On 13/04/18 01:18, tu...@posteo.de wrote:
On 04/12 10:01, Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
On 12/04/18 16:31, Alexey Eschenko wrote:
Is this some kind of maintainer's mistake or does NVIDIA really messed
up with drivers again?

Before updating the nvidia driver, you should always check here:

   http://www.nvidia.com/Download/Find.aspx

and see if the version you're updating to is a beta driver or not.

As a long time nvidia-drivers user, I really recommend to:

   1. Use an LTS kernel series (latest LTS series is 4.14.x.)
   2. Do not install nvidia beta drivers.
   3. Do not use X.Org pre-releases.

Currently, that means these in package.mask:

   >=sys-kernel/gentoo-sources-4.15
   >=x11-drivers/nvidia-drivers-391
   >=x11-base/xorg-server-1.19.99

Unless you're using Chrome, where 390 has a bug that makes it unusable slow,
so you need:

   >=x11-drivers/nvidia-drivers-385

You need to check on the available versions these packages manually from
time to time to see if it's safe to update them.

Also, nvidia driver version can be confusing. 390 is the latest stable
series, while 384 is the "LTS-like" stable series. To be frank, I find it
impossible to tell what's happening with driver releases from nvidia if I
don't read phoronix.com news.

In any event, the TL;DR is that sticking to non-beta drivers and non-beta
xorg and the latest LTS kernel will result in avoiding the majority of
breakages.



hi Alexey,

which in turn is, what I said before:
I will be bound to older versions of software.
It is, what I try to avoid.

Do you have something specific in mind? I'm not aware of software that requires a non-LTS kernel right now, or a beta X.Org driver, or a beta nvidia-driver.


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