Date: Wed, 11 Jan 2017 18:54:54 -0800 From: <soralx@cydem.org> To: <kmacy@freebsd.org> Cc: <freebsd-virtualization@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: Issues with GTX960 on CentOS7 using bhyve PCI passthru (FreeBSD 11-RC2) Message-ID: <20170111185454.59c47d1c@mscad14> In-Reply-To: <CAHM0Q_ORGbwqK2D0ThV_kZaud4%2BRaR1E=ZvVx1yWFbgH0B55Ng@mail.gmail.com> References: <20170110003332.7cf8ba15@mscad14> <0de7e0fe-5680-b1be-bd57-6bf446c2fd38@talk2dom.com> <0c927784-3e3f-7946-fba9-c25001f4156c@talk2dom.com> <20170110180117.7f246b5a@mscad14> <75abdb83-8902-1c6e-e881-5af24e5bba05@talk2dom.com> <CAHM0Q_ORGbwqK2D0ThV_kZaud4%2BRaR1E=ZvVx1yWFbgH0B55Ng@mail.gmail.com>
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> Is the VM checking documented in the driver notes somewhere? I have a It's not in their driver's "README" file. > Titan X that I need to run CUDA on and would be much happier if I > didn't have to actually switch back and forth between FreeBSD and > Ubuntu on my desktop. Are we new fairly certain that this won't work? Not certain. The idea that nVidia artificially limits the use of the non-pro cards in VMs in their drivers are only speculations. There is a possibility that certain BIOS and/or hardware features are missing in the gaming cards. > (Yet another reason to go with AMD if they ever deliver on ROCm) Yeah, AMD are pretty good for computing. And they don't seem to limit floating-point performance as severely as nVidia for non-"professional" cards. -- [SorAlx] ridin' VN2000 Classic LT
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