

This started when I switched a setting in ‘nvidia-settings’ from “nvidia” to "on-demand’, and I’m wondering if the reason it broke things is because the nvidia driver didn’t know how to deal with the stuff from that ppa. I’m wondering if installing 3rd-party mesa drivers for my iGPU is the reason why I’m having issues now. I’m going to boot a 5.8 kernel and see if I’ll be able to use my GPU with that. This is probably because I didn’t properly uninstall the driver that I had installed beforehand, but I’m not certain. It said that nvidia-drm and I think something else too failed to install. I wouldn’t mind using the 460.39 version, but I wasn’t able to get it working. The stock kernel on my distribution is 5.4.0-65 at the moment, and I’ve got a 5.4.0-26 installed as well from when I first put this OS on my laptop. I don’t have a 5.8 kernel version installed right now.

15 percent are at and the other 5 percent are on GitHub. Once you wrap your head around it its super easy to get outstanding performance.This is totally wrong but completely right.Think of dkms as to install the nVidia driver for the kernels your not using.Run pciutils and fwupd before and after every driver, firmware and kernel change.Why? Example: Location and Size of vulkan Shader Cache in 460.ALWAYS completely purge nvidia* libnvidia on every kernel / driver change.

