Gentoo Linux nVidia Guide
1.
Introduction
The nVidia drivers in the tree are released by nVidia and are built against the
Linux kernel. They contain a binary blob that does the heavy lifting for talking
to the card. The drivers consist of two parts, a kernel module, and an X11
driver. Both parts are included in a single package. Due to the way nVidia has
been packaging their drivers, you will need to make some choices before you
install the drivers.
The nvidia-drivers package contains the latest drivers from nVidia with
support for all cards, with several versions available depending on how
old your card is. It uses an eclass to detect what kind of card you're running
so that it installs the proper version.
2.
Driver compatibility
Which version?
The nvidia-drivers package supports the full range of available nVidia
cards. Multiple versions are available for installation, depending on the
card(s) you have.
Newer cards such as the GeForce 8, 7, 6, and FX 5 series should use the newer
drivers from the 100.x series.
Older cards such as the GeForce 3 or GeForce 4 series require the 96.x drivers.
For these cards, you should mask >=x11-drivers/nvidia-drivers-97.00 in
your /etc/portage/package.mask file. This will prevent newer
versions of the driver which are incompatible with your card from being
installed.
Old NV2x-based cards (such as TNT, TNT2, GeForce, and GeForce 2) require the
older 71.x drivers (such as nvidia-drivers-71.86.01). For these cards,
you should mask >=x11-drivers/nvidia-drivers-87.00 in
/etc/portage/package.mask.
You can check for driver compatibility for your card at to determine which
driver supports it by viewing the README at its appropriate x86 or x86-64
release page.
3.
Configuring your Card
Kernel Configuration
As mentioned above, the nVidia kernel driver installs and runs against your
current kernel. It builds as a module, so it makes sense that your kernel must
support the loading of kernel modules. If you used genkernel all to
configure the kernel for you, then you're all set. If not, double check your
kernel configuration so that this support is enabled:
Code Listing 3.1: Enabling the Loading of Kernel Modules |
Loadable module support --->
[*] Enable loadable module support
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You also need to enable Memory Type Range Register in your kernel:
Code Listing 3.2: Enabling MTRR |
Processor and Features --->
[*] MTRR (Memory Type Range Register) support
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Also, if you have an AGP graphics card, you can optionally enable
agpgart support to your kernel, either compiled in or as a module. If
you do not use the in-kernel agpgart, then the drivers will use their own
agpgart implementation, called NvAGP. On certain systems, this
performs better than the in-kernel agpgart, and on others, it performs worse.
You will need to evaluate this on your own system to get the best performance.
If you are unsure what to do, use the in-kernel agpgart:
Code Listing 3.3: Enabling agpgart |
Device Drivers --->
Graphics Support --->
-*- /dev/agpgart (AGP Support) --->
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Note:
On amd64, the IOMMU controls the agpgart setting.
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Arch-specific notes
Important:
For x86 and AMD64 processors, the in-kernel driver conflicts with the binary
driver provided by nVidia. If you will be compiling your kernel for these CPUs,
you must completely remove support for the in-kernel driver as shown:
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Code Listing 3.4: Remove the in-kernel driver |
Device Drivers --->
Graphics Support --->
<*> Support for frame buffer devices --->
< > nVidia Framebuffer Support
< > nVidia Riva support
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A framebuffer alternative is uvesafb, an advanced
framebuffer. Note that you can choose to compile it into your kernel, or
as a module. The following example compiles uvesafb into the kernel.
Code Listing 3.5: Enable uvesafb support |
Device Drivers --->
Graphics Support --->
<*> Support for frame buffer devices --->
<*> Userspace VESA VGA graphics support
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Or you can try VESA:
Code Listing 3.6: Enable VESA support |
Device Drivers --->
Graphics Support --->
<*> Support for frame buffer devices --->
[*] VESA VGA graphics support
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For more information, you can look up the documentation for your chosen
framebuffer in /usr/src/linux/Documentation/fb/.
