NVIDIA: Difference between revisions
imported>PedroHLC Adopt changes from https://github.com/NixOS/nixos-hardware/pull/427 |
imported>Matklad Fix common pitfall for dual graphics laptops https://discourse.nixos.org/t/laptop-screen-not-detected/20117/ |
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services.xserver.videoDrivers = [ "nvidia" ]; | services.xserver.videoDrivers = [ "nvidia" ]; | ||
# For laptops with dual graphics | |||
# services.xserver.videoDrivers = [ "intel" "nvidia" ]; | |||
hardware.opengl.enable = true; | hardware.opengl.enable = true; | ||
Revision as of 09:39, 4 July 2022
Installing NVIDIA official drivers on NixOS
If you're using NixOS, installing and using the official NVIDIA drivers is as simple as,
/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
{
# NVIDIA drivers are unfree.
nixpkgs.config.allowUnfree = true;
services.xserver.videoDrivers = [ "nvidia" ];
# For laptops with dual graphics
# services.xserver.videoDrivers = [ "intel" "nvidia" ];
hardware.opengl.enable = true;
# Optionally, you may need to select the appropriate driver version for your specific GPU.
hardware.nvidia.package = config.boot.kernelPackages.nvidiaPackages.stable;
...
}
As noted in the final comment, you'll need to determine the appropriate driver version for your card. For "legacy" cards, you can consult nvidia official legacy driver list. You can consult the set of possible options in the source here.
Using GPUs on non-NixOS
If you're using Nix-packaged software on a non-NixOS system, you'll need a workaround to get everything up-and-running. The nixGL project provides wrapper to use GL drivers on non-NixOS systems. You need to have GPU drivers installed on your distro (for kernel modules). With nixGL installed, you'll run nixGL foobar
instead of foobar
.
Note that nixGL is not specific to NVIDIA GPUs, and should work with just about any GPU.
CUDA and using your GPU for compute
See the CUDA wiki page!
Using your GPU for graphics
Please note that, if you are setting up PRIME offloading, you must set the single value of "nvidia" even though it would be more conceptually correct to also include the driver for your other GPU. Doing otherwise will cause a broken xorg.conf to be generated. This is because NixOS doesn't actually handle multiple GPUs / GPU drivers properly, as per https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/108018.
Determining the type of your GPU
- MXM / output-providing card (shows as
VGA Controller
inlspci
), i.e. graphics card in desktop computer or in some laptops - muxless/non-MXM Optimus cards have no display outputs and show as
3D Controller
inlspci
output, seen in most modern consumer laptops
MXM cards allow you to use the Nvidia card standalone, in Non-Optimus mode. Non-MXM cards require Optimus, Nvidia's integrated-vs-discrete GPU switching technology.
Non-Optimus mode
You need an MXM card (see above) for Non-Optimus mode. Follow NVIDIA Graphics Cards section in official manual.
In case of laptop you may also need to use a BIOS option to select which card to use for the internal display.
Optimus
Mostly useful for laptops. There are currently two solutions available under NixOS, described in detail below:
- Official solution: Nvidia PRIME (in on-demand "offload" mode, and always-on "sync" mode)
- Previous open-source solution: Bumblebee (now deprecated)
Nvidia PRIME
Official solution by nvidia. Currently, reverse PRIME does not work. The consequence of this is that if you have a special laptop configuration where external display ports are only exposed to the dedicated GPU, then running in offload mode will not allow you to use those display ports for external monitors. If you wish to use the external monitors in that particular case, you have to use sync mode.
offload mode
Available since 20.09 (see #66601).
In this mode the Nvidia card is only activated on demand, however a Nvidia card of the Turing generation or newer and an Intel Coffee Lake chipset is required for a complete poweroff of the Nvidia card (see discussion).
Offload mode is enabled by running your program(s) with specific environment variables, i.e., here's a sample script called nvidia-offload
that you can run wrapped around your exacutable, for example nvidia-offload glxgears
:
nvidia-offload
export __NV_PRIME_RENDER_OFFLOAD=1
export __NV_PRIME_RENDER_OFFLOAD_PROVIDER=NVIDIA-G0
export __GLX_VENDOR_LIBRARY_NAME=nvidia
export __VK_LAYER_NV_optimus=NVIDIA_only
exec "$@"
To configure Offload mode, you firstly you need to enable the proprietary Nvidia driver:
/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
{
services.xserver.videoDrivers = [ "nvidia" ];
...
Note that on certain laptops and/or if you are using a custom kernel version, you may have issues with your NixOS system finding the primary display. In this case you should use hardware.nvidia.modesetting.enable
, i.e.:
/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
{
hardware.nvidia.modesetting.enable = true;
services.xserver.videoDrivers = [ "nvidia" ];
// ...
Then you need to setup the Bus ID's of the cards as seen below.
Note: Bus ID is important and needs to be formatted properly
The Nvidia driver expects the bus ID to be in decimal format; There are two ways you can get the bus IDs, one is with lspci, which shows the bus IDs in hexadecimal format and the other with lshw, which shows it in decimal format, as wanted by nixos.
lspci
You can convert the value by:
- Stripping any leading zeros from the bus numbers or if the number is above 09, convert it to decimal and use that value.
- Replacing any full stops with colons.
- Prefix the final value with "PCI".
