--- layout: doc title: How to Install an Nvidia Driver permalink: /doc/install-nvidia-driver/ redirect_from: - /en/doc/install-nvidia-driver/ - /doc/InstallNvidiaDriver/ - /wiki/InstallNvidiaDriver/ --- #Nvidia proprietary driver installation You can use rpm packages from rpmfusion, or you can build the driver yourself. ##RpmFusion packages There are rpm packages with all necessary software on rpmfusion. The only package you have to compile is the kernel module (but there is a ready built src.rpm package). ###Download packages You will need any Fedora 18 system to download and build packages. You can use Qubes AppVM for it, but it isn't necessary. To download packages from rpmfusion - add this repository to your yum configuration (instructions are on their website). Then download packages using yumdownloader: ~~~ yumdownloader --resolve xorg-x11-drv-nvidia yumdownloader --source nvidia-kmod ~~~ ###Build kernel package You will need at least kernel-devel (matching your Qubes dom0 kernel), rpmbuild tool and kmodtool, and then you can use it to build package: ~~~ yum install kernel-devel rpm-build kmodtool rpmbuild --nodeps -D "kernels `uname -r`" --rebuild nvidia-kmod-260.19.36-1.fc13.3.src.rpm ~~~ In above command replace `uname -r` with kernel version from your Qubes dom0. If everything went right, you have now complete packages with nvidia drivers for Qubes system. Transfer them to dom0 (e.g. using a USB stick) and install (using standard "yum install /path/to/file"). Then you need to disable nouveau (normally it is done by install scripts from nvidia package, but unfortunately it isn't compatible with Qubes...): Edit /etc/default/grub: ~~~ GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="quiet rhgb nouveau.modeset=0 rd.driver.blacklist=nouveau video=vesa:off" ~~~ Regenerate grub configuration: ~~~ grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/grub2/grub.cfg ~~~ Reboot. ##Manual installation This process is quite complicated: First - download the source from nvidia.com site. Here "NVIDIA-Linux-x86\_64-260.19.44.run" is used. Copy it to dom0. Every next step is done in dom0. See [this page](/doc/copy-to-dom0/) for instructions on how to transfer files to Dom0 (where there is normally no networking). **WARNING**: Nvidia doesn't sign their files. To make it worse, you are forced to download them over a plaintext connection. This means there are virtually dozens of possibilities for somebody to modify this file and provide you with a malicious/backdoored file. You should realize that installing untrusted files into your Dom0 is a bad idea. Perhaps it might be a better idea to just get a new laptop with integrated Intel GPU? You have been warned. ###Userspace components Install libraries, Xorg driver, configuration utilities. This can by done by nvidia-installer: ~~~ ./NVIDIA-Linux-x86_64-260.19.44.run --ui=none --no-x-check --keep --no-nouveau-check --no-kernel-module ~~~ ###Kernel module You will need: - nvidia kernel module sources (left from previous step) - kernel-devel package installed - gcc, make, etc This installation must be done manually, because nvidia-installer refused to install it on Xen kernel. Firstly ensure that kernel-devel package installed all needed files. This should consists of: - */usr/src/kernels/2.6.34.1-12.xenlinux.qubes.x86\_64* - */lib/modules/2.6.34.1-12.xenlinux.qubes.x86\_64/build* symlinked to the above directory - */usr/src/kernels/2.6.34.1-12.xenlinux.qubes.x86\_64/arch/x64/include/mach-xen* should be present (if not - take it from kernel sources) If all the files are not there correct the errors manually. To build kernel module, enter *NVIDIA-Linux-x86\_64-260.19.44/kernel* directory and execute: ~~~ make IGNORE_XEN_PRESENCE=1 CC="gcc -DNV_VMAP_4_PRESENT -DNV_SIGNAL_STRUCT_RLIM" make -f Makefile.kbuild mv /lib/modules/2.6.34.1-12.xenlinux.qubes.x86_64/kernel/drivers/video/nvidia.ko /lib/modules/2.6.34.1-12.xenlinux.qubes.x86_64/extra/ ~~~ Ignore any errors while inserting nvidia.ko (at the end of make phase). ###Disable nouveau: ~~~ cat /etc/modprobe.d/nouveau-disable.conf # blacklist isn't enough... install nouveau /bin/true ~~~ Add *rdblacklist=nouveau* option to /boot/grub/menu.lst (at the end of line containing *vmlinuz*). ###Configure Xorg After all, you should configure Xorg to use nvidia driver. You can use *nvidia-xconfig* or do it manually: ~~~ X -configure mv /root/xorg.conf.new /etc/X11/xorg.conf # replace Driver in Device section by "nvidia" ~~~ Now you should reboot the system.