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ARRIRAW FAQ

Common questions regarding ARRIRAW, MXF/ARRIRAW and High Density Encoding (HDE)

  • ARRIRAW is the raw format of ARRI's digital cameras. Its file extension is *.ari or *.mxf.

    The sensor readout of our ALEV3 and ALEV4 sensor is a raw Bayer frame provided as uncompressed, 12 bit/13 bit (ALEXA 35) log ARRIRAW data. To turn ARRIRAW data into RGB images, the files or clips need to be processed (de-bayering and color processing).

  • MXF/ARRIRAW is ARRIRAW with a wrapper. All frames are wrapped within a MXF container. ALEXA Mini and AMIRA use this format to write ARRIRAW to CFast 2.0 media. For ALEXA Mini LF and ALEXA 35 we switched completely to MXF-wrapped ARRIRAW.

    Good to know:

    • There's no quality difference to *.ari single frame files.
    • All ARRIRAW-enabled softwares understand MXF/ARRIRAW.
    • If you need single frame ARRIRAWs you can use our ARRI Reference Tool or on older systems (and not for ALEXA 35 footage) our legacy ARRIRAW Converter/ARRI Meta Extract or to unwrap the images.
  • The resolution of ARRIRAW is not fixed to a specific number! It depends on the camera and its selected sensor mode. ALEXA 65 records the biggest ARRIRAW frames to date with a resolution of 6560x3100 pixels.

    The document ARRI Formats and Resolutions Overview provides information on all recording modes (including our other recording formats ProRes, DNxHD and MPEG).

  • This, again, depends on the type of ARRIRAW you want to record. 16:9 2.8K ARRIRAW records at 1.34 Gigabit per second at 24fps; Open Gate on ALEXA 65 with 5.89 Gbit/s at 24fps.

    See our Formats and Data Rate Calculator for more!

  • The ALEXA or AMIRA series cameras do not offer a special HDR mode. The camera's ALEV3 sensor provides an unrivalled 14+ stops of exposure latitude (measured with the ARRI Dynamic Range Test Chart) without any special capture mode.
    Equally for ALEXA 35: The camera's ALEV4 sensor provides 17 stops of exposure latitude (measured with the Xyla chart and ARRI Analysis method) without any special capture mode."

    That's "HDR since 2010" - when ALEXA with ALEV3 sensor was first introduced and continued with a greater dynamic range with ALEV4 in 2022.

  • Yes, it is. We've successfully submitted SMPTE Registered Disclosure Documents (RDDs) on ARRIRAW: 

    RDD 30:2014: ARRIRAW Image File Structure and Interpretation Supporting Deferred Demosaicing to a Logarithmic Encoding 
    RDD 31:2014: Deferred Demosaicing of an ARRIRAW Image File to a Wide-Gamut Logarithmic Encoding.
    RDD 54:2022 - SMPTE Registered Disclosure Doc - Material Exchange Format — Mapping ARRIRAW Bitstreams into the MXF Generic Container
    RDD 55:2022 - SMPTE Registered Disclosure Doc - Material Exchange Format — Carriage of ARRI Camera System Metadata

    These documents are available from the Society of Motion Picture & Television Engineers (SMPTE)'s website at https://www.smpte.org.

  • The camera always outputs an HD or UHD monitoring image with optional surround view (see what is around the frame), status information and configurable frame markers.

  • The ALEV4 sensor offers 17 stops and the ALEV3 sensor 14+ stops of dynamic range with a base sensitivity of EI 800. This dynamic range is available in both ARRIRAW and Log C encoded ProRes footage. Due to the image compression used in ProRes, however, higher compressed ProRes footage can start to exhibit encoding artifacts when the material is excessively pushed in grading, whereas ARRIRAW footage will remain clean.

  • ARRIRAW footage is wrapped into a MXF container or can be a straightforward file sequence. There are various software tools to generate a verified copy of the captured ARRIRAW data. We suggest to use checksums for all copy processes to ensure a perfect 1:1 copy of your data. More information about file copy and checksums you will find on our workflow pages under Copy and Backup of Camera Negatives

  • The metadata contains all camera settings, production notes, optionally scene and take information, camera tilt and roll and lens metadata (if an LDS lens/camera was used). Tilt, roll and lens information is recorded for each frame individually, so it is possible to track the exact timing, e.g. when the focus pulls away from one actor to an object in the back.

    That data can be accessed or extracted using ARRI Reference Tool (or our legacy ARRI Meta Extract and ARRIRAW Converter).

  • All up-to-date VFX tools have native support for ARRIRAW processing.

    For applications without ARRIRAW support, the footage can be processed to e.g. 10 bit log *.dpx or 16 bit floating-point *.exr files using our free ARRI Reference Tool. Processing the files in native resolution usually provides a better basis for VFX work. Once the material has been composited, it can be scaled to the target format.

