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NVIDIA 460.67 Linux Driver Brings A Few Fixes, 5.11 Kernel Compatibility

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  • NVIDIA 460.67 Linux Driver Brings A Few Fixes, 5.11 Kernel Compatibility

    Phoronix: NVIDIA 460.67 Linux Driver Brings A Few Fixes, 5.11 Kernel Compatibility

    While we are very eager to see the NVIDIA 470 series Linux driver for at least having Wayland / DMA-BUF support improvements and OpenGL 3.0 support, for now the NVIDIA 460 series is the latest public stable series and today was updated to v460.67...

    Phoronix, Linux Hardware Reviews, Linux hardware benchmarks, Linux server benchmarks, Linux benchmarking, Desktop Linux, Linux performance, Open Source graphics, Linux How To, Ubuntu benchmarks, Ubuntu hardware, Phoronix Test Suite

  • #2
    You don't actually need this for 5.11 unless of course you run into an issue. Older driver worked for me fine. Installed this one anyway.

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    • #3
      Probably just hurrying to block the fact they negated their whole new platforms that hobbled cryptomining, trying to put some GPU's into the hands of desktop users and gamers by adding the cryptohash limiters in drivers. Too bad all the cryptominers will already be buying these up with botnets and will just use their broken driver indefinitely.

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      • #4
        Originally posted by ix900 View Post
        You don't actually need this for 5.11 unless of course you run into an issue. Older driver worked for me fine. Installed this one anyway.
        Yup, 5.11+460.56 here running as smooth as ever. 5.11 compatibility must be a copy paste from a previous release.

        Originally posted by mikus View Post
        Probably just hurrying to block the fact they negated their whole new platforms that hobbled cryptomining, trying to put some GPU's into the hands of desktop users and gamers by adding the cryptohash limiters in drivers. Too bad all the cryptominers will already be buying these up with botnets and will just use their broken driver indefinitely.
        That driver doesn't seem to work in most mining scenarios: https://videocardz.com/newz/nvidia-c...-rate-limitier
        It still requires cards inserted directly into the motherboard.

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        • #5
          Originally posted by phoronix View Post
          Phoronix: NVIDIA 460.67 Linux Driver Brings A Few Fixes, 5.11 Kernel Compatibility

          While we are very eager to see the NVIDIA 470 series Linux driver for at least having Wayland / DMA-BUF support improvements and OpenGL 3.0 support, for now the NVIDIA 460 series is the latest public stable series and today was updated to v460.67...

          https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?pa...7-Linux-Driver
          OpenGL 3.0 support...are we going back in time? xD I think you meant OpenCL ;-)

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          • #6
            Waiting for the 470 Wayland-Yutoldme release.

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            • #7

              Will have beta 470?

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              • #8
                Originally posted by bug77 View Post
                That driver doesn't seem to work in most mining scenarios: https://videocardz.com/newz/nvidia-c...-rate-limitier
                It still requires cards inserted directly into the motherboard.
                What a crazy 'feature' for a driver.
                This is why open source is so important.

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by Templar82 View Post

                  What a crazy 'feature' for a driver.
                  This is why open source is so important.
                  i'm confused. people on reddit claim that 1337 hackers bypassed the limiters, but this is saying 1337 hackers didn't, rather that nvidia's incompetence left out the limiters in a driver that was released by "accident." so what's true?

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Templar82 View Post

                    What a crazy 'feature' for a driver.
                    This is why open source is so important.
                    Actually, open source is exactly why AMD can't implement an equivalent feature. The drivers being open to modification, anyone can comment out any protections.
                    (Still, open source > closed source, but open also has its drawbacks.)

                    Originally posted by fafreeman View Post

                    i'm confused. people on reddit claim that 1337 hackers bypassed the limiters, but this is saying 1337 hackers didn't, rather that nvidia's incompetence left out the limiters in a driver that was released by "accident." so what's true?

                    Nobody bypassed the protection, the claims were proven to be running other hashing algorithms, that's why the card were reporting more MH/s than expected.
                    This leaked driver indeed lacked part of the protection, but it was an internal beta (supposedly geared towards testing OpenCL under WSL), so it's pretty buggy and doesn't even work right on all cards.
                    A blunder on Nvidia's part, but not as monumental as the tech press would have you believe.

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