Hello poma,
The chipset didn't disappear and is still displayed: it is the G98 you get on
the "[2.483843] nouveau :02:00.0: NVIDIA G98 (098200a2)" line. The
"NV98" was the "Nouveau" chipset, but the switch was made to use the same
naming as NVIDIA. So rather than displaying both the
dmesg -t | grep -i nvidia
nouveau :02:00.0: NVIDIA G98 (098200a2)
input: HDA NVidia Rear Mic as
/devices/pci:00/:00:07.0/sound/card0/input6
input: HDA NVidia Front Mic as
/devices/pci:00/:00:07.0/sound/card0/input7
input: HDA NVidia Line as
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On 10/07/2015 11:49 AM, poma wrote:
>
> dmesg -t | grep -i nvidia nouveau :02:00.0: NVIDIA G98
> (098200a2) input: HDA NVidia Rear Mic as
> /devices/pci:00/:00:07.0/sound/card0/input6 input: HDA
> NVidia Front Mic as
>
On 07.10.2015 03:55, Ben Skeggs wrote:
> NACK.
>
> All the relevant information is shown, "nouveau" (video driver)
> detected an "NVIDIA G98" (complete with full chip identification
> register value for specifics). I'm not bikeshedding this topic any
> further than that.
>
> Thanks,
> Ben.
>
On 06.10.2015 21:07, Pierre Moreau wrote:
> Hello poma,
>
> The chipset didn't disappear and is still displayed: it is the G98 you get on
> the "[2.483843] nouveau :02:00.0: NVIDIA G98 (098200a2)" line. The
> "NV98" was the "Nouveau" chipset, but the switch was made to use the same
>
On 06.10.2015 02:21, poma wrote:
> 4.1.8-200.fc22.x86_64 dmesg:
> [ 11.809467] nouveau [ DEVICE][:02:00.0] BOOT0 : 0x098200a2
> [ 11.809493] nouveau [ DEVICE][:02:00.0] Chipset: G98 (NV98)
> [ 11.809508] nouveau [ DEVICE][:02:00.0] Family : NV50
>
>
>