![]() ![]() Then by default, Nvidia launches for those apps/games. The only possible automatic launch is when you have hybrid setup and launch games or apps using Proton or directly using Vulkan. On Linux dGPU never activates automatically like on Windows, because hybrid technology was designed for Windows. ![]() P.S.: I know that there’s a whole load of threads in several different forums about the matter at hand and providing solutions that range from installing FOSS drivers, which won’t work since CUDA doesn’t run on them, installing additional programs, which can be outdated and confusing, or targeted to Arch Linux or Ubuntu, and from what I find out, Manjaro does it differently. My question is, in order to avoid wasting my time, where should I start looking to properly configure my hybrid GPU laptop?Īnd if it’s impossible to only activate my dGPU to run CUDA, without having it running in the background, what’s the recommended way of using the iGPU exclusively? (without disabling it on the BIOS, I’m on a dual boot with Windows) Now that I finally have some time to work on this issue, it seems that I’m left more or less alone with trial and error until I eventually succeed, or find a post somewhere that states that this is impossible. ![]() Now it seems that Manjaro does things differently from Arch, which means that I can’t use the Arch Wiki, and the Manjaro Wiki has a warning that says it’s outdated - link. My goal is quite simple: to have a setup where the dGPU only activates when requested (which is the default on Windows).Īlthough this seems simple at first I’ve seen multiple people doing it in multiple ways, and never succeeded, at least when I tried, one year ago. Now I’ve had issues with many things so far but the only that really generated a major headache was NVIDIA related business. | GPU GI CI PID Type Process name GPU Memory | | Fan Temp Perf Pwr:Usage/Cap| Memory-Usage | GPU-Util Compute M. | GPU Name Persistence-M| Bus-Id Disp.A | Volatile Uncorr. One thing that I could never fix however, was the fact that now my dGPU is always on, because of Xorg: $ nvidia-smi Less than a year ago I needed to use CUDA for classes and, after using Manjaro with the iGPU since it was first installed, I followed a guide to install the proprietary NVIDIA drivers, as CUDA only works with them installed, and successfully managed to get CUDA up and running after some hiccups. I have a laptop with hybrid GPU: an iGPU by Intel and a dGPU (1050 Ti) by NVIDIA. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |