

- #Nvidia cuda toolkit guide install
- #Nvidia cuda toolkit guide mod
- #Nvidia cuda toolkit guide driver
- #Nvidia cuda toolkit guide archive
#Nvidia cuda toolkit guide driver
#Nvidia cuda toolkit guide archive
The error i receive is.Download Quick Links Ī more recent release is available see the CUDA Toolkit and GPU Computing SDK home pageįor older releases, see the CUDA Toolkit Release Archive
#Nvidia cuda toolkit guide install
Then i installed an older drivers (340) apt-get install nvidia-340Īfter installing the driver i ran the hashcat with. So i decide to remove all the drivers from nvidia (352) with apt-get purge nvidia* Installing the drivers for the gtx 550 worked fine and i was able to run hashcat,īut after replacing to 1 tesla k20 it stoped to work (the graphic)



Ofc they are low cards but i just want to compare betwen them. (03-08-2016, 10:17 AM)philsmd Wrote: The only thing you need to do is to install the damn nvidia driver from as recommended on (03-10-2016, 09:26 AM)stepMode Wrote: (03-09-2016, 01:21 PM)pay Wrote: from what i understand from u, installing nvidia driver is all what it need to be done for running cudahashcat, is that right? (nothing else) Ofc hashcat stoped to work right after, so what i did was apt-get install nvidia-352, and it workedįrom what i understand from u, installing nvidia driver is all what it need to be done for running cudahashcat, is that right? (nothing else) So i removed all nvidia driver then i could log back to my account. I pass that to, and then hashcat worked, but then when trying to login to my account in the gui, it did not work. Then another error came which was nouveau kernel is on and it need to be stoped.
#Nvidia cuda toolkit guide mod
I received an error which it could not installīecause of x server is on, so i had to stop it go into command line mod (ctrl + alt + f1), and killed lightdm I downloaded the recommended driver for the graphic card, I have formated my hdd and did a clean install of ubuntu 14.04 desktop, Now you might already have to uninstall a few things and clean the system, before you proceed to the only needed step and install the recommended driver from the vendor site. (btw: this is also true for AMD, but for AMD the URL is ) The only thing you need to do is to install the damn nvidia driver from as recommended on (03-08-2016, 10:17 AM)philsmd Wrote: The answer is just to *not* install anything "cuda"-related at all and do not install anything from you packet manager (because it will be outdated and probably not working). This alleviates the need to do a complete install again. So as to not completely trash my linux system, I make a backup of the linux installation partition and am able to restore it when my system fails to boot to a screen as the other poster experienced. What I've learned so far is by reading and hints from others on the web. I'm running debian 8.3 on my linux box and oclhashcat 2.01 with two geforce GTX 960s. I'm not sure what those "few things" might be. I've tried adding resolutions to it with recommendations from others having similar problems however the new resolutions are not recognized. You mentioned having to uninstall a few things and clean up the system. I assume it is something with the nf file. I've installed the nvidia driver from site and it does work, however, I cannot change screen resolutions after installation. I don't want to hijack this thread, however you mentioned installing nvidia drivers from the site so figured I would add my successes and failures.
