Update 1/6: HDMI Forum has notified us that the HDMI 2.1 uses DSC 1.2 compression for everything higher than 8K with 4:2:0 chroma sub sampling. The story was updated accordingly.

The HDMI Forum on Wednesday announced key specifications of the HDMI 2.1 standard, which will be published in the second quarter. The new standard will increase link bandwidth to 48 Gbps and will enable support for up to 10K resolutions without compression, new color spaces with up to 16 bits per component, dynamic HDR, variable refresh rates for gaming applications as well as new audio formats

The most important feature that the HDMI 2.1 specification brings is massively increased bandwidth over predecessors. That additional bandwidth (48 Gbps over 18 Gbps, a bit more than what a USB-C cable is rated for) will enable longer-term evolution of displays and TVs, but will require the industry to adopt the new 48G cable, which will keep using the existing connectors (Type A, C and D) and will retain backwards compatibility with existing equipment. The standard-length 48G cables (up to two meters) will use copper wires, but it remains to be seen what happens to long cables. It is noteworthy that while some of the new features that the HDMI 2.1 spec brings to the table require the new cable, others do not. As a result, some of the new features might be supported on some devices, whereas others might be not.

The increased bandwidth of HDMI 2.1’s 48G cables will enable support of new UHD resolutions, including 4Kp120, 8Kp100/120, 10Kp100/120, and increased refresh rates. It is no less important that increased bandwidth will enable support of the latest and upcoming color spaces, such as BT.2020 (Rec. 2020) with 10, 12, or even more advanced with 16 bits per color component and without compression. HDMI Forum does not say it explicitly, but the version 2.1 of their standard will also likely support the BT.2100 (Rec. 2100), which has a number of important enhancements to the BT.2020 when it comes to HDR. While HDMI 2.0 already supports BT.2020 and HDMI 2.0b adds support for HDR10 (through support for Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG)), it only can transmit 10 and 12 bits per sample at 4Kp60 resolution. To support HDR at 8K, one will need HDMI 2.1.

Key HDMI 2.1 Improvements Over HDMI 2.0/2.0a
  HDMI 2.0 HDMI 2.1
Physical Bandwidth 18 Gbps (with High Speed cable) 18 Gbps (with High Speed cable)
48 Gbps (with 48G cable)
Maximum Resolution (2D) 4K (4096×2160) @ 60 Hz (4:4:4) 4K (4096×2160) @ 120 Hz (4:4:4)
8K (7680×4320) @ 60Hz (4:4:4)
8K (7680×4320) @ 120Hz (4:2:0)
10K @ 120Hz (?)
Maximum Color Depth 48 bits (at 4K) 48 bits (at 8K+)
HDR Static Dynamic
Game Mode Variable Refresh Rate No Yes
Object-Based Audio (eARC) No Yes

Moreover, the new HDMI 2.1 standard brings support for dynamic HDR metadata, enabling content makers to control levels of color, contrast and brightness on a frame-by-frame basis. The important part here is that dynamic HDR will not require the new 48G cable to handle video in up to 4Kp60 resolution and thus manufacturers may add support for dynamic HDR even using a firmware update. That is not going to work for a lot of existing equipment because display pipelines work differently and many TVs are incapable of anything beyond HDR10. Moreover, recorded media (i.e., Ultra HD Blu-ray) does not currently support dynamic HDR (and when the next-gen standard emerges, it will bring a lot of other features, including a new content protection algorithm), which means that two primary sources for dynamic HDR content will be games and streaming media (which is an interesting thing, given the focus of AMD’s recently announced FreeSync 2 technology). It is also noteworthy that HDMI Forum does not currently mention particular HDR implementations, but only says that the HDMI 2.1 standard will support a variety of them.

In fact, dynamic HDR will not be the only feature of the HDMI 2.1 specifications applicable to games. Among other things, the new standard will support the game mode variable refresh rate (GM VRR). Nowadays, AMD already supports FreeSync-over-HDMI using a custom mode and with the HDMI 2.1 everything gets a little easier. The HDMI 2.1 GM VRR will work for 4Kp120 and 8Kp60 resolutions with the new 48G cable, but for lower resolutions/refresh rates, the HDMI 1.4 cable will be enough. We do not known whether current-gen sources (i.e., GPUs and consoles) could be updated to support the HDMI 2.1 GM VRR, but the upcoming graphics processors are going to support the tech simply because they are going to support the HDMI 2.1 in general. When it comes to sinks (i.e., TVs, displays), it is unclear whether this is a full-on requirement - if all sinks will need to support VRR - but it is likely that they will support it in their next generations as well. Meanwhile, support of GM VRR by HDMI 2.1 also means that variable refresh rates may be coming to next-generation consoles (whenever they come out), finally making the feature a default one for gaming.

