With Mandriva/Mageia you can't install the drivers using the Nvidia .run packages as they conflict with something inside the system and crash it. However there is a script available that converts the .run file into 5 RPM's which can be installed using urpmi. Obviously this effects PCLOS as it is Mandriva derived as well.
There is a possible version clash here. The CUDA libraries version from Mageia is labelled 3.2.16, as I posted above the PCLOS version is 302.17. Whether the numbering sequence is related or not I don't know.
If you can think of any reason why the PCLOS install did not work I'd be interested to hear your thoughts.
Quote from: Terror Australis on 26 Jun 2012, 12:15:49 pmWith Mandriva/Mageia you can't install the drivers using the Nvidia .run packages as they conflict with something inside the system and crash it. However there is a script available that converts the .run file into 5 RPM's which can be installed using urpmi. Obviously this effects PCLOS as it is Mandriva derived as well.Where did you read that? Searching google for "pclinuxos nvidia driver how to" didn't show anything remotely close to an nvidia driver installation guide for pclinuxos in the first 2-3 pages I looked at.
Anyway working from a livecd (why isn't there any 64bit livecd mentioned at all at the official site and wiki? ? I dug it out from the ftp mirrors) I installed the nvidia driver 302.17 with no problem (just a garbled screen during installation), seti works fine and boinc 6.10.58 recognized a 470 nicely.
Before I installed the nvidia driver I --purge removed:......
There is a possible version clash here. The CUDA libraries version from Mageia is labelled 3.2.16, as I posted above the PCLOS version is 302.17. Whether the numbering sequence is related or not I don't know.Don't be confused by those two numbers. They are completely different. 302.17 is a driver version, 3.2.16 is a cuda version.
Quote from: Terror Australis on 26 Jun 2012, 12:15:49 pmIf you can think of any reason why the PCLOS install did not work I'd be interested to hear your thoughts.-Maybe the script you mention doesn't do a good job. You don't need it anyway.
-You also don't need any cuda related packages installed from the repositories. Only the files I mentioned in my other post.
If you do not use RPM packages to install the driver and instead run theNVIDIA installer directly, it will overwrite some system files with thefollowing consequences:- X server will fail to start if you update kernel or x11-server packages
- 3D acceleration will stop working if you update mesa packages
- switching to non-proprietary driver using XFdrake will not work