** Changed in: hwe-next
Status: New => Fix Released
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Title:
SRU: PRIME Power Saving mode draws too much
The issue persists on 19.04.
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Title:
SRU: PRIME Power Saving mode draws too much power
Status in HWE Next:
Is there a way to test this patch with the 418 driver? I have an RTX
2070, which is not supported by the 390 driver, but I'd really like my
battery life back.
When I try to follow the instructions from the report, but replacing 390
with 418, it doesn't work (predictably).
$ sudo apt install nvidi
After seeing Alex's post, I tried installing 410.104-0ubuntu0~18.10.1 from
ppa:graphics-drivers.
Using 4.18.0-16-generic kernel.
I find that when I use Intel profile, powertop reports the nvidia card as 0%
active, and the setting in Tunables shows up as Good.
However, /proc/acpi/bbswitch reports
With kernel 4.18 and 410.104 drivers, it seems to work properly for me.
Ubuntu 18.04.2 LTS on a Dell Inspiron Gaming 7000 with nvidia GeForce
GTX 1050 Ti, Gnome.
I am here because a couple patches ago, I lost ability to resume from
sleep. Opening the lid, it would just hang in black screen, requ
@Alberto I'm afraid I have to add to the pile of users reporting issues
here. Kernel 4.20.14 with 418.43 drivers. Ubuntu 18.04.2 LTS, on an X1
Extreme.
Using both GDM3 and lightdm, "prime-switch intel" doesn't seem to power
off the nvidia GPU. power seems to go between 25-35W on battery. Using
pow
After spending some more time with this, I can confirm that this is
definitely a regression. Both nouveau and the old bbswitch based method
in 16.04 were able to power off the nvidia card successfully when not in
use. The current implementation of prime-select in 18.04 doesn't do
that. It may be th
@Alberto, with prime-select intel as well as with bbswitch off, powertop
shows the nvidia tunable as "good". Still, the battery's discharge rate
on idle remains pretty high (around 20W) on prime-select intel. With
bbswitch off, it drops to 13W or thereabouts. Do you need any more
information ?
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@dustya
Thanks a lot for the feedback. I think that I will install both operating
systems on the laptop, and check what happens.
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> * If I understand correctly, the bug does not occur in Ubuntu 18.10.
The user can switch seamlessly between using the Intel or the Nvidia
discrete graphics card. Is this correct?
@jespestana
No, this bug is affecting me on 18.10.
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I am very interested on the status of this bug, since I am considering
which version of Ubuntu to install. I have just 3 questions about it:
* If I understand correctly, the bug does not occur in Ubuntu 18.10. The user
can switch seamlessly between using the Intel or the Nvidia discrete graphics
I observed the same behaviour as Adrian S..
Selecting Intel keeps the Nvidia card powered and the fan spinning.
Installing and using bbswitch manually works. I can't make it working powering
off the card at boot time :( Therefore I have to do it manually every time I
boot my notebook.
MX150, Ub
I can confirm that installing nvidia-390 through the Ubuntu driver dialog, and
then using nvidia-settings or prime-select to set intel keeps the nvidia card
on for me on my GeForce 840M laptop.
I can also confirm Installing bbswitch-dkms and turning it off through bbswitch
works.
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@Alberto:
Sorry for the lateness of my reply, apparently Launchpad doesn't
automatically subscribe me just because I commented...
Anyway, I am attaching both gpu-manager.log and gpu-manager-switch.log
for when both the Nvidia profile and Intel profiles are selected.
FWIW, I discovered that once
I noticed off a clean boot on Intel gpu-manager.log was different from
when I just logged out and logged back in so I'm attaching that file
now.
No change as far as power consumption goes though.
** Attachment added: "gpu-manager.log"
https://bugs.launchpad.net/hwe-next/+bug/1778011/+attachme
@Fink: I would like to see powertop when you don't use bbswitch (and the
Nvidia GPU is on). More specifically, I would like to know if you can
disable the Nvidia GPU using the "Tunables" tab from powertop.
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Pe4enko: Here is your problem:
NVRM: API mismatch: the client has the version 410.66, but
NVRM: this kernel module has the version 390.87. Please
NVRM: make sure that this kernel module and all NVIDIA driver
NVRM: components have the same version.
