12th Generation Intel® Core™ Processors
Datasheet, Volume 1 of 2
ID | Date | Version | Classification |
---|---|---|---|
655258 | 06/15/2023 | Public |
DisplayPort*
The DisplayPort* is a digital communication interface that uses differential signaling to achieve a high-bandwidth bus interface designed to support connections between PCs and monitors, projectors, and TV displays.
A DisplayPort* consists of a Main Link (four lanes), Auxiliary channel, and a Hot-Plug Detect signal. The Main Link is a unidirectional, high-bandwidth, and low-latency channel used for transport of isochronous data streams such as uncompressed video and audio. The Auxiliary Channel (AUX CH) is a half-duplex bi-directional channel used for link management and device control. The Hot-Plug Detect (HPD) signal serves as an interrupt request from the sink device to the source device.
The processor is designed in accordance with VESA* DisplayPort* specification. Refer to Display Technologies Support.
- Support main link of 1, 2, or 4 data lanes.
- Link rate support up to HBR3.
- Aux channel for Link/Device management.
- Hot Plug Detect.
- Support up to 36 BPP (Bit Per Pixel).
- Support SSC.
- Support YCbCR 4:4:4, YCbCR 4:2:0, YCbCR 4:2:2, and RGB color format.
- Support MST (Multi-Stream Transport).
- Support VESA DSC 1.1.
- Adaptive Sync.