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I am using Ubuntu 16.04 with GTX 1080. On my first boot, the screen turn black after I selected Ubuntu in grub. After I added nomodeset, the black screen gone however it only shows the Ubuntu default background image. It can't reach the login screen.
First, make the live USB for Ubuntu. Go into your BIOS settings, and enable both iGPU and the GPU. Plug in your monitor to the HDMI port on the motherboard, and install Ubuntu as normal. After installation, boot Ubuntu and install the nvidia-367 drivers. Once that's done, you can plug your motherboard back into the the GPU and use Ubuntu.
Sounds like to me its a driver issue. Try setting up a live cd and installing nvidia drivers and see if that resolves the issue. Im just guessing at the moment, i would wait for more responses to see if this is a known issue.
If you already have an OS Installed and are upgrading to the GTX 1080, you could boot into the OS Using the older gpu (with the 1080 plugged in), and then install the new drivers. No need for a live OS. Worked for me
The screen turns black because the screen connected to the gpu. Do connect to motherboard before installing the driver. Then, use the nvidia provided download rather than ppa. I solved this issue for my pc, but I don't remember the step correctly.
Hi,
I am a Ubuntu user and my computer just cannot start after an update. Then I found it is because the latest driver of 460 does not work for my display card 1080 anymore. 1080 only accepts 390 as its driver.
driver_avai1099543 56.9 KB
But with 390, the nvidia-smi does not show 2080 anymore. May I know why this is happening? I am using 1080 as my daily use card and 2080 as my DL project training card. I really need to have them work at the same time.
I've contacted the Intel Support and uploaded the some Logs and they told me the standard phrases like update your Bios, use the newest drivers and so on. I told them that native resolution and fullscreen IS possible until driver 4578 and that it has to be a bug in the newer drivers. Then they refused to do any research and closed the case, because i didn't want to do a bios update.
It's definitely a driver issue - there are numerous threads that need the dots connected by intel due to the symptoms being different. I am suffering the same regression since the same driver - disappointingly I don't see Intel posting it as a known issue in the driver releases (I lost count but I think we are 4-5 driver releases in since its been reported).
For me HDMI was working but none of the display ports.
From the numerous threads the common denominator seems to be that its failing on 21:9 Ultra Wide Displays as I can see people reporting it with different brands of intel and different brands of monitor (albeit LG seems to be the most common).
I'm hoping this feedback to intel dev's will help in tracking down the issue - as it seems to me that the latest driver(s) seem to stop the board detecting the monitor correctly and therefore defaulting to a fairly safe, smaller resolution.
When I have chance I'll draw up a list of all the threads which I think are related as I'm counting at least 12 having reporting this issue for quite some time. This seems to be the most active ...
My 1440p monitor can only output at 1080p resolution now Issue #433 IGCIT/Intel-GPU-Community-Issue-Tracker-IGCIT (github.com)
I'm shocked that they closed the ticket, and they should have been able to look at the issue description and the fact that it works on an earlier driver as evidence enough. However, I understand the protocol in ensuring the latest bios is on the mainboard as this could affect other issues, sometimes though you need to read between the lines when supporting end users.
Intel, can we have this documented on the Known issues please, as people are going out spending on the new cables when it is not necessary - at least have them test on the 101.4577 driver in your testing phase. (You might want to put that back on the website until this issue is resolved as it was removed recently).
I told you, that the newer drivers don't work and so i can't use and work with them! It's my only PC and i need it to work. It's not the testing PC for Intels bad programming. Fix your bad coding in your newer driver, i don't have time for testing out and installing back and forth. I'm not an idiot and it works with the older ones, so it has to be a problem with programming. Or close the case and ignore it, like before. I think Intel Arc is Sh*t since the newer drivers, and i have to replace it...
I understand your frustration and also understand that you do not have time for testing, I want to let you know that we are working really hard on this issue to fix it as soon as possible, but these tests, information, and files requested will help us with the investigation and to find a solution.
As mentioned before I am aware that you do not have the time to complete them, but if you will have it later and you still want to have this thread open just let me know and I will be more than glad to help you.
Happy to hear that the issue is fixed by installing the graphics driver 101.4885. For now, we will close this thread. If you need any additional information, please submit a new question as this thread will no longer be monitored.
Do you have any older driver who is working properly? If so the only thing you can do is install the next, see if it works, if not roll back and try the next one. Intel isn't helping at all. I only installed the display driver and kept the control center and always went for the clean install. For me it worked with driver 4885 and until 5186, than i replaced it with an nvidia rtx...
If your monitor is not hitting the correct resolution, then I would first check the cable - ensure it is of suitable quality, I've been through a few cheap ones which cannot sustain the data transfer required and will either cause flashing or lower resolutions being offered.
Intel does not verify all solutions, including but not limited to any file transfers that may appear in this community. Accordingly, Intel disclaims all express and implied warranties, including without limitation, the implied warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, and non-infringement, as well as any warranty arising from course of performance, course of dealing, or usage in trade.
OPENGL ERROR: failed to choose pixel format for dc 410039
GLContext warn: failed to setup offscreen pixel format: Success.
GLContext: failed to create context: Success.
GLContext: failed to register master context class: Success.
Failed to initialize graphics.
Make sure you have DirectX 11 installed, have up to date
drivers for your graphics card and have not disabled
3D acceleration in display settings.
InitializeEngineGraphics failed
Not sure what you mean here. Is the problem in gaming or playing video. Did you mean you are playing video and it is capped at HD? You can use the downgrade command also to downgrade your nvidia drivers.
Resolutions are not wrong, Inxi is showing the calculated resolutions with fractional scaling applied when it does not have a permission to access some display info. I see this on newer inxi versions where there is a combination of wayland + HiDPI displays.
Correct. running sudo pacman -R nvidia-dkms nvidia-settings nvidia-utils && yay -S nvidia-535xx-dkms nvidia-535xx-utils nvidia-535xx-settings gave me an error about being unable to uninstall nvidia-utils because it would remove the vulkan drivers steam needed. Following this I ran sudo pacman -R steam and then ran the original command again, this time it installed without error. Once the drivers were taken care of I just did sudo pacman -Syu steam and it reinstalled steam again. As far as I can tell everything seems to be working, all my games are there, no need to re-sign-in and I did a quick bout of fallout 4 just to make sure everything was still working fine - it was.
I recently had to figure out how to set up a new Ubuntu 16.04 machine with NVIDIA's new GTX 1080 Ti graphics card for use with CUDA-enabled machine learning libraries, e.g. Tensorflow and PyTorch; since the card (as of this writing) is relatively new, the process was pretty involved. The same tricks should also work for the newer Titan Xp graphics card.
I couldn't just install CUDA and have it work, since certain CUDA version (e.g., 8.0) come with a driver version (in the case of CUDA 8.0, driver version 375.26) that doesn't support the GTX 1080 Ti and other newer cards. As a result, installing CUDA from apt-get doesn't work since it installs this driver version. Thus, you have to install with the runfile, to opt-out of installing the driver.
Post Install Notes (Thanks to Jake Boggan for mentioning this in the comments): After installing, check that the CUDA folders are where you expect them to be (usually /usr/local). The CUDA installer creates a symlink at /usr/local/cuda that automatically points to the version of CUDA installed.
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