I have tested exactly as you described without terminating X
$ sudo modprobe -r nvidia_uvm
$lsmod | grep nvidia_uvm # empty result
$ nvidia-modprobe -u#without sudo
$ lsmod | grep nvidia_uvm # empty result! (not like it
was expected)
$ sudo nvidia-
On 2018-02-05 22:35, Krzysztof Marczak wrote:
> Module loading mechanism seem to be working properly.
> I have tested it as you described:
>
> $ sudo modprobe -r nvidia
> $ lsmod | grep nvidia # there was no output
> $ sudo nvidia-modprobe -u
> $ lsmod | grep nvidia #returned folowing:
Module loading mechanism seem to be working properly.
I have tested it as you described:
$ sudo modprobe -r nvidia
$ lsmod | grep nvidia # there was no output
$ sudo nvidia-modprobe -u
$ lsmod | grep nvidia #returned folowing:
nvidia_uvm765952 0
nvidia 1316864
Control: tag -1 moreinfo
On 2018-02-02 17:19, Krzysztof Marczak wrote:
> Thank you for quick reply.
> You were right. It's look like it's the same problem as reported in #888952
> When after reboot I don't run clinfo as a root, the NVidia OpenCL platform
> is not visible. After running 'sudo clinf
Thank you for quick reply.
You were right. It's look like it's the same problem as reported in #888952
When after reboot I don't run clinfo as a root, the NVidia OpenCL platform
is not visible. After running 'sudo clinfo' it starts to work properly.
It's reproducible all the time.
It looks like nv
On 2018-02-01 22:30, Krzysztof Marczak wrote:
> After lastest update to version nvidia-graphics-drivers 384.111-3 the OpenCL
> platform in no longer available in the system. clinfo command lists only other
> platforms (e.g. Intel).
> Just before this update everything worked properly.
>
> I have t
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