Continuing with Kernel Configuration
The nvidia-drivers ebuild automatically discovers your kernel version
based on the /usr/src/linux symlink. Please ensure that you have
this symlink pointing to the correct sources and that your kernel is correctly
configured. Please refer to the "Configuring the Kernel" section of the Installation Handbook for details on configuring
your kernel.
First, you'll need to emerge eselect (if you don't already have it). If
you are using gentoo-sources-2.6.18-r4, your kernel listing might look
something like this:
Code Listing 3.7: Check your /usr/src/linux symlink |
# eselect kernel list
Available kernel symlink targets:
[1] linux-2.6.18-gentoo-r4 *
[2] linux-2.6.20-gentoo-r7
[3] linux-2.6.20-gentoo-r8
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In the above output, you'll notice that the linux-2.6.18-gentoo-r4 kernel
is marked with an asterisk (*) to show that it is the symlinked kernel.
If the symlink is not pointing to the correct sources, you must update the link
by selecting the number of your desired kernel sources, as in the example
above.
Code Listing 3.8: Create/Update /usr/src/linux symlink |
# eselect kernel set 1
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Installing the Appropriate Drivers
Now it's time to install the drivers.
Code Listing 3.9: Installing the nVidia drivers |
# emerge nvidia-drivers
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Note:
The drivers can be installed with the gtk USE flag set. This will install
media-video/nvidia-settings, a handy graphical tool for monitoring and
configuring several aspects of your nVidia card.
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Important:
Every time you compile a new kernel
or recompile the current one, you will need to run emerge nvidia-drivers
to reinstall the nVidia modules. An easier way to keep track of modules
installed by ebuilds (such as nvidia-drivers) is to install
sys-kernel/module-rebuild. Once you've installed it, simply run
module-rebuild populate to populate its database with a list of packages
to be rebuilt. Once you've finished compiling or recompiling a kernel, just run
module-rebuild rebuild to rebuild the drivers for your new kernel.
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Once the installation has finished, run modprobe nvidia to load the
kernel module into memory. If this is an upgrade, you should remove the
previous module first.
Code Listing 3.10: Loading the kernel module |
# lsmod | grep nvidia && rmmod nvidia
# modprobe nvidia
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To prevent you having to manually load the module on every bootup, you probably
want to have this done automatically each time you boot your system, so edit
/etc/modules.autoload.d/kernel-2.6 and add nvidia to it.
Don't forget to run update-modules afterwards.
Important:
If you compiled agpgart as a module, you will need to add it to
/etc/modules.autoload.d/kernel-2.6.
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Code Listing 3.11: Running update-modules |
# update-modules
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Configuring the X Server
Once the appropriate drivers are installed you need to configure your X Server
to use the nvidia driver instead of the default nv driver.
Open /etc/X11/xorg.conf with your favorite editor (such as
nano or vim) and go to the Device section. In that
section, change the Driver line:
Code Listing 3.12: Changing nv to nvidia in the X Server configuration |
Section "Device"
Identifier "nVidia Inc. GeForce2"
Driver "nvidia"
VideoRam 65536
EndSection
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Then go to the Module section and make sure the glx module gets
loaded while the dri module doesn't:
Code Listing 3.13: Updating the Module section |
Section "Module"
# Load "dri"
Load "glx"
EndSection
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Next, in section Screen, make sure that either the DefaultDepth
directive is set to 16 or 24, or that you only have Display subsections
with Depth settings of 16 or 24. Without it, the nVidia GLX extensions
will not start.
Code Listing 3.14: Updating the Screen section |
Section "Screen"
DefaultDepth 16
Subsection "Display"
EndSection
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Run eselect so that the X Server uses the nVidia GLX libraries:
Code Listing 3.15: Running eselect |
# eselect opengl set nvidia
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Adding your Users to the video Group
You have to add your user to the video group so he has access to the
nVidia device files:
Code Listing 3.16: Adding your user to the video group |
# gpasswd -a youruser video
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This might not be totally necessary if you aren't using udev but it
doesn't hurt either and makes your system future-proof.
