Thanks for your Helps, I downloaded *http://nyftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD-daily/HEAD/201602241810Z/images/NetBSD-7.99.26-amd64-install.img.gz <http://nyftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD-daily/HEAD/201602241810Z/images/NetBSD-7.99.26-amd64-install.img.gz>* and boot from it and my Notebook hanged on: *http://pasteboard.co/1PfvN8Bl.jpg <http://pasteboard.co/1PfvN8Bl.jpg>*
I think that working on last release is better that this hanging! On Thu, Feb 25, 2016 at 6:24 PM, Roy Bixler <rcbix...@nyx.net> wrote: > On Thu, Feb 25, 2016 at 12:37:00PM +0330, Mohammad BadieZadegan wrote: > > I have Dell E6410 Latitude notebook (With nVidia Graphic card) and I > > installed NetBSD v7.0 as a main OS on it. > > While I run [X -configure] it make a [xorg.conf.new] and then I run [X > > -config /root/xorg.conf.new] but it errored me: [(EE) No device > Detected]. > > > > Finally I changed "nv" in [xorg.conf.new] to "vesa" but still error me > > [(EE) No device Detected]! > > > > How can I resolve this nVidia issue? > > I have about a 10 year old Dell laptop with an nVidia card. In my > case, it wasn't necessary to run "X -configure". It worked, up to a > point (i.e. stability is an issue.) > > You might want to try netbsd-current, where the Nouveau driver has > been made the default framebuffer for nVidia graphics cards. I > haven't quite gotten that to work, since the PCI BARs don't seem to be > where the code expects them. > > If you hesitate to make the leap to -current, you could try booting > with a Linux LiveCD like Knoppix and see if the Nouveau framebuffer > works there. It did for me, which led me to try the experiment with > -current. > > -- > Roy Bixler <rcbix...@nyx.net> > "The fundamental principle of science, the definition almost, is this: the > sole test of the validity of any idea is experiment." > -- Richard P. Feynman > -- [image: ( openbsd.pro ---- 933k.ir )] <http://openbsd.pro>