It looks like you installed the 410.66 driver (ma
Attached powertop images. I'm not sure how accurate powertop's values
and distributions are. With prime-select intel, the total estimated
power remains high although it doesn't attribute it to nvidia. bbswitch
also stays on. I've also attached a bbswitch off capture after prime-
select intel. That
Should it work on ubuntu 18.10? I try to install 390 driver. After this i run
command
sudo prime-select nvidia and restart system. But GUI no work anymore. In kernel
log i see errors.
My video card is geforce 750M
Jan 11 02:38:17 lblack kernel: [ 121.613281] nvidia: loading out-of-tree
module
also, we do not rely on bbswitch any more.
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Title:
SRU: PRIME Power Saving mode draws too much power
Status in HWE Next:
@Dan: I would like to see your /var/log/gpu-manager.log when in power
saving mode.
@Fink: please install powertop, launch it by typing "sudo powertop", and
get to the "device stats" tab, to see what's drawing power. You can
attach a screenshot of that.
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Thinkpad w530. Still looks like the nvidia gpu isn't turning off.
bionic+lightdm+unity7. Log attached.
prime-select query
intel
cat /proc/acpi/bbswitch
:01:00.0 ON
** Attachment added: "gpu-manager.log"
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/nvidia-prime/+bug/1778011/+attachment/5226
I'm still experiencing high power consumption with GDM3 on Cosmic with
0.8.10 of nvidia-prime. Can provide logs/hardware info if it's helpful,
just let me know what you need. Nouveau or manually disabling the DGPU
in the BIOS behaves as expected.
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I'm still experiencing high power consumption with GDM3 on Cosmic with
0.8.10 of nvidia-prime. Can provide logs/hardware info if it's helpful,
just let me know what you need. Nouveau or manually disabling the DGPU
in the BIOS behaves as expected.
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@Krzysztof: The NVIDIA GPU is more powerful, but also more power hungry
than the Intel GPU. This is why you are seeing such a high power
consumption.
If you select the Intel GPU, through prime-select, then you will lose
the HDMI, but power consumption should also go down. If it doesn't, it
is a bu
@Gregor: that shouldn't be an issue any more, assuming that you are
using the latest updates, and that you are using the nvidia driver from
the ubuntu archive.
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http
@Chris, Thanks for your reply. I know, my point is a bit different. If I
set the bios to discrete only, I get an HDMI signal. If I set the bios
option to hybrid, I can use prime-select to switch between intel and
nvidia but in both cases I cannot use HDMI anymore and in both cases
power consumption
@janowicz The HDMI port on the Thinkpad X1 Extreme is physically
connected to the Nvidia chip, so it ONLY works if you are using the
Nvidia card, not the Intel Integrated graphics.
This is the case with several of the latest laptops with Nvidia GTX 1050
cards in them.
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@Alberto: Thanks a lot for your help! There is no such setting in the
BIOS of the Thinkpad X1 Extreme. I can either select discrete only or
hybrid cards. I was finally able to get prime-select to switch to intel
but the rate remains at like 20W which is essentially the same as using
the nvidia card
** Attachment added: "prime-select query = intel"
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/nvidia-prime/+bug/1778011/+attachment/5214282/+files/gpu-manager.log
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Hi,
Thinkpad P1 Quadro P1000. prime-select also not working.
after prime-select intel and a rebeoot nouveau is driving the GPU but not intel.
Thanks
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My gpu-manager.log (Intel selected)
** Attachment added: "gpu-manager.log"
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/nvidia-prime/+bug/1778011/+attachment/5213565/+files/gpu-manager.log
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My laptop is MSI GE60 0NC
CPU: Intel i5-3210M, GPU: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 660M
Running Kubuntu 18.10
As in comment
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/nvidia-prime/+bug/1778011/comments/13
my laptop has a led indicating if Nvidia GPU is on and according to it Nvidia
GPU does not power off wh
Sorry wrong file this is the file with the $ prime-select intel
** Attachment added: "gpu-manager.log"
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/nvidia-prime/+bug/1778011/+attachment/5213087/+files/gpu-manager.log
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@albertomilone here is my gpu-manager.log this is a fresh install and
all updates have been made
** Attachment added: "gpu-manager.log"
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/nvidia-prime/+bug/1778011/+attachment/5213084/+files/gpu-manager.log
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@Fernando: we don't support hybrid graphics without using a display
manager, as that would prevent gpu-manager from running at the right
time.
