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Live Battles

AtomicXCore provides two primary modules: CoHostStore and BattleStore, which handle cross-room co-hosting and PK battles respectively. This guide walks you through using both modules together to implement the complete workflow from co-hosting to PK in a live streaming scenario.

Core Scenario

A typical "Host Co-hosting PK" session consists of three main stages, as shown below:
1. Cross-room Co-hosting: Two hosts connect, and both video streams are displayed in a shared view.
2. Initiate PK: After the connection is established, either host can start a PK challenge.
3. PK Battle: Both hosts compete in a PK battle, with scores updated in real time.


Implementation

Step 1: Component Integration

Refer to Quick Start to integrate AtomicXCore and complete the setup of LiveCoreView.

Step 2: Implement Cross-Room Co-hosting

The goal of this step is to display the video streams of two hosts in the same view. Use CoHostStore to achieve this.

Inviter (Host A) Implementation

1. Initiate Co-hosting Invitation
When Host A selects Host B in the UI and initiates a co-hosting request, call the requestHostConnection method.
import androidx.appcompat.app.AppCompatActivity
import io.trtc.tuikit.atomicxcore.api.CompletionHandler
import io.trtc.tuikit.atomicxcore.api.live.CoHostLayoutTemplate
import io.trtc.tuikit.atomicxcore.api.live.CoHostStore

// Host A's Activity
class HostAActivity : AppCompatActivity() {
private val liveId = "hostA_roomID" // Host A's Room ID
private val coHostStore = CoHostStore.create(liveId)

// User clicks the "Co-host" button and selects Host B
fun inviteHostB(targetHostLiveId: String) {
val layout = CoHostLayoutTemplate.HOST_DYNAMIC_GRID // Select a layout template
val timeout = 30 // Invitation timeout (seconds)

coHostStore.requestHostConnection(
targetHostLiveID = targetHostLiveId,
layoutTemplate = layout,
timeout = timeout,
extraInfo = null,
completion = object : CompletionHandler {
override fun onSuccess() {
println("Co-hosting invitation sent, waiting for response...")
}

override fun onFailure(code: Int, desc: String) {
println("Invitation failed to send: $desc")
}
}
)
}
}
2. Listen for Invitation Result
Receive Host B's response via the CoHostListener callback methods.
import android.os.Bundle
import androidx.appcompat.app.AppCompatActivity
import io.trtc.tuikit.atomicxcore.api.live.CoHostListener
import io.trtc.tuikit.atomicxcore.api.live.CoHostStore
import io.trtc.tuikit.atomicxcore.api.live.SeatUserInfo

class HostAActivity : AppCompatActivity() {
private val liveId = "hostA_roomID" // Host A's Room ID
private val coHostStore = CoHostStore.create(liveId)
private val coHostListener = object : CoHostListener() {
override fun onCoHostRequestAccepted(invitee: SeatUserInfo) {
println("Host ${invitee.userName} accepted your co-hosting invitation")
}

override fun onCoHostRequestRejected(invitee: SeatUserInfo) {
println("Host ${invitee.userName} rejected your invitation")
}

override fun onCoHostRequestTimeout(inviter: SeatUserInfo, invitee: SeatUserInfo) {
println("Invitation timed out, no response received")
}
}

override fun onCreate(savedInstanceState: Bundle?) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState)
// ... initialization code ...
// Initialize CoHostStore
coHostStore.addCoHostListener(coHostListener)
}
}

Invitee (Host B) Implementation

1. Receive Co-hosting Invitation
Host B listens for invitations from Host A via CoHostListener.
import androidx.appcompat.app.AppCompatActivity
import io.trtc.tuikit.atomicxcore.api.live.CoHostListener
import io.trtc.tuikit.atomicxcore.api.live.CoHostStore
import io.trtc.tuikit.atomicxcore.api.live.SeatUserInfo

