This bug was fixed in the package nvidia-graphics-drivers-319-updates -
319.49-0ubuntu1
---------------
nvidia-graphics-drivers-319-updates (319.49-0ubuntu1) saucy; urgency=low
* debian/templates/nvidia-graphics-drivers.{links|links32}.in:
- Create links for the new NvIFROpenGL library.
* debian/additional_card_ids:
- Remove card id 11C4 which is now officially supported.
* New upstream release (LP: #1219908, LP: #1222670):
- Added support for the following GPUs:
o GeForce GT 740A
o GeForce GT 745A
o GeForce GT 755M
o GeForce GT 625
o GeForce GTX 645
o GRID K340
o GRID K350
o NVS 315
o Quadro K500M
- Fixed a bug that caused DisplayPort monitors connected
to Quadro FX 3800, 4800, or 5800 to remain off after
DPMS.
- Added the NVIDIA OpenGL-based Inband Frame Readback
(NvIFROpenGL) library to the Linux driver package.
This library provides a high performance, low latency
interface to capture and optionally encode an
individual OpenGL framebuffer. NvIFROpenGL captures
pixels rendered by OpenGL only and is ideally suited
to application capture and remoting.
- Fixed a bug that caused applications using CUDA-GL
interop to crash when run on X servers with Xinerama
enabled.
- Fixed a bug that could prevent some double-bit ECC
errors from being properly reported.
- Fixed a bug which could cause a blank screen when
changing house sync settings on Quadro Kepler GPUs
with Quadro Sync boards.
- Fixed a bug that prevented nested loops with
identical loop conditions in GLSL shaders from
terminating correctly. This could cause hangs in
applications such as Exa PowerVIZ.
- Fixed a bug that resulted in corrupt texels when a
previously empty texture image was specified with
glXBindTexImageEXT. In GNOME 3, this caused
gnome-screenshot to produce garbled window
screenshots.
- Fixed a bug that caused the X server to crash when
querying the current mode of disabled displays.
-- Alberto Milone <[email protected]> Mon, 16 Sep 2013 17:35:57
+0200
** Changed in: nvidia-graphics-drivers-319-updates (Ubuntu)
Status: In Progress => Fix Released
--
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Desktop
Packages, which is subscribed to nvidia-graphics-drivers-304 in Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1219908
Title:
[needs-packaging] All nvidia-current and nvidia-updates need
repackaging to mirror official Nvidia releases...
Status in Nvidia Feature Request and Bug Reporting:
New
Status in “nvidia-graphics-drivers-304” package in Ubuntu:
Confirmed
Status in “nvidia-graphics-drivers-319-updates” package in Ubuntu:
Fix Released
Status in “nvidia-graphics-drivers-304” source package in Precise:
New
Status in “nvidia-graphics-drivers-319-updates” source package in Precise:
Triaged
Bug description:
The official Nvidia long-lived-branch stable driver is now 319.49.
That means that the recommended official driver is 319.49 and should
be used by all Nvidia users except those using old legacy devices.
There are important fixes that are in this driver and the previous
319.17 that affect Chromium browser users especially:
+ Fixed a memory leak that occurred when destroying a GLX window but
not its associated X window.
These can crash machines using Nvidia GPU's according to a Chromium-
bug http://crbug.com/145600 "NVIDIA linux drivers are unstable when
using multiple Open GL contexts and with low memory.:" and if check
`about:gpu` you will see this is a major reason most if not all Nvidia
GPU's are currently blacklisted.
Also, when using Windows 7 I am at liberty to install any driver
version I want, keeping my machine up to date with the latest official
Nvidia fixes. With Ubuntu I'm stuck with older drivers that affect
performance and contain old bugs that have already been fixed. This
leads to a lower quality experience than with Windows. Drivers need
to be kept current with upstream in my opinion. For the time being I
have been cherry-picking *.deb packages from X-Org-Edgers so that I
can replicate that Windows experience and it's been working. However,
all Ubuntu users should have this experience as well and most do not
know how to manually install packages using DPKG so it is out of their
reach.
The current Nvidia driver versions are as follows:
http://www.nvidia.com/object/unix.html
Long Lived Branch version: 319.49 <-- `nvidia-current` should be here as
stable
Short Lived Branch version: 325.15 <-- `nvidia-updates` should be here as
unstable
Legacy GPU version (304.xx series): 304.108 <-- `nvidia-current-legacy`
should be here.
This situation has to be solved, Ubuntu cannot be so far behind the
curve that it cannot keep Nvidia drivers fresh and in sync with the
upstream Nvidia release schedule...
To manage notifications about this bug go to:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/nvidia/+bug/1219908/+subscriptions
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