  • Provided your system can deliver the data at a sufficient speed, ARRIRAW can be edited in the latest versions of Adobe Premiere, Assimilate Scratch, Autodesk Smoke, Blackmagic Resolve and others.

    Usually small-size dailies are being rendered for editorial from the ARRIRAW footage.

  • We strive to make the ARRIRAW format accessible to anyone. With our recent effort, to have the format specification published as SMPTE RDD (Registered Disclosure Document), we want to make sure that anyone who needs to process ARRIRAW archives in the future can rest assured that the instructions, how to do it, will be there.

  • The sensor in ALEXA and AMIRA cameras is covered with a mosaic RGB filter pattern, called the Bayer pattern. When an exposed frame is sampled by the sensor, it is captured as a one-channel image (as opposed to a regular RGB three-channel color image). The reconstruction of the missing color components for each pixel, based on the type and position on the Bayer pattern is called de-bayering.

    With a Bayer pattern sensor, 50% of the sensors photosites are used to represent green, 25% of the photosites represent red and the remaining 25% represent blue.

    For more information, please see our ARRIRAW page.

  • ARRI offers a software development kit (SDK) for ARRIRAW processing that software vendors can incorporate into their application. ARRI also supports vendors who wish to implement the ARRIRAW processing procedure on their own. Depending on the implementation, the following processing settings can be adjusted:

    • Exposure Index (ASA rating)
    • white balance
    • tint (green-magenta shift)
    • current or legacy de-bayering mode
    • output color space for HDTV, digital cinema (P3), ACES and Log C wide gamut
    • different standard aspect ratios
    • output resolution
    • sharpening of the image output
    • noise reduction

    With the ARRIRAW SDK, you can also apply a custom ARRI Look File, which offers CDL and 3D LUT options.

  • The different ARRI De-Bayer Algorithms (ADA) control how the color channels are reconstructed. 

    • ADA-7 is a powerful algorithm that delivers cleaner images, minimizes aliasing on edges and contouring artifacts. Therewith ADA-7 offers an improved Green/Blue screen portrayal.
    • ADA-5 HW de-bayer algorithm was introduced with ALEXA Classic cameras starting with SUP 11.0. It offers improvements for bluescreen vfx shoots and reduces noise as well as aliasing. 
    • ADA-5 SW is an enhanced software de-bayering algorithm based on ADA-5 HW 
    • ADA-3 HW is the camera hardware de-bayer algorithm used in ALEXA cameras in SUP 7.0 up to SUP 10.0. 
    • ADA-3 SW is an enhanced software de-bayering algorithm based on ADA-3 HW. Depending on the scene content, it can deliver more image detail than ADA-3 HW. 
    • ADA-2 SW is a legacy software de-bayer algorithm. 
    • ADA-1 HW is a legacy camera hardware de-bayer algorithm, that was used before SUP 7.0. 

    The processing version is directly connected to the de-bayer. We’ve decided not to list it as a separate version (as we used to in the past) to avoid confusion.

  • To cater to different needs, we provide our reference ARRIRAW processing chain through the free ARRI Reference Tool application and a free command line tool for different operating systems.

  • Images with Log C encoding in the ALEXA/AMIRA-specific wide gamut color space provide the camera's full latitude in an unconfined color space. For ALEXA and AMIRA cameras this is ARRI Wide Gamut (LogC3 encoding).

    With the ALEXA 35 camera a new Log C iteration was introduced. LogC4 is able to carry all 17 stops of dynamic range from the ALEV4 sensor in ARRI Wide Gamut 4 color space.Log C is based on how the Cineon format brings film scans into the digital realm. Using these characteristics has proven beneficial: grading Log C is similar to grading scanned film negative. It is efficient and feels familiar to any colorist who is used to grading film.

  •  Yes you can. The ARRIRAW SDK and ARRI Reference Tool can output Open EXR files with ACES color space. ARRI provided all partner companies with IDTs, so the ALEXA/AMIRA profiles are already available in most tools that support ARRIRAW data and the ACES color pipeline.

  • No. Going from ARRIRAW to Log C encoded files means no information loss. ProRes is capable to hold all the information that is inside an ARRIRAW frame in ARRI Wide Gamut 4 (LogC4) or ALEXA Wide Gamut (LogC3) color space.

  • When viewed directly, Log C footage looks flat with desaturated colors, LogC4 might seem underexposed. To get an image with a grayscale characteristic and color reproduction that is visually correct, the Log C footage must be tone-mapped and transformed into the target color space. This conversion can be applied with a 3D Look Up Table (LUT). A one-dimensional LUT can take care of the tone-mapping, so the resulting image will at least have a grayscale characteristic suitable for display. The transform into the target color space, however, requires a 3D LUT. This type of LUT contains both, the grayscale and the color transformation.

