector` is a flexible `TrackSelector` suitable for most use cases. It uses the `TrackSelectionParameters` set in the `Player`, but also provides some advanced customization options that can be specified in the `DefaultTrackSelector.ParametersBuilder`: ~~~ trackSelector.setParameters( trackSelector .buildUponParameters() .setAllowVideoMixedMimeTypeAdaptiveness(true)); ~~~ {: .language-java} ### Tunneling Tunneled playback can be enabled in cases where the combination of renderers and selected tracks supports it. This can be done by using `DefaultTrackSelector.ParametersBuilder.setTunnelingEnabled(true)`. [`TrackSelectionParameters`]: {{ site.exo_sdk }}/trackselection/TrackSelectionParameters.html