@Michael: I can only assume there was some failure somewhere when
setting the power state of the NVIDIA GPU (the dmesg output might help).
There are indeed
@Alberto: here you go. The card is a GeForce GTX 1050 Ti with Max-Q
Design/PCIe/SSE2 in a Thinkpad X1 Extreme.
** Attachment added: "gpu-manager.log"
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/nvidia-prime/+bug/1778011/+attachment/5211182/+files/gpu-manager.log
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Hi Alberto,
just wanted to let you know that I made a new and clean install of Ubuntu 18.10
and now switching to Intel GPU works from the start.
Thank you so much for your work.
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** Attachment added: "My gpu-manager log file"
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/nvidia-prime/+bug/1778011/+attachment/5211042/+files/gpu-manager.log
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ht
For me the power management isn't working, too.
The fan is always running and my notebook is getting hot.
I'm using Ubuntu 18.04 and installed the default nvidia driver 390.
My machine is an ASUS UX331UN with an nvidia mx150.
Currently my workaround is to install bbswitch and turn the nvidia
gra
Status changed to 'Confirmed' because the bug affects multiple users.
** Changed in: sddm (Ubuntu Bionic)
Status: New => Confirmed
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Status changed to 'Confirmed' because the bug affects multiple users.
** Changed in: sddm (Ubuntu)
Status: New => Confirmed
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** Also affects: sddm (Ubuntu)
Importance: Undecided
Status: New
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Title:
SRU: PRIME Power Saving mode draws too
@Alberto: Is there any chance that this work-around works without gdm3?
I'm using ubuntu-server 18.04 and this my laptop configuration:
➜ ~ inxi -G
Graphics: Card-1: Intel HD Graphics 5500
Card-2: NVIDIA GK208M [GeForce 920M]
Display Server: X.Org 1.19.6 driver: intel Resol
@Krzysztof: I don't think your GPU is the same as Andrew's. Please
attach your /var/log/gpu-manager.log
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Title:
SRU: PRIME
@Andrew, @Alberto: Looks like many Thinkpad X1 Extreme users are
reporting the same issue where prime-select seems to work but does not
power of the nvidia card nor shows up in nvidia-settings. I followed the
instructions the same way Andrew did and got the same 'not found'
message. I assumed the p
@Leandro: please attach your /var/log/gpu-manager.log , as that might
give me a clue about your system.
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Title:
SRU: PRIME
@albertomilone
so this is happening to me since 18.04 is my gpu not supported also?
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Title:
SRU: PRIME Power Saving mode d
@Andrew: sorry, but your GPU is supported only by the 340 legacy driver,
and we do not support hybrid graphics with that driver.
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UPDATE: I found the packages in bionic-updates.
After setting prime-select nvidia and logging out, I got the attached
/var/log/gpu-manager.log.
It says that nvidia is not loaded, and my laptop still runs hot.
When I set prime-select intel, log out, and back in, nvidia is still not
loaded (accord
@Alberto
This is my first time on launchpad, so please forgive any noob errors.
I followed the instructions to the letter:
I enabled bionic-proposed with: sudo add-apt-repository "deb
http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ $(lsb_release -sc)-proposed restricted main
universe"
I created /etc/apt/pref
@Alberto,
As you suggest, I did some tests with lightdm on Ubuntu 18.10 and it's
working. Low battery usage with Intel and second monitor working with
Nvidia.
Thanks for your answer.
Renato
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Or should I maybe try to make a clean install of 18.10 as you said that
it should be fixed in it and maybe I just have some stuff from 18.04
still here that does not work and I am not experienced enough to find
it? I just thought that there would be a way to make it work here.
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@Alberto,
thank you for your answer. I have answerd your question on the Discord where
you have also asked for testing.
