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Eazy wrote:bw123 and Head_on_a_Stick, you are really insulting. I come here for help and you act defensive for some reason. What gives you the right to act so unfriendly? Do we know each other? Help me if you know how to install the drivers or don't answer at all. I hope you don't feel the need to represent the Debian community by acting like you do.
stil no luck ?
u are on buster version right ?
do u use the RT = real time kernel or the normal one ?
if u are on RT , for as much i know there are no good source headers for this kernel, i had no luck to get nvidia pack to install on this kind of kernel...
if try to install the nvidia pack form the nvidia website don't forget to close your x.org driver with the root command "" init 3 "" and the try to install sh NVIDIA-470.10.run after this reboot.
Eazy wrote:bw123 and Head_on_a_Stick, you are really insulting. I come here for help and you act defensive for some reason. What gives you the right to act so unfriendly? Do we know each other? Help me if you know how to install the drivers or don't answer at all. I hope you don't feel the need to represent the Debian community by acting like you do.
stil no luck ?
u are on buster version right ?
do u use the RT = real time kernel or the normal one ?
if u are on RT , for as much i know there are no good source headers for this kernel, i had no luck to get nvidia pack to install on this kind of kernel...
if try to install the nvidia pack form the nvidia website don't forget to close your x.org driver with the root command "" init 3 "" and the try to install sh NVIDIA-470.10.run after this reboot.
I'm on my Debian Jessie now, so i don't know what kernel I use. Its the kernel that comes with the installation of Debian Buster.
For some reason unknown I got it to work now. One thing i did was run "sudo update-glx --config glx" if that have something to so with it. The Debian install I installing the nvidia-driver on is just a test install to see what works and behave. I will install Debian again on my primary disk and then I will see if i can get it working.
From up to Debian Jessie I never had these problems. It has just been working. Usual way I installed them have been to install the nvidia-driver (nvidia-glx) then run nvidia-xconfig and that is that. Dunno what have changed.
I got tired to get this to work, so I took the opportunity to try another dist, but I thought the dist was buggy. So here I am again trying to get this to work.
I can get it to work if I remove xorg.conf. When having a xorg.conf in /etc/X11/xorg.conf I only have 2d graphics. If I remove xorg.conf I have 2d and 3d.
I wouldn't mind having xorg.conf removed, but I need to enable "Force Composition Pipeline" and that is something you need to set in xorg.conf.
I have googled my ass but hot finding a solution.
Is the xorg.conf needed to be in another folder than /etc/X11 or do i set my settings in another conf-file?
Is the new install the same as the other one jessie
want to start a new thread
General Questions or Desktop & Multimedia
info should include at a minimum
Debian Version:
Installation Method used: / link to installation image used.
Kernel version running : uname -a
Nvidia package version:
A link to the nvidia instructions you follow
In memory of Ian Ashley Murdock (1973 - 2015) founder of the Debian project.
llivv wrote:Is the new install the same as the other one jessie
want to start a new thread
General Questions or Desktop & Multimedia
info should include at a minimum
Debian Version:
Installation Method used:
Nvidia package version:
A link to the nvidia instructions you follow
Debian Version: 9.6 Buster
Installation Method used: From Debian non-free repo
Kernel version running : 4.18.0-3-amd64
Nvidia package version: nvidia-driver 390.87-3
A link to the nvidia instructions you follow: https://wiki.debian.org/NvidiaGraphicsD ... Stretch.22
Eazy wrote:I got tired to get this to work, so I took the opportunity to try another dist, but I thought the dist was buggy. So here I am again trying to get this to work.
I can get it to work if I remove xorg.conf. When having a xorg.conf in /etc/X11/xorg.conf I only have 2d graphics. If I remove xorg.conf I have 2d and 3d.
I wouldn't mind having xorg.conf removed, but I need to enable "Force Composition Pipeline" and that is something you need to set in xorg.conf.
I have googled my ass but hot finding a solution.
Is the xorg.conf needed to be in another folder than /etc/X11 or do i set my settings in another conf-file?
You don't need a xorg.conf (depreciated now a days) to enable Force Composition Pipeline
You can enable it from nvidia settings
In nvidia settings ☛ xserver display configuration ☛ advanced ☛ and put a check mark next to
I know that xorg.conf soon is removed. If I enable "Force Composition Pipeline" in nvidia-settings its gone after a reboot and need to enable it again. So until that is fixed (if it will be), I will use xorg.conf.