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doc | How to Install an Nvidia Driver | /doc/install-nvidia-driver/ |
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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 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"
Reboot to verify all this works.
Troubleshooting lack of video output during installation
Specifically, the notes below are aimed to help when the GRUB menu shows up fine, the installation environment starts loading, and then the display(s) go into standby mode. This is, typically, related to some sort of an issue with the kernel's KMS/video card modules.
Initial setup.
Note: The steps below do not produce a fully-functional Qubes OS install. Rather, only a dom0 instance is functional, and there is no networking there. However, they can be used to gather data in order to troubleshoot video card issues and/or possible other basic kernel module issues.
- Append
nomodeset ip=dhcp inst.nokill inst.vnc
to the kernel command line. Removerhgb
andquiet
to see the kernel messages scroll by, which may help in further diagnostics.- If DHCP is not available on the installation network, the syntax becomes a bit more involved. The full list of variants is documented in the [Dracut Command-line parameters] (http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/dracut.cmdline.7.html)
- The VGA console should switch into the installer's multi-virtual-terminal display. VNC may take a number of minutes to start, please be patient.
- Using the anaconda installer interface, switch to the "shell" TTY (ALT-F2), and use
ip a
command to display the IP addresses.
- Using the anaconda installer interface, switch to the "shell" TTY (ALT-F2), and use
- Using the Connect to the IP (remember the :1) using a VNC viewer.
- Follow the installation UI.
- Since this won't be a usable install, skipping LUKS encryption is an option which will simplify this troubelshooting process.
- Do not reboot at the end of the installation.
- Once the installation completes, use the local VGA console switch to TTY2 via ALT-F2
- Switch to the chroot of the newly-installed system via
chroot /mnt/sysinstall
- Set the root password (this will also enable the root account login)
- Double-check that
/boot/grub2/grub.cfg
contains anomodeset
kernel parameter. - Exit out of the chroot environment (
exit
or CTRL-D)
- Switch to the chroot of the newly-installed system via
- Reboot
Note If the kernel parameters do not include quiet
and rhgb
, the kernel messages can easily obscure the LUKS passphrase prompt. Additionally, each character entered will cause the LUKS passphrase prompt to repeat onto next line. Both of these are cosmetic. The trade-off between kernel messages and the easy-to-spot LUKS passphrase prompt is left as excercise to the user.
Gather initial dmesg
output
If all is well, the newly-installed Qubes OS instance should allow for user root to log in.
Run dmesg > dmesg.nomodeset.out
to gather an initial dmesg output.
Gather the 'video no worky' dmesg
output
- Reboot and interrupt the Grub2's process, modifying the kernel parameters to no longer contain
nomodeset
.- If the LUKS passphrase was set, blindly enter it.
- Wait for the system to finish booting (about 5 minutes, typically).
- Blindly switch to a TTY via CTRL-ALT-F2.
- Blindly log in as user root
- Blindly run
dmesg > dmesg.out
- Blindly run
reboot
(this will also serve to confirm that logging in as root, and running commands blindly is possible rather than, say, the kernel having hung or some such).- Should this step fail, perhaps by the time step #3 was underaken, the OS hasn't finished coming up yet. Please retry, possibly with a different TTY (say, 3 or 4 - so CTRL-ALT-F3?)
Exfiltrate the dmesg outputs
Allow the system to boot normally, log in as user root, and sneakernet the files off the system for analysis, review, bug logging, et cetera.