(https://discourse.ubuntu.com/t/call-for-testing-nvidia-prime-in-ubuntu-18-04-and-18-10/8207/4)
Sorry for my lack of understanding, but I am not quite sure what the problem
is
@Alberto, I switched back to Ubuntu 18.04 and now everything is working.
Now I can switch to Intel with low power consumption and no external monitor
how it was ever, and when I switch back to Nvidia, I can use external monitor
normally.
Next weekend I`ll try again with Lightdm and tell you, ok?
Hi,
I believe that I am also affected by this bug.
Graphics driver is nvidia-driver-410 on 18.04 (410.66-0ubuntu0~gpu18.04.1)
DM is sddm (0.17.0-2+18.04+bionic+build14)
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@Stefan: it seems to me that you didn't install nvidia-prime from the
Ubuntu archive.
@Renato: does it solve your problem if you install lightdm, and you use
it instead of gdm?
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Sory, I can't use external monitors
Do you have any tip?
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Title:
SRU: PRIME Power Saving mode draws too much power
Statu
Hi Alberto!
I was using Ubuntu 18.04 for a time, and today I decided do install
Ubuntu 18.10 again e see if everything is fine. I did a clean
installation but the problem persist and I can use external monitors
Do you have any tip?
Thanks man!
PS: Power consumption is very low now when nvidia i
Xorg.0.log
** Attachment added: "Xorg.0.log"
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/nvidia-prime/+bug/1778011/+attachment/5203813/+files/Xorg.0.log
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Additional:
If I try sudo prime-select intel, this is what I get:
Info: selecting the intel profile
Failed to disable unit: Unit file nvidia-fallback.service does not exist.
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/local/bin/prime-select", line 334, in
switcher.enable_profile(arg)
F
Hi Alberto,
I was having this issues for a long time and since I am not a very experienced
user I thought to just wait for 18.10 and that it would be fixed there
automatically. So today I upgraded and still face the same problem. I cannot
even open the Nvidia x server settings. Could you maybe
@Anton: you are using gdm3, right? (you can check it with "ps aux | grep
gdm")
@Josh: this bug report: LP: #1797147
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Title:
Is there another bug I can follow to find out when LightDM will receive
support for this update?
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Title:
SRU: PRIME Power
After this change:
nvidia-prime (0.8.8.1) bionic; urgency=medium
- Enable KMS by default
My external displays stopped working.
Ubuntu 18.04 (4.15.0-36-generic), nvidia-390.77, Lenovo ThinkPad P50 with
NVIDIA M1000M.
I use Communitheme X session. Disabling KMS restores external displays.
--
Yo
This bug was fixed in the package nvidia-graphics-drivers-390 -
390.77-0ubuntu0.18.04.1
---
nvidia-graphics-drivers-390 (390.77-0ubuntu0.18.04.1) bionic; urgency=medium
* New upstream release:
- Improved compatibility with recent Linux kernels.
- Fixed an intermittent hang o
This bug was fixed in the package ubuntu-drivers-common - 1:0.5.2.1
---
ubuntu-drivers-common (1:0.5.2.1) bionic; urgency=medium
* debian/rules:
- Make sure to remove "__pycache__" directory.
* debian/source/options:
- Ignore the "__pycache__" directory.
* gpu-manager.(c
This bug was fixed in the package nvidia-prime - 0.8.8.1
---
nvidia-prime (0.8.8.1) bionic; urgency=medium
[ Alberto Milone ]
* 90-nvidia.conf,
debian/rules,
prime-select:
- Make sure to remove the old blacklist file.
- Use /lib for blacklist-nvidia.conf.
- Do
This bug was fixed in the package nvidia-settings -
390.77-0ubuntu0.18.04.1
---
nvidia-settings (390.77-0ubuntu0.18.04.1) bionic; urgency=medium
* New upstream release.
* 08_add_prime_support.patch:
- Recommend a simple log out (LP: #1778011).
