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Shotstack JSON examples

A collection of JSON templates and examples demonstrating common techniques and features of the Shotstack platform.

Shotstack is video automation platform for creating video centric applications. The core of the platform is a highly scalable, hosted API that can edit, process, manipulate and personalise 1000's of videos concurrently.

The RESTful API uses JSON to describe the timeline of a video edit which can be posted to the render endpoint which then takes care of delivering a rendered mp4 video file.

This is a collection of JSON examples to help users get familiar with the system and demonstrate basic video editing concepts and features of the system.

Requirements

Before using these examples you will need he following:

  • A Shotstack account and API key, register via the website.
  • Curl, Postman or another application or command line tool for making RESTful API requests

Note: This readme provides examples using Curl

Usage

To run the examples we will provide instructions using Curl. You could easily use an application like Postman or
another application or tool that can post JSON formatted data to an API endpoint.

This guide assumes Curl is already installed on your environment and you have a basic understanding of posting requests to an API. Even if you are familiar with working with API's it is worthwhile checking our getting started guide before using these examples.

Post Render Task

To queue and render a video example:

curl -X POST \
     -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
     -H "x-api-key: YOUR_KEY_HERE" \
     -d @examples/ken-burn-effect.json \
     https://api.shotstack.io/stage/render
  • In the example above replace YOUR_KEY_HERE with your the staging key provided to you during registration.
  • @examples/ken-burn-effect.json is the example JSON file from the examples folder you wish to render. See the Examples table below for a list of examples.
  • Notice that we are using the stage endpoint https://api.shotstack.io/stage/render which is free for development and testing.

Response

If the POST is successful you will receive a response similar to:

{
   "success":true,
   "message":"Created",
   "response":{
      "message":"Render Successfully Queued",
      "id":"d2b46ed6-998a-4d6b-9d91-b8cf0193a655"
   }
}

Take a note of the response id, i.e.: d2b46ed6-998a-4d6b-9d91-b8cf0193a655, which we will use in the next step.

Status Check

Video rendering takes time, usually several seconds per second of video, so a 30 second video might take 30 seconds to one minute to complete.

To check the status of render task:

curl -X GET \
     -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
     -H "x-api-key: YOUR_KEY_HERE" \
     https://api.shotstack.io/stage/render/d2b46ed6-998a-4d6b-9d91-b8cf0193a655
  • Replace YOUR_KEY_HERE with your staging environment key.
  • Notice we have appended the response id to the end of the request URL https://api.shotstack.io/stage/render/d2b46ed6-998a-4d6b-9d91-b8cf0193a655; you will need to make sure you use the id returned from the Post Render Task step.

Response

You can query the render endpoint above until your video has finished rendering. The response you can expect to see is:

{
   "success":true,
   "message":"OK",
   "response":{
      "id":"d2b46ed6-998a-4d6b-9d91-b8cf0193a655",
      "owner":"hckwccw3q3",
      "plan":"sandbox",
      "status":"done",
      "url":"https://s3-ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/shotstack-api-stage-output/hckwccw3q3/d2b46ed6-998a-4d6b-9d91-b8cf0193a655.mp4",
      "poster": null,
      "thumbnail": null,
      "data":{
         "output":{
            ...
         },
         "timeline":{
            ...
         }
      },
      "created":"2019-04-16T12:02:42.148Z",
      "updated":"2019-04-16T12:02:51.867Z"
   }
}
  • While the video is rendering the status will be set to rendering and there will be no url parameter.
  • When complete the status will be set to done and a url to an mp4 (or gif) file will be available.
  • Copy and paste the URL to your browser to preview the video or download via Curl, wget or via your browser.

Examples

Example File Description Video
1-min-stitched.json A 1 minute video made from 5 second clips stitched in sequence. Preview
captions.json Add captions to a video in time to the audio. Preview
carousel.json Carousel animation transition using static images. Preview
crop.json Crop effects using sections of a video. Preview
ken-burns-effect.json Animate static images using zooming and panning, also know as the Ken Burns effect. Preview
kinetic-text.json Text animation in sync with the music. Preview
luma-matte.json Luma matte demo to create transition effects between clips. Preview
overlay-transition.json Use QuickTime mov with alpha transparency to create cool transitions. Preview
picture-in-picture.json Picture in picture demo using layered tracks, clip position and scale. Preview
snowflake-overlay.json Snowflakes alpha matte overlay using luma matte. Preview
watermark.json Apply a logo watermark to the corners of a video. Preview

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