HDR (High Dynamic Range) is a video technology that improves the way light is represented by permitting to render brighter highlights, darker shadows and more details between both ends. Sometimes, it allows to reproduce richer colors than with the standard dynamic range.
Behind this principle, several formats exists (HDR10, HLG, Dolby Vision) and implements specific media and stream encoding and packaging technologies. When using streaming technologies, both streaming manifest and codecs strings can provide information about the technical HDR characteristics of the content.
These information are parsed and exposed through the hdrInfo
attribute that
can be found in the periods/adaptation/representation path of the RxPlayer
manifest object. Also, the getAvailableVideoTracks
and getVideoTrack
functions and the videoTrackChange
event carries the hdrInfo
.
- colorDepth:
number|undefined
: It is the bit depth used for encoding the color for a pixel. The more bits are used for encoding, the more color shades could be rendered. It allows to increase rendering dynamic range without color banding. - eotf:
string|undefined
: It is the HDR eotf. It is the transfer function having the video signal as input and converting it into the linear light output of the display. For example, pq (published as standard SMPTE2084) is an eotf developped by Dolby for HDR contents and capable of rendering brightness until 10000 nits (the derived SI unit of luminance). - colorSpace:
string|undefined
: It is the video color space used for encoding. An HDR content may not have a wide color gamut. HD TV standards define the use of the rec709 color space for content. Most of HDR standards define the use of rec2020, which is a color space that contains rec709 color space and more. In other words, rec2020 can reproduce colors that cannot be shown with the rec709.
HDR do not specify new display's capabilities. However, it allows to make better use of the display brightness, contrast and color capabilities. HDR will not be rendered the same way on each used display. It is possible through several APIs to query the browser about its screen characteristics, to speculate about the quality of the HDR rendering. Here are the available APIs now :
In HDR, more colors and brightness levels have to be encoded. More than 8 bits par component are used in most of standards. It is possible to check how many bits are used for reproducing colors on the output display, to ensure the color shades could be rendered.
/**
* It is the bit depth used for encoding one color. Example :
* screen.colorDepth = 48 :
* - 12 bits for the red component
* - 12 bits for the blue component
* - 12 bits for the green component
* - 12 bits for the alpha component (optional)
*/
const colorDepth = screen.colorDepth;
/**
* The media query tells if the current output device is compatible
* with the given media characteristics.
* Here, it tells if the given color depth for one component is supported.
*/
const is10bitsSupported = window.matchMedia("(min-color: 10)").matches;
It is possible to check if the output device is capable of displaying standard color gamut that are used in HDR formats.
/**
* The media query tells if the current output device is compatible
* with the given media characteristics.
* Here, it tells if the output device is capable of displaying approximatively
* the given color space.
*/
const isRec2020Supported = window.matchMedia("(color-gamut: rec2020)").matches;