-- Alberto Milone Thu, 02 Aug
You are using 4.18.12-041812-generic, which is not a supported kernel. You
can uninstall the nvidia driver doing the following:
sudo apt-get --purge remove libnvidia* nvidia-*
On Sun, 7 Oct 2018 at 14:55, Unkraut <1778...@bugs.launchpad.net> wrote:
> Please add rollback instructions. I'm now stu
Please add rollback instructions. I'm now stuck with a broken intel
driver.
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Title:
SRU: PRIME Power Saving mode draws too
I tested this on a Dell XPS 15 9570.
When using the kernel is 4.18.12-041812-generic, boot options:
acpi_rev_override=5 acpi_osi=Linux scsi_mod.use_blk_mq=1 and selecting nvidia I
don't get any graphical login.I have to switch to intel via the recovery root
console.
When selecting intel, power
I tested with i7 Broadwell and GTX 850M and I think it works. I'm
sending the log also.
** Attachment added: "i7broadweel_GTX850M_gpu-manager.log"
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/ubuntu-drivers-common/+bug/1778011/+attachment/5198239/+files/i7broadweel_GTX850M_gpu-manager.log
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Thanks a lot, it works very well in Ubuntu 18.04 with Xiaomi Air 13
Really appreciated :)
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Title:
SRU: PRIME Power Saving
Tested with MSI PE70 7RD ( Intel i7-7700HQ and GeForce GTX 1050 ) and
Ubuntu 18.04 fresh install.
Proposed Packages install fine. Change of graphic with PRIME and log
out/in working fast and without problem. Nvidia driver is not loaded in
Power Saving Mode and power is OK ~10W idle. Led indicates
@Renato: I might have a fix for external display in 18.10. If it works
correctly, I'll backport it to 18.04.
@Luiz: Gdm 3 creates one main X (or XWayland) session, and then starts
an additional X for the user session. It's the default behaviour.
I suspect PRIME synchronisation is only meant to ha
Correction:
xrandr --output eDP-1-1 --set "PRIME Synchronization" 1
xrandr --output HDMI-1-1 --set "PRIME Synchronization" 1
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I am ubuntu on 18.04.1 LTS.
With intel integrated gpu things are normal. With my nvidia gpu occured
two problems:
* I disabled login screen because it was creating two intances of Xorg
and gnome-shell each. I can see these with top and nvidia-smi. It
decreased cpu temps a lot even in idle time.
Tested with Dell XPS 9560 and Ubuntu 18.04.
After installing the proposed packages and rebooting, everything booted
correctly, although the nvidia driver was still loaded (I had my system
set to use intel) and power use was quite high (~23W).
*But* after following the test case steps and switchin
Xorg.0.log using NVIDIA
** Attachment added: "Xorg.log"
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/nvidia-prime/+bug/1778011/+attachment/5195329/+files/Xorg.0.log
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Now I have problem with nvidia card. I Can't use external monitor and
gnome-shell is using 100% of CPU all the time.
With intel, everything is Ok. Low battery usage as expected.
My system is a Dell Inspiron Gaming with intel i7-7700HQ and GeForce GTX
1050 Ti
** Attachment added: "gpu-manager.log
just to give some more feedback,
I have a optimus laptop with i7 Sandybridge and nvidia GT550M, there is a led
that indicates the nvidia GPU is always in use also after using the proposed
repos to test, the laptop is indeed very hot also after I select intel and
reboot and the led indicates that
Tested on Dell Precission 5520 with Ubuntu 18.04. This suffer from a
consistently high power usage in the Intel (Power saving) mode.
Proposed Packages install fine. After reboot switching Prime profile did
not seem applied with logout+login. Reboot was required. After a further
'apt upgrade' which
This bug was fixed in the package gdm3 - 3.28.3-0ubuntu18.04.1
---
gdm3 (3.28.3-0ubuntu18.04.1) bionic; urgency=medium
[ Iain Lane ]
* New upstream release 3.28.3 (LP: #1786933):
- CVE-2018-14424 - double free fix
+ 0001-display-store-Pass-the-display-object-rather-than-
Hello, I saw the request for testing from the article here:
http://albertomilone.com/blog/?p=670
I 'm running Ubuntu Mate 18.04 in a laptop with i5-7300hq and 1050ti.