The final capability of the HDMI 2.1 specification is the eARC — support for object-based many-channel audio formats. The HDMI Forum did not mention specific brands, but Dolby Atmos and DTS:X seem to be the most likely candidates to support.

The HDMI 2.1 specification brings a number of long-awaited features to the table, some of which may show up in shipping products sooner, the other will become available years from now. HDMI Forum plans to publish the final standard in Q2 2017 and release the HDMI 2.1 compliance test specification in Q2 or even Q3 2017. That said, do not expect any features of the new spec to become available earlier than in the second half of this year (2018 seems more likely). Meanwhile, from licensing standpoint, any company with a license for the HDMI 2.0 spec can have access to the HDMI 2.1 blueprints.

Source: HDMI Forum

Comments Locked

40 Comments

View All Comments

  • DanNeely - Thursday, January 5, 2017 - link

    I'm a bit confused by the no-compression claim. 8k @120hz @ 24bit color needs 95.5 gigabits/sec. At a minimum that would require an equivalent to DP1.4's ~2:1 compression and 128/130 bit encoding or equivalents. 48bit color would need at least 4:1 compression at 8k/120. Depending on exactly what 10k means you'd need somewhere around 6:1 compression in the same circumstances, more if only using 8/10bit for some reason.
  • nathanddrews - Thursday, January 5, 2017 - link

    The exact quote is:
    "48G cables enable up to 48Gbps bandwidth for uncompressed HDMI 2.1 feature support including 8K video with HDR."

    Virtually all 4K and 8K video content that is available or WILL BE available is chroma 4:2:0, so the compression they are referring to is likely TRANSPORT COMPRESSION - which is what DisplayPort uses.

    http://www.hdmi.org/manufacturer/hdmi_2_1/index.as...
  • chaos215bar2 - Thursday, January 5, 2017 - link

    I think the article is somewhat confusingly written, but isn't claiming HDMI 2.1 supports 8k120 at full color rate. Other sources claim 8k60 and 4k120, which makes more sense.

    I don't see why it shouldn't support 4k240 and even 2k960 with 24 bit color (and for that matter full resolution 3D for each configuration at half the frame rate) as long as the source and display are capable. It's HDMI, though, so they'll leave out a few obvious bits for HDMI 2.1a, HDMI 2.2, and/or HDMI 3.0.
  • extide - Thursday, January 5, 2017 - link

    It shows right in the table -- 8K at 120 FPS is only with 4:2:0 color -- which you could argue is a form of compression.
  • qap - Thursday, January 5, 2017 - link

    Those numbers don't add up. By tripling bandwidth (and I'm being generous) you can not push 6x more pixels (10k vs 4k) and double refreshrate (120 vs 60Hz) without compression. For 10k@120Hz with 24bpp (8 bit per channel) you need 10240*5760*24*120 bps = 158Gbps. Plus some overhead - so more like 180Gbps cable. For this resolution you need at least 4 HDMI 2.1 cables or lossy (though probably "visualy-lossless") compression.
  • bcronce - Thursday, January 5, 2017 - link

    You got me curious, Definitely does not pass the sniff test. I had to look up Nvidia's Pascal memory compression to have something to compare against. Nvidia is getting between 4:1 and 8:1 compression ratios on textures and frame buffers. This would mean that at least 4:1 should be doable for loss-less low latency compression.
  • qap - Friday, January 6, 2017 - link

    No, it's not. Not for general purpose compression of images. For example random noise (if you remember analog TV noise) is incompressible. Nvidia does "up to" 8:1 compression - meaning some parts of the image are compressed 8:1.
    Any compression, that has to guarantee compression ratio must be lossy (or at least lossy in some situations).
  • bcronce - Friday, January 6, 2017 - link

    4:1+ is "typical". I'm not going to argue against contrived edge cases like random data. There will always be outliers, but it is safe to assume a 4:1 compression ratio on average with a low standard deviation. The main problem with this is there is no guarantee and the system will need to handle situations gracefully where there is not enough effective bandwidth.
  • qap - Friday, January 6, 2017 - link

    Check this page:
    http://www.compression.ru/video/ls-codec/index_en....
    There are some tests of offline lossless codecs under different situations. And for the most part 3x compression is the limit. On average over many frames. Our usecase requires that every frame meets your size limit and it is compressed in real-time. I wouldn't call that "edge-case". That is why DisplayPort uses term "visualy lossless" for its compression and I imagine it will be very similar here.
  • ddriver - Friday, January 6, 2017 - link

    That's really bad news for random noise viewing enthusiasts. They will not be able to enjoy their random noise at a fluid frame rate. Going back to the drawing board then!

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now