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#781 |
BD Test Disc Author
Mar 2008
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#782 | |
BD Test Disc Author
Mar 2008
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The 6 series has a tiny LUT for tone mapping, which impacts DV too. Even with the issues, Dolby's tone mapping is much better than LGs across all generations. Do you use PC mode on the 6 series? It seems to stay 10-bit and 4:4:4 chroma vs. the 7-9. It is fixed again on the X. Now they just need to enable Real Cinema (5:5) and we are golden. |
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#783 | |
BD Test Disc Author
Mar 2008
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#784 | |
Banned
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When you mean DV is using Rec 709 upsampling and not Rec 2020... when does this occur? On FEL video layer content? Is it flagged Rec 2020 on the disc (even if the actual gamut content is mostly P3), but during the DV engine stage it gets cut to Rec 709? Could the player and/or display manufacturers be implementing DV incorrectly? Panasonic players seem to clip DV highlights, for instance. Help us understand the process. The more Dolby gets called out, the more likely they might quietly improve things in the future, for their reputation if anything. |
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Thanks given by: | mrtickleuk (03-10-2021) |
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#785 | |
Junior Member
Nov 2008
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That seems to be the way to go, instead of DV's pre-cooking its tone-mapping to SDR (709) based on average display capabilities. |
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#786 |
Senior Member
Nov 2017
Nott'm, UK
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#787 | |
BD Test Disc Author
Mar 2008
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1. The gamut. Think of the triangles on the CIE diagram. 2. The color space conversion matrix. This is a 3x3 matrix that converts between RGB and YCbCr 3. The chroma conversion between 4:2:0 and 4:2:2. This is the up/down sampling/scaling we talk about. In the context of what I mentioned about DV and BD playback, it is number 3. Numbers 1 and 2 are fine from what I can tell. Here is the chroma location differences between 709 and 2020. The white circles are the luma samples and the red squares are the chroma samples in 4:2:0. In 709, the chroma is stored in between the luma samples, vertically. In 2020, they are co-sited with luma. Get this wrong and you have a half a pixel shift (YC delay) between luma and chroma. Horizontally they are both co-sited with luma. There is one chroma sample for every four luma samples in 4:2:0. The Dolby tools that convert 16-bit TIFFs into 10-bit 4:2:0 YUVs for encoding correctly use 2020 chroma down scaling. The BD players are incorrectly using 709 up scaling for Dolby content. For HDR10, the up scaling on Panasonic is fine. The 4:2:0 to 4:2:2 conversion in the player happens in the Dolby block for Dolby Vision. For SDR and HDR10, it uses the players decoder. Panasonic uses a different decoder for different players and I am testing on a UB9000. For OPPO, it is MediaTek. The content is flagged as 2020. There is no P3 flagging, so all HDR content is placed inside of a 2020 container and flagged as 2020 at encode time. Unless it is 709 HDR, which I have no seen anyone use, but is not impossible. The flagging I am talking about is in the HEVC elementary stream. You can specify the gamut, matrix and transfer function. There is also a chroma_loc flag. You are supposed to use chroma_loc 0 for 709 and chroma_loc 2 for 2020. Nothing stopping you from doing something different, but there is no chroma_loc flag in HDMI, which is a problem for anyone sending 4:2:0 over HDMI. Assumptions are made. I have not found Panasonic to clip highlights in DV on my test patterns. It matches OPPO and goes up to code value 940 (10,000 cd/m²). Do you have an example of this clipping? Which display are you using? The Z9D, for example, clips Dolby highlights on all players. You can pull down contrast and the clipping goes away. A later generation Sony display did not have this problem. Last edited by Stacey Spears; 03-09-2021 at 03:21 PM. |
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#788 | |
Banned
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Thanks for the explanation. Trying to wrap my brain around it all. ![]() When I say Panasonic DV clipping, I was talking about prior discussions on this forum about noticing better DV highlight performance of the Oppo players vs the Panasonic players. From what you are saying, it might be attributed to the particular DV display being used and not the players themselves. Correct? |
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#789 | |
BD Test Disc Author
Mar 2008
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I did have an issue on my Panasonic where the PQ tracking boxes were not blending. I had confirmed the Optimizer was off. Then I realized one of the other HDR controls was on and maxed out. I had assumed they were all controlled by the optimizer setting. This was when I was seeing how the various settings changed the output a few months back. These controls were impacting Dolby Vision, I believe. I have looked at so many different scenarios over the weekend, I don't recall what was what at this point. :-) For chroma alignment. When it is off by half a pixel, this impacts vertical edges. It is a slight softening to the edge. If you look at the red stripe on yellow background, one edge becomes a dark red and the other a pink'ish red. I see this type of error on TV all the time with Macys and Target commercials. Their logos make good test patterns. ![]() The 2020 alignment issue is because they decided to change this for 2020 and it is a mention in the doc. There is a reason its not a bad idea, but the trouble it has caused was not worth the change in my opinion. Or rather the gain is not worth the pain. |
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#790 | |
Banned
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Ugh, it seems like they're always adding more problems than they are fixing. Then it's never mind, we're moving on to 8k with its own set of unresolved issues. |
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#791 | |
Member
Jan 2014
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I don't have much details on how VS10 really works, it looks like its doing much of the decoding (chroma upsampling is better, banding is gone). Just keep in mind that the VS10 just used the HDR10 test pattern and converted it to Dolby Vision. So it will be extremely interesting how the output will be on a DV test pattern. However, the Zidoo does not support "full" profile 7 playback. What it is doing for profile 7 MEL is BL+RPU and the same is planned for profile 7 FEL. Thus, the EL is always being disregarded. Maybe VS10 is based on a later DV SDK, but I'm just guessing. |
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Thanks given by: | Stacey Spears (03-09-2021) |
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#792 | |
BD Test Disc Author
Mar 2008
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I suspect the BD SDK has not been updated since it was released. Certainly not in two years. |
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#793 |
Member
Apr 2008
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I am sure I am missing something in this conversation, because my first read through the last several pages would lead to be to believe that all Dolby Vision content (whether on disk or a streaming service) is only using the rec709 color space within the rec2020 container....but that HDR10 content (disk and streaming) is using more (when the content creators choose) of the rec 2020 color space (likely out to the P3 color points in some cases). And that this is not related to bugs in any particular playback device...that this is in the source itself?
