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NVIDIA Publishes Open-Source Linux Driver Code For GPU Virtualization "vGPU" Support

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  • #21
    Originally posted by sophisticles View Post
    To all the people complaining about the consumer side, is there any demand for this among regular Joe consumers?

    Or are you all under the illusion that the large corporate clients would switch to using consumer cards if only NVIDIA wasn't so evil and greedy?
    Yes there is a demand. They could probably limit the number of virtual gpus with the firmware on consumer cards. Most of the consumer demand people are likely to just want to run one vm at a time after all. Obviously that doesn't cover everyone, but most of consumers who'd be interested.

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    • #22
      nothing stops you to use it on your workstation/pc

      just that NVidia made this feature having in mind datacenter virtual machine scenarios

      you can run it on your PC/Workstation

      do not understand all the hate I'm reading

      just there is lack of information on how to use it and people are starting to attack this new feature

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      • #23
        Originally posted by jeisom View Post

        I mostly mean using it to run games, applications or Windows itself on desktop linux in a window with full gpu acceleration. I have a Windows vm that works, but is mostly useless with regards to anything that uses the gpu that I use from time to time.

        Edit:

        Looked over the patches as I hadn't had time earlier and it has a link to a youtube video and it has more info in the patch. Linux and windows guests will work and they have a test linux guest driver that works.
        yeah that's the kind of stuff this is designed for. Cloud gaming uses nvidia + vgpu a lot.

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        • #24
          Originally posted by jeisom View Post
          Yes there is a demand. They could probably limit the number of virtual gpus with the firmware on consumer cards. Most of the consumer demand people are likely to just want to run one vm at a time after all. Obviously that doesn't cover everyone, but most of consumers who'd be interested.
          Exactly. Or they could simply forbid commercial use (on consumer hardware) in their licensing. That would easily make every big (cloud) company comply. But i doubt nvidia will ever learn to give consumers enterprise features for free.

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          • #25
            Originally posted by bernstein View Post
            Exactly. Or they could simply forbid commercial use (on consumer hardware) in their licensing. That would easily make every big (cloud) company comply. But i doubt nvidia will ever learn to give consumers enterprise features for free.
            Compared to AMD? What do you think reliable access to CUDA for things like Stable Diffusioning your own porn (the only actually-marketable use of A.I.) is?

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            • #26
              Originally posted by Quackdoc View Post

              their igpus had it. not sure if they still do. I think flex gpus have them too. IIRC there was a mod announced to get it working on the consumer dgpus but I dont think anything has materialized thus far.
              My vague recollection is that for the dgpu's it required flashing enterprise (flex?) gpu firmware on the consumer cards by bypassing some version checks. I don't think the details as to how to do it were ever publicly released.

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              • #27
                It is strange that nobody mentions it and it seems to be something that few people know about.

                AMDVLK supports SR-IOV virtualisation and works with VMware Workstation.

                I've had it running on a virtualised Windows for a while now using a single 7900XT (the same as the host).​

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                • #28
                  Originally posted by robojerk View Post
                  I was kind of under the illusion Intel is actually ahead of AMD on sriov in their GPUs.
                  Probably their onboard, I am not aware that its in the Arc Alchemist PCIe cards.

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                  • #29
                    Originally posted by ssokolow View Post
                    among people who don't want to dual-boot to game on Windows and don't want to have two separate graphics cards with one dedicated exclusively to a VM
                    This is the thing that has me wondering.

                    AMD and Nvidia are charging quite a lot for cards capable of SR-IOV​, it is likely cheaper just to have a weaker card for regular uses and the beefy GPU for use in the gaming VM and when the feature goes mainstream worry about it at that point. Especially for someone who already has a card they upgraded up from a while back.

                    Just use two cards and why worry about it.

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                    • #30
                      Heck, even just making PCIe reset perfectly reliable would already be a massive improvement over the way things worked (or rather, the way thing failed) the last few times I tried PCIe passthrough with AMD GPUs!

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