Date: Tue, 10 Jun 2003 18:57:06 -0700 From: "darren" <darren@quantumtheorem.com> To: freebsd-stable@freebsd.org Subject: Solution! Re: nvidia/4.8-stable Message-ID: <20030611014657.M2069@quantumtheorem.com> In-Reply-To: <20030609070718.GA94542@happy-idiot-talk.infracaninophile.co.uk> References: <20030608012118.M496@quantumtheorem.com> <20030609021420.M59766@quantumtheorem.com> <200306082154.41860.mupi@mknet.org> <20030609070718.GA94542@happy-idiot-talk.infracaninophile.co.uk>
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ok guys, since I got my system working in full, I want to share my findings. I'm sorry if some of you might think this is a newbie approach but I had this problem, and I'm sure others will. We arn't all X11R6 experts. first off, one thing wrong such as syntax in your XF86Config file and your kernel crashs, so make sure you get the right syntax, follow the README in the doc directory, you can find this inside your work directory from ports second, updateports (cvsup is fine) and make sure you have the latest of everything, I might recomend doing a recursive package delete (man pkg_delete) I did this with all the dependencies of the dependencies, ports doesn't check what version you have most of the time, and just that you have it. Install the nvidia driver LAST. third, unless you tell it to dissable hardware acceleration. I found I crashed everytime my computer tried to access it's faster speeds. It tries to do the speeds, even if they are unavailable, I assume I needed to use this at first to stop the crashes because I didn't enable anything agp related, so if you find you are crashing and would like your hardware acceleration, try enabling your agp, that is if you have an agp card like me. and for anyone curious, I own an nvidia tnt2 ultra. On Mon, 9 Jun 2003 08:07:18 +0100, Matthew Seaman wrote > On Sun, Jun 08, 2003 at 09:54:33PM -0600, Mike Porter wrote: > > On Sunday 08 June 2003 08:20 pm, darren wrote: > > > No, the nvidia driver claims it works on 4.7 and up, and then later says it > > > doesn't work on 4.8. Someone was really lazy with the documentation and > > > didn't bother proof reading it. I already had it installed and had it > > > crash my computer when I upgraded to 4.8, and yet in ports it still builds, > > > even though I crash from it. > > > > > > -Darren > > > > I guess YMMV, then, because it works fine for me, and I have 4.8. Like I > > said, I did have to jump through a few hoops, but once jumped, it has been > > working (I almost said flawlessly, but it doesn't appear to do OpenGL > > correctly; everything else in my setup works). It may be something with the > > particular card, although supposedly nvidia has a common driver interface > > that means that all of their cards, from TNT to Titanium, should work. > > When I first installed the nvidia drivers, everything was peachy. > However a few XFree86 updates[*] later, and X started to get a little > flakey on startup -- usually the xdm login screen wouldn't render > correctly. Ctrl-Alt-Backspace would restore things to normal. Then > came an X update too far, and X would crash on boot leaving the > console completely unresponsive. > > The cure was to throw away my old XF86Config and start again from > scratch. Seems that either re-ordering the FontPath elements or > modifying the Module Load stuff by dropping 'bitmap' and adding > 'xtrap' has made all the difference. Now everything is peachy once > again. > > Cheers, > > Matthew > > [*] Since the x11/nvidia-driver port fights with the > x11/XFree86-4-libraries port over the ownership of > /usr/X11R6/lib/libGL.so.1, reinstalling x11/nvidia-driver after every > update to the X11 libraries would seem to be a good idea. > > -- > Dr Matthew J Seaman MA, D.Phil. 26 The Paddocks > Savill Way > PGP: http://www.infracaninophile.co.uk/pgpkey Marlow > Tel: +44 1628 476614 Bucks., SL7 > 1TH UK -- An Important Member of http://www.quantumtheorem.com/ =)
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