// Host B's Activity
class HostBActivity : AppCompatActivity() {
private val liveId = "hostB_roomID" // Host B's Room ID
private val coHostStore = CoHostStore.create(liveId)
private val coHostListener = object : CoHostListener() {
override fun onCoHostRequestReceived(inviter: SeatUserInfo, extensionInfo: String) {
println("Received co-hosting invitation from Host ${inviter.userName}")
// Display invitation dialog to respond
// showInvitationDialog(inviter)
}
}
}
2. Respond to Co-hosting Invitation
After Host B receives the invitation, prompt for “Accept” or “Reject” and call the appropriate method:
// Part of HostBActivity
fun acceptInvitation(fromHostLiveId: String) {
coHostStore.acceptHostConnection(fromHostLiveID = fromHostLiveId, completion = null)
}

fun rejectInvitation(fromHostLiveId: String) {
coHostStore.rejectHostConnection(fromHostLiveID = fromHostLiveId, completion = null)
}

Step 3: Implement Host PK

After a successful co-hosting connection, either host can initiate a PK. Use BattleStore for PK functionality.

Challenger (e.g., Host A) Implementation

1. Initiate PK Challenge
When Host A clicks the "PK" button, call the requestBattle method.
// Part of HostAActivity
class HostAActivity : AppCompatActivity() {
private val liveId = "hostA_roomID" // Host A's Room ID
private val battleStore = BattleStore.create(liveId)

fun startPK(opponentUserId: String) {
val config = BattleConfig(duration = 300) // PK lasts 5 minutes
battleStore.requestBattle(
config = config,
userIDList = listOf(opponentUserId),
timeout = 30,
completion = null
)
}
}
2. Listen for PK Status
Use BattleListener to monitor key events such as the start and end of PK.
// Part of HostAActivity
class HostAActivity : AppCompatActivity() {
private val liveId = "hostA_roomID" // Host A's Room ID
private val battleStore = BattleStore.create(liveId)
private val battleListener = object : BattleListener() {
override fun onBattleStarted(
battleInfo: BattleInfo,
inviter: SeatUserInfo,
invitees: List<SeatUserInfo>
) {
println("PK started")
}

override fun onBattleEnded(battleInfo: BattleInfo, reason: BattleEndedReason?) {
println("PK ended")
}
}

override fun onCreate(savedInstanceState: Bundle?) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState)
// ... other initialization code ...
battleStore.addBattleListener(battleListener)
}
}

Opponent (Host B) Implementation

1. Receive PK Challenge
Listen for PK invitations via BattleListener.
// Add to HostBActivity
class HostBActivity : AppCompatActivity() {
private val liveId = "hostB_roomID" // Host B's Room ID
private val battleStore = BattleStore.create(liveId)

private val battleListener = object : BattleListener() {
override fun onBattleRequestReceived(battleID: String, inviter: SeatUserInfo, invitee: SeatUserInfo) {
println("Received PK challenge from Host ${inviter.userName}")
// Pop up a dialog for Host B to choose "Accept" or "Reject"
// showPKChallengeDialog(battleID, inviter)
}
}
override fun onCreate(savedInstanceState: Bundle?) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState)
// ... other initialization code ...
battleStore.addBattleListener(battleListener)
}
}
2. Respond to PK Challenge
Prompt Host B for “Accept” or “Reject” and call the corresponding method:
// Part of HostBActivity
// User clicks "Accept Challenge"
fun acceptPK(battleId: String) {
battleStore.acceptBattle(battleID = battleId, completion = null)
}

// User clicks "Reject Challenge"
fun rejectPK(battleId: String) {
battleStore.rejectBattle(battleID = battleId, completion = null)
}

Step 4: End PK and Disconnect Co-hosting

After the PK session, end the PK and disconnect co-hosting in sequence.
1. End PK Battle
PK typically ends automatically when the timer expires, but hosts can also end PK early. Use exitBattle:
NoteAfter PK ends, both hosts remain connected (side-by-side video streams). Only the PK progress bar and score panel are removed.
fun stopPK(battleId: String) {
battleStore.exitBattle(battleID = battleId, completion = object : CompletionHandler {
override fun onSuccess() {
println("PK ended")
// Handle UI refresh in onBattleEnded event
}
override fun onFailure(code: Int, desc: String) {
println("Failed to end PK: $desc")
}
})
}
2. Disconnect Cross-room Co-hosting
To return to solo live streaming, call exitHostConnection:
fun stopConnection() {
coHostStore.exitHostConnection(completion = object : CompletionHandler {
override fun onSuccess() {
println("Co-hosting disconnected, back to solo live")
// UI will receive onCoHostUserLeft event
}
override fun onFailure(code: Int, desc: String) {
println("Failed to disconnect co-hosting: $desc")
}
})
}
3. Listen for End Events
Handle UI cleanup in event listeners for consistency:
private val battleListener = object : BattleListener() {
override fun onBattleEnded(battleInfo: BattleInfo, reason: BattleEndedReason?) {
println("Received PK end event, reason: $reason")
// Remove PK score view, progress bar, etc.
// runOnUiThread { removeBattleUI() }
}
}