I didn't know of the problems mentioned but I 'd taken to switching gpus
from the command line with prime-select and rebooting be
@Arthur: you probably need to install the 32 bit libraries manually from
-proposed. Try with the following command:
sudo apt install libnvidia-gl-390:i386/bionic-proposed
as for 2), I would need some logs such as /var/log/gpu-manager.log after
reproducing the problem.
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@Aurelijus: not yet. I am going to add support for lightdm and for sddm
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Title:
SRU: PRIME Power Savin
I installed the packages from -proposed as per the instructions and had
two issues:
1. Steam fails to launch with NVIDIA due to a "glXChooseVisual failed"
error, which some cursory Googling suggests is due to a lack of 32-bit
libraries—perhaps this is expected.
2. After switching from NVIDIA to I
I was affected too, system info:
Asus-K43SD:
CPU: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-2450M CPU @ 2.50GHz
GPU: NVIDIA Corporation GF119M [GeForce 610M] (rev a1) - [GeForce
610M/PCIe/SSE2]
OS: 18.04 x64
Test update, works perfectly. Switching between Intel & NVIDIA happens
right after logging out
I was affected too, system info:
Asus-K43SD:
CPU: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-2450M CPU @ 2.50GHz
GPU: NVIDIA Corporation GF119M [GeForce 610M] (rev a1) - [GeForce
610M/PCIe/SSE2]
OS: 18.04 x64
Test update, works perfectly. Switching between Intel & NVIDIABut GDM3
gone crazy(i guess it's
Sorry, I pressed wrong key!!!
I was affected too, system info:
Asus-K43SD:
CPU: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-2450M CPU @ 2.50GHz
GPU: NVIDIA Corporation GF119M [GeForce 610M] (rev a1) - [GeForce
610M/PCIe/SSE2]
OS: 18.04 x64
Test update, works perfectly. Switching between Intel & NVIDIA
@Alberto I was assuming that this should also work with sddm (on
Kubuntu), but apparently not out of the box. Is there already something
to test there?
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** Tags added: originate-from-1788575 somerville
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1778011
Title:
SRU: PRIME Power Saving mode draws too much power
Status in HWE
I don't know if they updated the 396 packages to reflect my changes in
nvidia-390.
On Thu, 20 Sep 2018 at 22:00, Vlad Svitlichniy
wrote:
> Is this fix related to nvidia-390 only or will nvidia-396 from graphics-
> drivers/ppa benefit from it as well?
>
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Is this fix related to nvidia-390 only or will nvidia-396 from graphics-
drivers/ppa benefit from it as well?
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1778011
Title:
SRU:
after updated all the 5 packages below to new version, this issue seems
fixed in my quick testing.
nvidia-driver-390 (390.77-0ubuntu0.18.04.1)
gdm3 (3.28.3-0ubuntu18.04.1)
ubuntu-drivers-common (1:0.5.2.1)
nvidia-prime (0.8.8.1)
nvidia-settings (390.77-0ubuntu0.18.04.1)
** Tags removed: verificat
@ubname: installing the meta-package worked here, but you can install
the single packages manually:
sudo apt install libnvidia-gl-390/bionic-proposed libnvidia-compute-390
/bionic-proposed libnvidia-decode-390/bionic-proposed libnvidia-
encode-390/bionic-proposed libnvidia-ifr1-390/bionic-proposed
I've try to test without success, also following Alberto's procedure #40
packages have dependencies problems:
Versione "390.77-0ubuntu0.18.04.1" (Ubuntu:18.04/bionic-proposed [amd64])
selezionata per "nvidia-driver-390"
Versione "390.77-0ubuntu0.18.04.1" (Ubuntu:18.04/bionic-proposed [amd64])
se
@Thomas: sorry but support for Lightdm and SDDM will be available in the
next update.
On Thu, 20 Sep 2018 at 10:06, Thomas Rupprecht <
rupprecht.thomas+launch...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Should this also work with Kubuntu 18.04 with SDDM instead of GDM3?
>
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Should this also work with Kubuntu 18.04 with SDDM instead of GDM3?
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Title:
SRU: PRIME Power Saving mode draws too much po
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