Few days ago I did the weekly system update which included latest NVIDIA drivers. Everything went smoothly, no error messages, systems works as usual. Today I wanted to play some game and I noticed that the performance was horrible. This is what I found
lspci -k | grep -A 2 -E "(VGA|3D)"
00:02.0 VGA compatible controller: Intel Corporation Alder Lake-P GT2 [Iris Xe Graphics] (rev 0c)
Subsystem: Dell Device 0aff
Kernel driver in use: i915
--
01:00.0 VGA compatible controller: NVIDIA Corporation GA106M [GeForce RTX 3060 Mobile / Max-Q] (rev a1)
Subsystem: Dell Device 0aff
Kernel driver in use: nvidia
xrandr --listproviders
Providers: number : 0
I've tried to reinstall drivers, and ran some fixes I found online but still no luck. Any ideas how to fix it?
update
Just remembered. After last drivers update I wasn't able to run any Steam game. I always got some directx error. Before I had no issues.
update 2
I'm on Fedora 40, currently I'm using drivers downloaded directly from NVIDIA website. Before that I was using whatever drivers from these repositories
dnf repolist
repo id repo name
fedora Fedora 40 - x86_64
fedora-cisco-openh264 Fedora 40 openh264 (From Cisco) - x86_64
nvidia-container-toolkit nvidia-container-toolkit
protonvpn-fedora-stable ProtonVPN Fedora Stable repository
rpmfusion-free RPM Fusion for Fedora 40 - Free
rpmfusion-free-updates RPM Fusion for Fedora 40 - Free - Updates
rpmfusion-nonfree RPM Fusion for Fedora 40 - Nonfree
rpmfusion-nonfree-updates RPM Fusion for Fedora 40 - Nonfree - Updates
updates
The only thing I remember related to messing with drivers was playing with podman containers accessing my gpu (nvidia-container-toolkit).
Currently I'm using driver version 550.107.02
Installing drivers manually was the last resort. Before that I did the
sudo dnf install akmod-nvidia
.This is what you should be using on Fedora. Though take note, after each kernel update, you need to allow the module some time to rebuild, then reboot to ensure it got loaded properly.
Try running:
'dnf reinstall kernel-modules'
then reboot. This will trigger a cascading rebuild of the kernel modules that get rebuilt on every kernel update.
It didn't work. At this point I'm considering nuking the whole thing and start with the fresh system. If it won't work I will buy a Windows PC just for gaming.
Blacklist nouveau, install the akmod, you'll be fine
Already did that. Didn't help.
Well then follow every single guide online that is telling you exactly what people here are telling you. Remove every single Nvidia package, disable secure boot, then reinstall.
I did all those things before I asked a question.
Then you've done something wrong. Revisit the steps, learn how to read 'dmesg' and debug. Show more logs.