Videos
This topic contains information about how you can reference videos from
      your HTML or XML documents.
    Warning: 
        
- Only Acrobat Reader supports video embedding.
- Only the following extensions are supported: .mov,.mp4and.m4v.
Tip: 
To process large video files, you need to
        increase the available memory (e.g. 3.5Gb of memory for a 2Gb video).
For HTML, the 
    <video> tag can be used without any
      other styling in your CSS
        files:...
<video data="path/to/video.mp4" format="mp4" width="480" height="270">
    <source src="path/to/video.mp4"/>
</video>
...Note: 
It is recommended to use absolute paths for
          
@data and @src values like this:
          src="file:/C:/absolute/path/to/video.mp4".For XML, you must add CSS rules that pick up the content of an attribute
      and use it as a source for the
      video:
    ...
<para>Like shown in this video: <video src="files/earth.mp4"/>.</para>
...video {
  display: inline;
}
video[src] {
  content: attr(src, url);
}Note: 
It is important to use the 
url
        keyword when retrieving the attribute value. It signals that the value is a pointer to an
        external image.Change the Video Size
If your XML contains additional attributes such as 
    @width or
          @height, you can complete the
          CSS:video[width] {
  width: attr(width, length);
}
video[height] {
  height: attr(height, length);
}Notes: 
          
- It is also possible to set both @widthand@heightattributes directly on the video<object>.
- If no values are set for width/height (neither from the CSS nor attributes), the extracted video size will be used.
Customize Video Cover Placeholder
By default, a placeholder is displayed in place of the video. When clicked, this placeholder will launch the video.
It is possible to change this placeholder with a custom one by using the 
    -oxy-video-cover
        property:video {
  -oxy-video-cover: url("files/cover.png");
}