For example:
Output from lspci
09:1f.0 VGA compatible controller: NVIDIA Corporation Device 1f91 (rev a1)
Converted and correct format
PCI:9:31:0
lshw
If you don't have lshw installed, you can get it temporarily in a ephemeral shell by running:
nix-shell -p lshw --run "lshw -c display"
The two bus ID's will be in the corresponding "bus info" field.
For example:
bus info: pci@0000:01:00.0
and
bus info: pci@0000:00:02.0
Now you have to take everything after the first colon, and replace the .
with another colon.
01:00:0
and
00:02:0
A possible configuration:
/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
{ pkgs, ... }:
let
nvidia-offload = pkgs.writeShellScriptBin "nvidia-offload" ''
export __NV_PRIME_RENDER_OFFLOAD=1
export __NV_PRIME_RENDER_OFFLOAD_PROVIDER=NVIDIA-G0
export __GLX_VENDOR_LIBRARY_NAME=nvidia
export __VK_LAYER_NV_optimus=NVIDIA_only
exec "$@"
'';
in
{
environment.systemPackages = [ nvidia-offload ];
services.xserver.videoDrivers = [ "nvidia" ];
hardware.nvidia.prime = {
offload.enable = true;
# Bus ID of the Intel GPU. You can find it using lspci, either under 3D or VGA
intelBusId = "PCI:0:2:0";
# Bus ID of the NVIDIA GPU. You can find it using lspci, either under 3D or VGA
nvidiaBusId = "PCI:1:0:0";
};
}
booting with an external display
Most Optimus laptops have the HDMI port for an external display wired directly to the Nvidia chip, in which case you need a configuration to use the Nvidia driver directly without offload mode. Fortunately, NixOS has an amazing feature called specialisations which allows you to do this easily. Here is an example configuration:
/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
specialisation = {
external-display.configuration = {
system.nixos.tags = [ "external-display" ];
hardware.nvidia.prime.offload.enable = lib.mkForce false;
hardware.nvidia.powerManagement.enable = lib.mkForce false;
};
};
Once you rebuild your configuration, an extra external-display
configuration will be built and placed in your boot menu.
To use this, boot your laptop with the lid open, choose the external-display
configuration in the boot menu, and continue to keep the lid open until your desktop appears on the external display. At this point you can close the lid.
offloading steam
First, add this to your ~/.bashrc
:
export XDG_DATA_HOME="$HOME/.local/share"
.
For NixOS Steam run:
mkdir -p ~/.local/share/applications
sed 's/^Exec=/&nvidia-offload /' /run/current-system/sw/share/applications/steam.desktop > ~/.local/share/applications/steam.desktop
.
For Flatpak Steam run:
mkdir -p ~/.local/share/applications
sed 's/^Exec=/&nvidia-offload /' /var/lib/flatpak/exports/share/applications/com.valvesoftware.steam.desktop > ~/.local/share/applications/com.valvesoftware.steam.desktop
.
Then restart your graphical environment session.
sync mode
In this mode the Nvidia card is turned on constantly, having impact on laptop battery and health.
Possible issues:
- Hangs of applications after resume from suspend
- Wrong DPI calculation (in this case provide dpi manually
services.xserver.dpi = 96;
) - Black screen after system upgrade (e.g.
nixos-rebuild switch
; usenixos-rebuild boot
instead and reboot) - No video playback acceleration available (vaapi)
Example for NixOS 20.03
/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
{
hardware.nvidia.modesetting.enable = true;
services.xserver.videoDrivers = [ "nvidia" ];
hardware.nvidia.optimus_prime = {
enable = true;
# Bus ID of the NVIDIA GPU. You can find it using lspci, either under 3D or VGA
nvidiaBusId = "PCI:1:0:0";
# Bus ID of the Intel GPU. You can find it using lspci, either under 3D or VGA
intelBusId = "PCI:0:2:0";
};
}
Example for NixOS 20.09/unstable
/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
{
services.xserver.videoDrivers = [ "nvidia" ];
hardware.nvidia.prime = {
sync.enable = true;
# Bus ID of the NVIDIA GPU. You can find it using lspci, either under 3D or VGA
nvidiaBusId = "PCI:1:0:0";
# Bus ID of the Intel GPU. You can find it using lspci, either under 3D or VGA
intelBusId = "PCI:0:2:0";
};
}
Bumblebee
Deprecated solution. You should use offload mode instead.
Use option
hardware.bumblebee.enable = true;
Troubleshooting
Fix screen tearing
You may often incounter screen tearing or artifacts when using proprietary Nvidia drivers. You can fix that by forcing full composition pipeline.
/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
services.xserver.screenSection = ''
Option "metamodes" "nvidia-auto-select +0+0 {ForceFullCompositionPipeline=On}"
Option "AllowIndirectGLXProtocol" "off"
Option "TripleBuffer" "on"
'';
Fix app flickering with Picom
~/.config/picom/picom.conf
unredir-if-possible = false;
backend = "xrender"; # try "glx" if xrender doesn't help
vsync = true;
Fix graphical corruption on suspend/resume
By default only a small portion of VRAM is saved when suspending the system [1]. This can cause graphical issues in some applications when resuming from suspend. To fix it, enable systemd-based suspend, which will save and restore all of VRAM:
/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
hardware.nvidia.powerManagement.enable = true;
If you have a modern Nvidia GPU (Turing [2] or later), you may also want to investigate the hardware.nvidia.powerManagement.finegrained
option: [3]