Please tell me I am reading this incorrectly. |
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#794 |
Member
Jan 2014
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#795 | |
BD Test Disc Author
Mar 2008
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![]() Dolby and HDR10 are the same in terms of color volume. The issue here is strictly the conversion from 4:2:0 into 4:2:2 or chroma up scaling. This is a playback bug. Please read my post from 7:42 AM where I mention three different 709 vs. 2020 discussions that are possible and which one we are discussing here. Your confusion is understandable since those that wrote the 2020 doc decided to incorporate 4:2:0 pixel layout into it. My comments are also just for BD. Since I don't have my patterns on a streaming service, I can't tell you how they perform on the playback side. There are many different chroma layouts in 4:2:0. DVD and BD are assumed to always use chroma_loc 0. UHD BD is expected to support both chroma_loc 0 and chroma_loc 2. For DVD (601), the progressive layout is what was adopted where chroma is co-sited horizontally and interstitial vertically. This is chroma_loc 0. This did not change when we moved to HD DVD and Blu-ray (709). The fact that they decided to make this change when they introduced 2020 has been a mess. Many older TVs use 709 up scaling for 2020 content if you play a file from USB. BD was the first format to get this right, at least in some players and scenarios. For the new disc, we have patterns to test this in HDR10, HDR10+ and Dolby Vision (all 2020) for HD and UHD resolutions. (all chroma_loc 2) And SDR in both 709 (chroma_loc 0) and 2020 (chroma_loc 2) in HD and UHD resolutions. There are a lot of ways to get this wrong, which is why we are providing so many versions for people to test with. In my limited testing, the players seem to ignore the chroma_loc flag and instead decide which method to use based on the color space flag. Last edited by Stacey Spears; 03-09-2021 at 06:31 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | nathan_h (03-09-2021) |
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#796 |
Member
Jan 2014
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This can be tested with the Zidoo as well as it supports profile 5. Many TVs should support playback of it via USB as well.
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#797 | |
Member
Mar 2021
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Next. You can use any chroma_loc you want. And there are not just 2 of em. HEVC does specify all of them and they are supported by Mediainfo (it writes 4:2:0 (Type 2), for example). We in ffmpeg also added support for all of them. https://github.com/FFmpeg/FFmpeg/com...9674e4a083d43b Dolby Vision does redefine BT.2020 spec's chroma sitting at least for IPTPQc2 color (that is profile 5, not HDR10 compatible and it should be full range, it uses Type 0). "H.265 (2018-02) requires top-left chroma siting (VUI = 2), if the decoded video is intended for interpretation according to ITU-R BT.2020-2 or Rec. ITU-R BT.2100-1. Previously, H.265 (2016-12) described the default chroma siting as center left (VUI = 0)." Last edited by Balling; 03-09-2021 at 06:12 PM. |
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#798 | |
Power Member
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Thanks given by: | Geoff D (10-22-2021), Stacey Spears (03-09-2021) |
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#799 | |
BD Test Disc Author
Mar 2008
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For Profile 7 (Blu-ray) and Profile 8 Dolby Vision uses HDR10 as the base layer for the primary video and so it must use the same chroma_loc as HDR10. ICtCp is not supported on Blu-ray. |
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#800 | |
BD Test Disc Author
Mar 2008
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And as I mentioned, many TVs prior to 2017 were still using 709 style up scaling on 2020 content. It probably takes 18 months to spin a new chip, so there is always lag when changes like this occur. Especially when it was not communicated very well. We started by using HD resolution, because HD scaled to UHD made it easier to see the error in the case you don't' have a loupe. We then discovered some TVs introduced horizontal alignment issues during scaling. The Sony HDR capable display with the speakers that looked like ears, prior to the Z9D, had this issue. I don't recall the model number. Last edited by Stacey Spears; 03-09-2021 at 06:51 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | Sledgehamma (03-09-2021) |
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