Error Drm.requested_key_system_config_unavailable () | 6001 - Shaka

player.configure({ drm: { servers: { 'com.widevine.alpha': 'https://license.arthouse.com/widevine' } } }); The problem? The manifest file for Cybernetic Vampire III (and several other 4K remasters) contained multiple DRM schemes. But the player was asking for Widevine. When Widevine wasn't available (or the license server was down for that key system), Shaka threw the REQUESTED_KEY_SYSTEM_CONFIG_UNAVAILABLE error because it had no fallback.

The error message translated to: "The video player asked the browser for a specific DRM system to unlock the movie, but the browser said, 'I don't have that, and you didn't give me a backup plan.'" Maya opened her browser's developer console and replicated the error. She saw the player trying to initialize a DRM system called "com.widevine.alpha" (the standard for Chrome and Firefox) but failing because the video file was actually encrypted for a different system: "com.microsoft.playready" (common in older Edge browsers). player

The configuration was too rigid. The player was a locksmith showing up with only a titanium key, but the lock was made of brass. She dug into the Shaka Player configuration file, where a previous developer had hardcoded: When Widevine wasn't available (or the license server

And from that day on, ArtHouse Stream never saw the 6001 error again—except once, when a user tried to watch a movie on a 2012 smart TV. But that's a story for another night. The configuration was too rigid

player.getNetworkingEngine().registerRequestFilter((type, request) => { if (type === shaka.net.NetworkingEngine.RequestType.LICENSE) { // Ensure the correct license server is used per key system if (request.uris[0].includes('widevine') && !window.navigator.requestMediaKeySystemAccess) { request.uris[0] = request.uris[0].replace('widevine', 'playready'); } } }); Finally, she added a user-friendly message for when all DRM systems fail:

"The site is broken! Every time someone tries to watch Cybernetic Vampire III , they get a black screen and error code 6001," he yelled. "Our biggest subscriber, a film critic named Dr. Reid, is furious. Fix it."