private val coHostListener = object : CoHostListener() {
override fun onCoHostUserLeft(userInfo: SeatUserInfo) {
println("Host ${userInfo.userName} has left the co-hosting session")
// Remove the other host's video view and restore solo live layout
// runOnUiThread { resetToSingleStreamLayout() }
}
}

Run and Test

After integrating the above features, use Host A and Host B to test the corresponding operations. The runtime effect is shown below. For UI customization, see Refine UI Details.


Refine UI Details

Use the slot capability in the VideoViewAdapter interface to overlay custom views on video streams, such as nicknames, avatars, PK progress bars, or placeholder images when the host’s camera is off.

Display Nicknames on Video Streams

Implementation Example



Implementation

Step 1: Create a foreground view CustomSeatView to display user information above the video stream.
Note:
For a complete implementation, refer to the widgets directory in the open-source TUILiveKit project.
import android.content.Context
import android.graphics.Color
import android.view.Gravity
import android.widget.LinearLayout
import android.widget.TextView

// Custom user information overlay view (Foreground)
class CustomSeatView(context: Context) : LinearLayout(context) {
private val nameLabel: TextView

init {
orientation = VERTICAL
setBackgroundColor(Color.parseColor("#80000000")) // Semi-transparent black background

nameLabel = TextView(context).apply {
setTextColor(Color.WHITE)
textSize = 14f
gravity = Gravity.CENTER
}

addView(nameLabel)
val layoutParams = nameLabel.layoutParams as LayoutParams
layoutParams.setMargins(5, 0, 5, 5)
}

fun setUserName(userName: String) {
nameLabel.text = userName
}
}
Step 2: Create a background view CustomAvatarView to serve as a placeholder when the user has no video stream.
import com.tencent.cloud.tuikit.engine.room.TUIRoomDefine
import android.view.View
import androidx.appcompat.app.AppCompatActivity
import io.trtc.tuikit.atomicxcore.api.ViewLayer
import io.trtc.tuikit.atomicxcore.api.VideoViewAdapter

// 1. In your Activity, implement the VideoViewAdapter interface
class YourActivity : AppCompatActivity(), VideoViewAdapter {

// ... Other code ...

// 2. Fully implement the interface method to handle both view layers
override fun createCoHostView(coHostUser: TUIRoomDefine.SeatFullInfo?, viewLayer: ViewLayer?): View? {
val seatInfo = coHostUser ?: return null
val userId = seatInfo.userId
if (userId.isNullOrEmpty()) {
return null
}

return when (viewLayer) {
ViewLayer.FOREGROUND -> {
val seatView = CustomSeatView(this)
seatView.setUserName(seatInfo.userName ?: "")
seatView
}
ViewLayer.BACKGROUND -> {
val avatarView = CustomAvatarView(this)
// You can load the user's real avatar here using seatInfo.userAvatar
avatarView
}
null -> null
}
}
}
Step 3: Implement the VideoViewAdapter.createCoHostView method, returning the appropriate view based on viewLayer.
import com.tencent.cloud.tuikit.engine.room.TUIRoomDefine
import android.view.View
import androidx.appcompat.app.AppCompatActivity
import io.trtc.tuikit.atomicxcore.api.ViewLayer
import io.trtc.tuikit.atomicxcore.api.VideoViewAdapter

// 1. In your Activity, implement the VideoViewAdapter interface
class YourActivity : AppCompatActivity(), VideoViewAdapter {

// ... Other code ...

