AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |
Back to Blog
Arch linux nvidia11/4/2023 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() So, it seems the culprit is something to do with OVMF GPU Passthrough after all. See the xorg.Show 251 and sorry for replying late, just got around to trying it again. # This applies the option any libinput device also matched by the other # Instead, use a config snippet that contains something like this: # If you want to configure your devices, do not copy this file. # Match on all types of devices but joysticks MatchProduct "La-VIEW Technology Naos 5000 Mouse" Identifier "Tag Mionix Naos 5000 mouse XI_MOUSE" # Bug 62831 - Mionix Naos 5000 mouse detected incorrectly Identifier "Tag trackballs as XI_TRACKBALL" # Bug 55867 - Doesn't know how to tag XI_TRACKBALL Identifier "Xen Virtual Pointer axis blacklist" # Explicitly tell evdev to not ignore the absolute axes. MatchProduct "ThinkPad HDAPS accelerometer data" Identifier "ThinkPad HDAPS accelerometer blacklist" # Accelerometer device, posts data through ABS_X/ABS_Y, making X unusable # Collection of quirks and blacklist/whitelists for specific devices. That anwers my questions, Ill mark it solved.īut if anyone knows any good sources except the Arch wiki or man pages, feel free to share. ![]() To me this seems to mean rather "use intel driver, and output to nvidia, which would be the other way around. I checked the differences in the config files. I didn't get the fact that optimus was an nvidia technology. Hi V1del, thanks for explaining it to me. On the desktop the nvidia card can just directly render to the screen, you don't need to do the xorg config setup to tell the system to send information to nvidia, nvidia -> intel, intel -> output. The things explained in that wiki linked by seth allow you to configure the system in a way so that the nvidia card gets the actual information as to what should be rendered, this image produced by the nvidia card is then transferred to the intel card which in turn shows it on your screen. Everything is rendered by the integrated intel card. On this kind of setup your nvidia card is not plugged to any output. I don't really understand how the output is directed to different VGA ports, depending on the graphics card that is used. Why was switching to my nvidia card with optimus the solution, while my desktop pc used my nvidia card just by installing the nvidia driver? Laptop + nvidia driver = NOK (Xorg startup messages, and then screen freezes)Ĭould someone please tell me what happened? So currently I'm glad that xorg seems to work fine, but I would like to know why I needed to use optimus-manager on my laptop, and not my desktop.ĭesktop + intel drivers VGA port motherboard = OKĭesktop + nvidia drivers + VGA port motherboard = NOK (black screen, I think)ĭesktop + nvidia drivers + VGA port nvidia card = OK I found out that I could fix this by using the vga port of my nvidia graphics card instead the vga port of my motherboard. When I first installed xorg on my deskop, I used the vga port of my motherboard, and it worked fine.Īfter installing my new nvidia card, and installing the nvidia drivers, xorg gave a black screen (if I recall correctly), which I had to kill in another tty. 00:02.0 VGA compatible controller: Intel Corporation Xeon E3-1200 v3/4th Gen Core Processor Integrated Graphics Controller (rev 06)Ġ1:00.0 VGA compatible controller: NVIDIA Corporation GM204 (rev a1) ![]()
0 Comments
Read More
Leave a Reply. |