    In the grading application, the LUT is applied for the viewing/output path. The color correction is applied on the Log C image beforehand; the result of this operation is converted into the target color space using the corresponding LUT.

  • The ARRIRAW T-Link (Transport Link) had been developed for ARRIFLEX D-20/D-21 (and was used in early ALEXA cameras/"ALEXA Classic") to utilize a standardized HD-SDI interface for sending raw data from the camera to an external recorder. The camera packs the ARRIRAW data into a 12 bit log encoded RGBA HD video stream, which is sent over a standard SMPTE 424M or SMPTE 372M dual link HD-SDI connection. Since the recorder then has to recreate the individual raw frames from the stream, only certified recording equipment can be used.

    Developement of T-Link has been ceased with the advent of fast recording media suitable for in-camera recording.

  • Our legacy cameras or "ALEXA Classic" cameras (with the SxS module) cannot record ARRIRAW internally. These cameras output ARRIRAW via HD-SDI by using a special protocol called "T-Link". ARRIRAW T-Link output requires an onboard recorder that was certified for ALEXA ARRIRAW (T-Link) recording, such as:

    • Codex Digital Onboard M and S
    • S.Two OB-1
    • Astrodesign HD-7502-A
    • Convergent Design Gemini
    • cineFlow cine Take
  • HDE stands for High Density Encoding.  It is an encoding technique that is optimised for Bayer pattern images.  ARRIRAW images encoded with HDE are approximately 60% of the original size.  HDE encoding is completely lossless - when an HDE file is decoded, it is a bit-for-bit perfect match to the original file. For more information we also refer to the Codex HDE website.

  • HDE provides a lossless reduction of the storage size of ARRIRAW images. An uncompressed ARRIRAW image can be reduced to a HDE file size not much larger than a corresponding ProRes 4444 XQ file. Expect all the original pixel values being accessible with HDE. The reduction in size for ARRIRAW images drastically reduces storage costs and file transfer times, speeding up your workflow and saving you money.

  • When an ARRIRAW image is encoded as HDE, the file extension changes from .ari to .arx.  The image essence is encoded, but the file header is otherwise identical.

  • HDE typically results in a file that is aproximately 60% of the original ARRIRAW file size.  For example, ARRIRAW OpenGate 3.4K is normally 11.26 MB per frame and 972.5 GB per hour.  When stored as HDE, this becomes 6.76 MB per frame and 583.5 GB per hour. HDE encoding example

    • ALEXA SXT Open Gate (3424x2202)
      • ARRIRAW (.ari):
        • 11.5 MB/frame & 996 GB/hour
      • ARRIRAW-HDE (.arx):
        • 6.9 MB/frame & 598 GB/hour
    • ALEXA LF Open Gate (4448x3096)
      • ARRIRAW (.ari):
        • 20.9 MB/frame & 1.80 TB/hour
      • ARRIRAW-HDE (.arx):
        • 12.5 MB/frame & 1.08 TB/hour
  • HDE is designed to provide fast encoding and decoding speeds.  For example, ARRIRAW Open Gate 4.5K can be encoded comfortably at 24fps on a modern MacBook Pro laptop.

  • HDE is resolution independent, it can be used on ARRIRAW images of any resolution.

    • ARRIRAW data from cameras before the ALEXA 35 (i.e. ALEXA XT, SXT-W, LF, Mini, Mini LF and AMIRA) can be converted to HDE frame sequences (.arx) using the free Codex Device Manager software (Mac only).
    • ARRIRAW data from an ALEXA 35 can be encoded to HDE MXF clips using the free ARRIRAW HDE Transcoder software. It is available for macOS, Windows, and CentOS 6 from our Software & Tools page.
  • The zero-bytes size is expected for HDE (*.arx) files from a Capture Drive presented via the VFS mechanism. This is because the encoded size is dependent on the original image content and cannot be pre-determined.
    Codex has been working with a variety of copy tool vendors to ensure they understand how to correctly copy HDE files so that they are transferred to the destination disk with their final size.

  • These vendors offering tools that can be used to back up HDE footage with checksum verification.

    With introduction of macOS Sonoma the 'cp' command on macOS Terminal had changed and therefore this options does not work anymore. In the past it was possible to copy with the 'cp' command on macOS terminal. However, we recommend refraining from copying operations without checksums.


    Codex hosts a video that explains about HDE and the workflow options.



  • HDE files are supported in industry standard software such as Filmlight’s Baselight and Daylight, Blackmagic DaVinci Resolve, ColorFront Transkoder, Pomfort Silverstack and YoYotta. The list of supporting software is growing rapidly.

    The HDE SDK is available via our partner CODEX.

  • We've prepared some ARRIRAW-HDE sample footage on our sample footage website.

    You also can click this link for some ALEXA LF ARRIRAW-HDE (.arx) files.

    ALEXA LF ARRIRAW-HDE (.arx)