// 2. Fully implement the interface method to handle both view layers
override fun createCoHostView(coHostUser: TUIRoomDefine.SeatFullInfo?, viewLayer: ViewLayer?): View? {
val seatInfo = coHostUser ?: return null
val userId = seatInfo.userId
if (userId.isNullOrEmpty()) {
return null
}

return when (viewLayer) {
ViewLayer.FOREGROUND -> {
val seatView = CustomSeatView(this)
seatView.setUserName(seatInfo.userName ?: "")
seatView
}
ViewLayer.BACKGROUND -> {
val avatarView = CustomAvatarView(this)
// You can load the user's real avatar here using seatInfo.userAvatar
avatarView
}
null -> null
}
}
}

Parameter Description:

Parameter
Type
Description
seatInfo
SeatFullInfo?
Seat information object containing user details
seatInfo.userId
String?
User ID on the seat
seatInfo.userName
String?
User nickname on the seat
seatInfo.userAvatar
String?
User avatar URL
seatInfo.userMicrophoneStatus
DeviceStatus
User microphone status
seatInfo.userCameraStatus
DeviceStatus
User camera status
viewLayer
ViewLayer
View layer enum
FOREGROUND: Foreground widget view, always displayed on top of the video
BACKGROUND: Background widget view, under the foreground view, displayed only when the user has no video stream (e.g., camera off), typically used for the user's default avatar or a placeholder image

Displaying PK User Score on Video View

When the host starts a PK, you can attach a custom view to the opponent's video to display gift values or other PK-related information.

Implementation Example



Implementation

Step 1: Create a custom PK user view. For a complete implementation, see BattleMemberInfoView.kt in the open-source TUILiveKit project.
import android.content.Context
import android.graphics.Color
import android.view.Gravity
import android.widget.LinearLayout
import android.widget.TextView
import com.tencent.cloud.tuikit.engine.extension.TUILiveBattleManager.BattleUser
import io.trtc.tuikit.atomicxcore.api.BattleStore
import kotlinx.coroutines.CoroutineScope
import kotlinx.coroutines.Dispatchers
import kotlinx.coroutines.launch

// Custom PK User View
class CustomBattleUserView(
context: Context,
private val liveId: String,
private val battleUser: BattleUser
) : LinearLayout(context) {

private lateinit var scoreView: LinearLayout
private lateinit var scoreLabel: TextView
private val battleStore: BattleStore

init {
orientation = VERTICAL
gravity = Gravity.BOTTOM or Gravity.END
setBackgroundColor(Color.TRANSPARENT)
isClickable = false

battleStore = BattleStore.create(liveId)

// UI Layout
setupUI()
// Subscribe to score changes
subscribeBattleState()
}

private fun setupUI() {
scoreView = LinearLayout(context).apply {
setBackgroundColor(Color.parseColor("#66000000"))
orientation = VERTICAL
gravity = Gravity.CENTER
}

scoreLabel = TextView(context).apply {
setTextColor(Color.WHITE)
textSize = 14f
gravity = Gravity.CENTER
}

scoreView.addView(scoreLabel)
addView(scoreView)

val layoutParams = scoreView.layoutParams as LayoutParams
layoutParams.width = LayoutParams.WRAP_CONTENT
layoutParams.height = 48 // 24dp
layoutParams.setMargins(0, 0, 10, 10)
}

// Subscribe to PK score changes
private fun subscribeBattleState() {
CoroutineScope(Dispatchers.Main).launch {
battleStore.battleState.battleScore.collect { battleScore ->
val score = battleScore[battleUser.userId] ?: 0
// Update UI
scoreLabel.text = score.toString()
}
}
}
}
Step 2: Implement the VideoViewAdapter.createBattleView method.
// 1. Have your Activity implement the VideoViewAdapter interface
class YourActivity : AppCompatActivity(), VideoViewAdapter {

override fun createBattleView(battleUser: BattleUser?): View? {
battleUser ?: return null
// CustomBattleUserView is your custom PK user information view
return CustomBattleUserView(this, liveId, battleUser)
}

}

Parameter Description:

Parameter
Type
Description
battleUser
BattleUser?
PK user info object
battleUser.roomId
String
PK room ID
battleUser.userId
String
PK user ID
battleUser.userName
String
PK user nickname
battleUser.avatarUrl
String
PK user avatar URL
battleUser.score
UInt
PK score

