Hi Brad,

Thanks for the quick reply, this is my first experience with the
debian-user mailing list and it makes for a positive one.

I ran nvidia-detect every now and then and it doesn't tell me exactly which
version to install. Instead, it tells me that my card is "OK" (not legacy,
GTX-1070 Ti) and that I should simply go and install nvidia-driver. I did
that both times, once running from the standard debian repo, which installs
version 418, and once also from debian-backports, which installs version
450 (both is OK per Debian wiki here
<https://wiki.debian.org/NvidiaGraphicsDrivers>). Previously this worked
fine, but now those processes fail me as well, so something is different
this time, I just don't know what.

I am not skilled when it comes to building drivers, can you tell me what to
do to make sure I have everything it takes for this to work? It might be
something along those lines as last time I had the same problem, it
happened after a kernel upgrade. Back then I could fix it by reinstalling,
which is not the case now, though.

Thanks,
Vinko


On Sun, Nov 8, 2020 at 5:36 PM Brad Rogers <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Sun, 8 Nov 2020 17:07:20 +0100
> Vinko Tosevski <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Hello Vinko,
>
> >Can someone point me in the right direction to solve this problem? Or
>
> Install and run nvidia-detect.  That'll tell which is the preferred
> driver suite for your card.
>
> You should also be aware that nVidia drivers need to be rebuilt every
> time there's a kernel upgrade, so unless you also install all the
> relevant build tools (including sources, headers etc. for the kernel)
> you may well encounter problems, because there will be a driver/kernel
> mismatch.
>
> >should I give up on Debian all together?
>
> A bit drastic, I think.   ;-)
>
> --
>  Regards  _
>          / )           "The blindingly obvious is
>         / _)rad        never immediately apparent"
> It's only bits of plastic, lines projected on the wall
> Keep It Clean - The Vibrators
>

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