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Finally we have lived long enough to see the new 180 series going stable today News according to Phoronix.
NVIDIA 180.22 x86/x86_64 Linux Driver Released
Posted by Michael Larabel on January 08, 2009Up to this point NVIDIA had released several betas in the 180.xx driver series that introduced VDPAU acceleration support, OpenGL 3.0, CUDA 2.1, and other Linux work. This afternoon all of these new features are finally supported by NVIDIA with the release of the first stable Linux driver in this latest series.
The NVIDIA 180.22 Linux driver also officially adds in support for new GeForce and Quadro GPUs, workstation performance optimizations, glyph cache by default, improved X pixmap placement, and various bug-fixes. The 180.22 release also adds in support for the latest Linux kernels.
Can't wait to upgrade
Some notes from nVidia's website concerning freshly released driver
Linux x64 (AMD64/EM64T) Display Driver
Version: 180.22
Operating System: Linux x64 (AMD64/EM64T)
Release Date: January 8, 2009Release Highlights
>Added support for the following GPUs:
Quadro FX 2700M
GeForce 9400M G
GeForce 9400M
GeForce 9800 GT
GeForce 8200M G
GeForce Go 7700
GeForce 9800M GTX
GeForce 9800M GT
GeForce 9800M GS
GeForce 9500 GT
GeForce 9700M GT
GeForce 9650M GT
GeForce 9500 GT
>Added initial support for PureVideo-like features via the new VDPAU API (see the vdpau.h header file installed with the driver).
>Added support for CUDA 2.1.
>Added preliminary support for OpenGL 3.0.
>Added new OpenGL workstation performance optimizations.
>Enabled the glyph cache by default and extended its support to all supported GPUs.
>Disabled shared memory X pixmaps by default; see the "AllowSHMPixmaps" option.
>Improved X pixmap placement on GeForce 8 series and later GPUs.
>Improved stability on some GeForce 8 series and newer GPUs.
>Fixed a regression that could result in window decoration corruption when running Compiz using Geforce 6 and 7 series GPUs.
>Fixed an nvidia-settings crash when xorg.conf contains Device and Screen sections but no ServerLayout section.
>Fixed a problem parsing the monitor sync range X config file options.
>Fixed a problem with the SDI sync skew controls in nvidia-settings.
>Fixed a problem that caused some SDI applications to hang or crash.
>Added support for SDI full-range color.
>Improved compatibility with recent Linux kernels.
Last edited by Zibi1981 (2009-01-08 22:33:18)
"... being a Linux user is sort of like living in a house inhabited by a large family of carpenters and architects. Every morning when you wake up, the house is a little different. Maybe there is a new turret, or some walls have moved. Or perhaps someone has temporarily removed the floor under your bed."
MSI Raider GE78HX 13VI-032PL
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Awesome, can't wait to see these in extra
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Alas, still no fix for the dreaded PowerMizer screen flicker bug. It's been like six months and nvidia hasn't even admitted that this bug exists. It's crap like that thats making me look really hard at ATI and their new open-sourced drivers for my next upgrade. Of course, I'd be happy to see OpenCL for linux evolve so that I can finally ditch CUDA for something GPU independent. That's holding me back right now. Well, that and the poor economy making any hardware upgrading a life decision.
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Not sure what you are referencing about the screen flicker. But on my lappy, I used to have a problem with scrolling in firefox taking a long time at first (or swtiching tabs, etc.). Turns out it was the "power saving" mode throttling back my nVidia card. I added a few settings to modprobe (I think) and make the card run at "normal" speed all the time. I can dig those up if you think you are interested. I won't be able to do it until I get back at work tomorrow morning, though, ebcause the laptop is there.
Matt
"It is very difficult to educate the educated."
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Alas, still no fix for the dreaded PowerMizer screen flicker bug. It's been like six months and nvidia hasn't even admitted that this bug exists.
Can't you Free Software users just keep giving us your money and stop whingeing? We really don't care about Linux support.
With the efforts ATI are making towards open-sourcing their drivers, and nVidia's pathetic Linux tech support and bugfix attitude, it'll be a cold day in hell before I ever buy a GeForce again.
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iBertus wrote:Alas, still no fix for the dreaded PowerMizer screen flicker bug. It's been like six months and nvidia hasn't even admitted that this bug exists.
nVidia wrote:Can't you Free Software users just keep giving us your money and stop whingeing? We really don't care about Linux support.
With the efforts ATI are making towards open-sourcing their drivers, and nVidia's pathetic Linux tech support and bugfix attitude, it'll be a cold day in hell before I ever buy a GeForce again.
That's just because you don't have ANY experience with fglrx If you think nVidia's got a pathetic Linux support, just wait to see ATI...
My victim you are meant to be
No, you cannot hide nor flee
You know what I'm looking for
Pleasure your torture, I will endure...
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*** NO FLAMES ***
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>Fixed a regression that could result in window decoration corruption when running Compiz using Geforce 6 and 7 series GPUs.
I really hope this means my troubles are over. It's been months since NVIDIA drivers became real crap on my machines...
what goes up must come down
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>Fixed a regression that could result in window decoration corruption when running Compiz using Geforce 6 and 7 series GPUs.
I really hope this means my troubles are over. It's been months since NVIDIA drivers became real crap on my machines...