Displaying PK Status on Video Stream

Implementation Example



Implementation

Step 1: Create a custom PK global view (CustomBattleContainerView). For a complete implementation, see BattleInfoView.kt in the open-source TUILiveKit project.
Step 2: Implement the VideoViewAdapter.createBattleContainerView method.
// Have your Activity implement the VideoViewAdapter interface and set the adapter
class YourActivity : AppCompatActivity(), VideoViewAdapter {
override fun createBattleContainerView(): View? {
return CustomBattleContainerView(this)
}
}

Advanced Features

Updating PK Score via REST API

In typical live host PK scenarios, the value of gifts received by the host is linked to the PK score (for example, when a viewer sends a "Rocket" gift, the host's PK score increases by 500 points). You can implement real-time PK score updates using our REST API.
Note:
The PK score system in the LiveKit backend uses pure numeric calculation and accumulation. You must calculate the PK score according to your own business logic before calling the update API. See the following PK score calculation examples:
Gift Type
Score Calculation Rule
Example
Basic Gift
Gift value × 5
10 RMB gift → 50 points
Intermediate Gift
Gift value × 8
50 RMB gift → 400 points
Advanced Gift
Gift value × 12
100 RMB gift → 1200 points
Special Effect Gift
Fixed high score
520 RMB gift → 1314 points

REST API Call Flow



Key Process Description

1. Obtain PK Status:
Callback Configuration: Configure PK Status Callback to have the LiveKit backend actively notify your system when PK starts or ends.
Active Query: Your backend can call the PK Status Query API at any time to check the current PK status.
2. PK Score Calculation: Your backend calculates the PK score increment based on your business rules.
3. PK Score Update: Your backend calls the Update PK Score API to update the PK score in the LiveKit backend.
4. LiveKit Backend Syncs to Client: The backend automatically synchronizes the updated PK score to all clients.

Involved REST API Endpoints

API
Function Description
Request Example
Active API - Query PK Status
Check whether the current room is in PK
Example
Active API - Update PK Score
Update the calculated PK score
Example
Callback Configuration - PK Start Callback
Receive real-time notification when PK starts
Example
Callback Configuration - PK End Callback
Receive real-time notification when PK ends
Example

API Documentation

For detailed information on all public interfaces, properties, and methods of CoHostStore and related classes, refer to the official API documentation included with the AtomicXCore framework. The relevant stores used in this guide are as follows:
Store/Component
Description
API Reference
LiveCoreView
Core view component for displaying and interacting with live video streams. Handles video rendering and view widgets, supports host streaming, audience co-hosting, host connections, and more.
DeviceStore
Controls audio/video devices: microphone (on/off, volume), camera (on/off, switch, quality), screen sharing, and real-time device status monitoring.
CoHostStore
Handles host cross-room connections: supports multiple layout templates (dynamic grid, etc.), initiates/accepts/rejects connections, and manages co-host interactions.
BattleStore
Manages host PK battles: initiate PK (set duration/opponent), manage PK status (start/end), synchronize scores, and listen for battle results.

FAQs

Why didn't the other party receive my co-hosting invitation?

Ensure that targetHostLiveId is correct and that the other host's live room is broadcasting normally.
Check network stability. The invitation signaling has a default timeout of 30 seconds.

What happens if one host disconnects from the network or the app crashes during co-hosting or PK?

Both CoHostStore and BattleStore include built-in heartbeat and timeout detection. If one party exits abnormally, the other party is notified via events such as onCoHostUserLeft or onUserExitBattle. You can update the UI accordingly, for example, by displaying "The other party has disconnected" and ending the interaction.

Why can PK scores only be updated via REST API?

The REST API meets the security, real-time, and scalability requirements for PK scores:
Tamper-proof and fair: Requires authentication and data validation. Each update is traceable (e.g., tied to a gift action), preventing manual score changes or cheating and ensuring fair competition.
Real-time synchronization across multiple clients: Uses standardized formats (such as JSON) to quickly connect gift, PK, and display systems, ensuring real-time consistency of scores among hosts, viewers, and backend.
Flexible rule adaptation: Backend configuration changes (such as adjusting gift-to-score mapping or bonus points) can be made without modifying the frontend, reducing iteration costs.

How do I manage the lifecycle and events of custom views added via VideoViewAdapter?

LiveCoreView automatically manages views returned by delegate methods, including adding and removing them. No manual lifecycle management is required.