Testing your Card
To test your nVidia card, fire up X and run glxinfo, which is part of the
mesa-progs package. It should say that direct rendering is activated:
Code Listing 3.17: Checking the direct rendering status |
$ glxinfo | grep direct
direct rendering: Yes
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To monitor your FPS, run glxgears.
Enabling nvidia Support
Some tools, such as mplayer and xine-lib, use a local USE flag
called xvmc which enables XvMCNVIDIA support, useful when watching high
resolution movies. Add in xvmc in your USE variable in
/etc/make.conf or add it as USE flag to media-video/mplayer
and/or media-libs/xine-lib in /etc/portage/package.use.
There are also some applications that use the nvidia USE flag, so you
may want to add it to /etc/make.conf.
Then, run emerge -uD --newuse world to rebuild the applications that
benefit from the USE flag change.
Using NVidia Settings Tool
nVidia also provides you with a settings tool. This tool allows you to monitor
and change graphical settings without restarting the X server and is available
through Portage as media-video/nvidia-settings. As mentioned earlier, it
will be pulled in automatically if you install the drivers with the gtk
USE flag set in /etc/make.conf or in
/etc/portage/package.use.
4.
Troubleshooting
Getting 2D to work on machines with 4Gb or more memory
If you are having troubles with the nVidia 2D acceleration it is likely that
you are unable to set up a write-combining range with MTRR. To verify, check
the contents of /proc/mtrr:
Code Listing 4.1: Checking if you have write-combining enabled |
# cat /proc/mtrr
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Every line should contain "write-back" or "write-combining". If you see a line
with "uncachable" in it you will need to change a BIOS setting to fix this.
Reboot and enter the BIOS, then find the MTRR settings (probably under "CPU
Settings"). Change the setting from "continuous" to "discrete" and boot back
into Linux. You will now find out that there is no "uncachable" entry anymore
and 2D acceleration now works without any glitches.
When I attempt to load the kernel module I receive a "no such device"
This usually occurs when you don't have a matching video card. Make sure that
you have an nVidia-powered graphical card (you can double-check this using
lspci).
If you are confident that you have an nVidia card, check your BIOS and see if
the directive Assign IRQ to VGA is set.
5.
Expert Configuration
Documentation
The nVidia driver package also comes with comprehensive documentation. This is
installed into /usr/share/doc and can be viewed with the following
command:
Code Listing 5.1: Viewing the NVIDIA documentation |
$ less /usr/share/doc/nvidia-drivers-*/README.gz
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Kernel module parameters
The nvidia kernel module accepts a number of parameters (options) which
you can use to tweak the behaviour of the driver. Most of these are mentioned in
the documentation. To add or change the values of these parameters, edit the
file /etc/modules.d/nvidia. Remember to run update-modules after
modifying this file, and bear in mind that you will need to reload the
nvidia module before the new settings take effect.
Code Listing 5.2: Adjusting nvidia options |
# nano -w /etc/modules.d/nvidia
# update-modules
# modprobe -r nvidia
# modprobe nvidia
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Advanced X configuration
The GLX layer also has a plethora of options which can be configured. These
control the configuration of TV out, dual displays, monitor frequency detection,
etc. Again, all of the available options are detailed in the documentation.
If you wish to use any of these options, you need to list them in the relevant
Device section of your X config file (usually /etc/X11/xorg.conf). For
example, suppose I wanted to disable the splash logo:
Code Listing 5.3: Advanced nvidia configuration in the X configuration |
Section "Device"
Identifier "nVidia Inc. GeForce2"
Driver "nvidia"
Option "NoLogo" "true"
VideoRam 65536
EndSection
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