| ▲ | 3A2D50 2 hours ago | |
I have Interstellar on 4K UltraHD Blu-ray that features HDR on the cover, Sony 4K Blu-ray player (UBP-X700) and a LG G4 OLED television. I also have an AVR (Denon AVR-S760H 7.2 Ch) connecting both the Blu-ray and a PC running Linux with a RTX 3060 12GB graphic card to the television. I've been meaning to compare HDR on Linux with the Blu-ray. I guess now better than never. I'll reply back to my post after I am done. | ||
| ▲ | 3A2D50 3 minutes ago | parent | next [-] | |
Television HDR mode is set to FILMMAKER, OLED brightness 100%, Energy Saving Mode is off. Connected to AVR with HDMI cable that says 8K. PC has Manjaro Linux with RTX 3060 12GB Graphic card driver: Nvidia 580.119.02 KDE Plasma Version 6.5.4 KDE Frameworks Version: 6.21.0 Qt Version: 6.10.1 Kernel Version 6.12.63-1-MANJARO Graphics Platform: Wayland Display Configuration High Dynamic Range: Enable HDR is checked There is a button for brightness calibration that I used for adjustment. Color accuracy: Prefer color accuracy sRGB color intensity: This seems to do nothing (even after apply). I've set it to 0%. Brightness: 100% TV is reporting HDR signal. AVR is reporting... Resolution: 4KA VRR HDR: HDR10 Color Space RGB /BT.2020 Pixel Depth: 10bits FRL Rate 24Gbps I compared Interstellar 19s into Youtube video in three different ways on Linux and 2:07:26 on Blu-ray. For Firefox 146.0.1 by default there is no HDR option on Youtube. 4K video clearly doesn't have HDR. I enabled HDR in firefox by going to about:config and setting the following to true: gfx.wayland.hdr, gfx.wayland.hdr.force-enabled, gfx.webrender.compositor.force-enabled. Color look completely washed out. For Chromium 143.0.7499.169 HDR enabled by default. This looks like HDR. I downloaded the HDR video from Youtube and played it using MPV v0.40.0-dirty with settings --vo=gpu-next --gpu-api=vulkan --gpu-context=waylandvk. Without these settings the video seems a little too bright like the Chromium playback. This was the best playback of the three on Linux. On the Blu-ray the HDR is Dolby Vision according to both the TV and the AVR. The AVR is reporting... Resolution: 4k24 HDR: Dolby Vision Color Space: RGB Pixel Depth 8bits FRL Rate: no info ...I looked into this and apparently Dolby Vision uses RGB tunneling for its high-bit-depth (12-bit) YCbCr 4:2:2 data. The Blu-ray looks like it has the same brightness range but the color of the explosion (2:07:26) seems richer compared to the best playback on Linux (19s). I would say the colors over all look better on the Blu-ray. I might be able to calibrate it better if the sRGB color setting worked in the display configuration. Also I think my brightness setting is too high compared to the Blu-ray. I'll play around with it more once the sRGB color setting is fixed. | ||
| ▲ | bitanarch an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | |
Try it with different monitors you have. The current nVidia Linux drivers only has BGR output for 10bpp, which works on TVs and OLEDs but not most LCDs monitors. My monitors (InnoCN 27M2V and Cooler Master GP27U) require RGB input, which means it's limited to 8bpp even with HDR enabled on Wayland. There's another commentator below who uses a Dell monitor and manages to get BGR input working and full HDR in nVidia/Linux. | ||