That fix has been in the 180 series for a while (in fact all the above listed fixes have). I've found the "beta" (which is just a name) drivers much more stable than the "stable" ones for a while (not unusual for nvidia drivers - linux and windows).
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Super Jamie wrote:iBertus wrote:Alas, still no fix for the dreaded PowerMizer screen flicker bug. It's been like six months and nvidia hasn't even admitted that this bug exists.
nVidia wrote:Can't you Free Software users just keep giving us your money and stop whingeing? We really don't care about Linux support.
With the efforts ATI are making towards open-sourcing their drivers, and nVidia's pathetic Linux tech support and bugfix attitude, it'll be a cold day in hell before I ever buy a GeForce again.
That's just because you don't have ANY experience with fglrx If you think nVidia's got a pathetic Linux support, just wait to see ATI...
I had an old Radeon 8500 that worked great with the old drivers of the time. Granted, that was before compiz was around, but it was still a rock solid card. I have no problem with either company, but I've just favored ATI and AMD over the years.
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Has anyone tried those drivers yet, or all are waiting for them to hit official repos? Experiences?
"... being a Linux user is sort of like living in a house inhabited by a large family of carpenters and architects. Every morning when you wake up, the house is a little different. Maybe there is a new turret, or some walls have moved. Or perhaps someone has temporarily removed the floor under your bed."
MSI Raider GE78HX 13VI-032PL
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i'm curios to find out where is opengl 3.0
glxinfo | grep OpenGL
OpenGL vendor string: NVIDIA Corporation
OpenGL renderer string: GeForce 8600M GT/PCI/SSE2
OpenGL version string: 2.1.2 NVIDIA 180.22
OpenGL shading language version string: 1.20 NVIDIA via Cg compiler
EDIT: maybe there is but it doesn't been used by xorg
Last edited by wonder (2009-01-09 20:57:31)
Give what you have. To someone, it may be better than you dare to think.
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Don't you need to have GPU which support OpenGL 3.0? Are there any available at the moment?
"... being a Linux user is sort of like living in a house inhabited by a large family of carpenters and architects. Every morning when you wake up, the house is a little different. Maybe there is a new turret, or some walls have moved. Or perhaps someone has temporarily removed the floor under your bed."
MSI Raider GE78HX 13VI-032PL
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Has anyone tried those drivers yet, or all are waiting for them to hit official repos? Experiences?
I'm using the 32 bit 180.22 drivers on Arch i686 on a 64 bit Motherboard/CPU. No problems so far. I'm running Stanford's Windows XP 32 bit GPU folding client through WINE, which requires CUDA for the parallel processing of the 8000 and 9000 series Nvidia GPUs. Before 180.22, I have used 180.06, and I think it was 180.11 Beta with no problems.
Pudge
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>Fixed a regression that could result in window decoration corruption when running Compiz using Geforce 6 and 7 series GPUs.
Yup, I had this problem in Ubuntu. At least nvidia makes a decent attempt at supporting laptop gpu's on linux. For Windows they basically say "go screw yourself".
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nice news, wait for update in extra repository
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Don't you need to have GPU which support OpenGL 3.0? Are there any available at the moment?
Now I can answer myself by providing the following link
"... being a Linux user is sort of like living in a house inhabited by a large family of carpenters and architects. Every morning when you wake up, the house is a little different. Maybe there is a new turret, or some walls have moved. Or perhaps someone has temporarily removed the floor under your bed."
MSI Raider GE78HX 13VI-032PL
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thx. seems that my card has opengl 3 support
Give what you have. To someone, it may be better than you dare to think.
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Suspend still not working.
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Oh that's good news! I hope that the new driver will solve some performance issues that I still have with KDE 4, like resizing windows. The other stuff is working great meanwhile.
I can't wait for the new driver to hit the extra repo Yes I know, I'm sooo greedy
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Suspend still not working.
What graphic chip do you have, and what issue do you have exactly?
I got a COMPAL laptop with a GF7600, it worked spot on @ ubuntu 8.04 (and earlier archlinux), ever since the introduction of 173 and 177 I have issues with the window titlebars with compiz.
Those are less annoying than no suspend tho ;-)
And the nv driver from x.org does the same ugly thing, it fails at suspending for me ;>
edit: suspends fine for me:-) 180.11 @ 2.6.27 :-)
Last edited by imachine (2009-01-11 22:31:28)
a nail that sticks out, is hammered down.
aha.
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I wouldn't recommend this driver. I had an issue (messy picture on screen and hard system lockup) that has been reported many times on nvnews.net. I used beta driver, but they didn't change it in stable. I will stay with 177.xx. I don't want to scary you but one user has reported that this issue broke his card.
EDIT: some evidence http://www.nvnews.net/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=123912
Last edited by connexion2000 (2009-01-14 10:40:34)
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are you guys using the new driver from testing or from aur ("nvidia-beta, nvidia-utils-beta")? i installed the aur version, seems working for me
"I know what you're thinking, 'cause right now I'm thinking the same thing. Actually, I've been thinking it ever since I got here:
Why oh why didn't I take the BLUE pill?"
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are you guys using the new driver from testing or from aur ("nvidia-beta, nvidia-utils-beta")? i installed the aur version, seems working for me
Was using aur betas, worked great, when they hit testing I switched to them (just to make future updates easier), work great.
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are you guys using the new driver from testing or from aur ("nvidia-beta, nvidia-utils-beta")? i installed the aur version, seems working for me
working for me too.
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