Debian Buster GUI freezes up with Nvidia graphics
I recently built a new system, and my graphics are having... problems. The GUI will freeze up frequently and for minutes at a time. I'm running the proprietary drivers, and didn't have this problem with nouveau, but nouveau also didn't recognize my GPU or let me set up my second monitor.
Running dmesg | grep NVRM
yields
[ 3.909853] NVRM: loading NVIDIA UNIX x86_64 Kernel Module 375.66 Mon May 1 15:29:16 PDT 2017 (using threaded interrupts)
[ 350.982860] NVRM: GPU at PCI:0000:09:00: GPU-7276b506-d343-19d6-901c-e9b2d011f0b4
[ 350.982868] NVRM: GPU Board Serial Number:
[ 350.982873] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000020 intr 00040000
[ 355.100050] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000028 intr 00040000
[ 409.548334] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 31, Ch 00000028, engmask 00000101, intr 10000000
[ 413.293746] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000028 intr 00040000
[ 4082.537408] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000020 intr 00040000
but these Xid errors don't mean a whole lot to me.
xrandr
gives
Screen 0: minimum 8 x 8, current 2806 x 900, maximum 32767 x 32767
DVI-D-0 connected primary 1440x900+0+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 410mm x 256mm
1440x900 59.89*+
1280x800 59.81
1280x720 60.00
1152x864 75.00
1024x768 75.03 70.07 60.00
800x600 75.00 72.19 60.32 56.25
640x480 75.00 72.81 59.94
HDMI-0 connected 1366x768+1440+132 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 410mm x 230mm
1366x768 59.86*+
1920x1080 59.94
1280x1024 75.02 60.02
1280x960 60.00
1280x800 59.81
1280x720 60.00 59.94
1152x864 75.00
1024x768 75.03 70.07 60.00
800x600 75.00 72.19 60.32 56.25
720x480 59.94
640x480 75.00 72.81 59.94 59.93
DP-0 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis)
DP-1 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis)
I have a GeForce GTX 1050 Ti. Any ideas on what I might try?
debian x11 nvidia
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 6 hours ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
add a comment |
I recently built a new system, and my graphics are having... problems. The GUI will freeze up frequently and for minutes at a time. I'm running the proprietary drivers, and didn't have this problem with nouveau, but nouveau also didn't recognize my GPU or let me set up my second monitor.
Running dmesg | grep NVRM
yields
[ 3.909853] NVRM: loading NVIDIA UNIX x86_64 Kernel Module 375.66 Mon May 1 15:29:16 PDT 2017 (using threaded interrupts)
[ 350.982860] NVRM: GPU at PCI:0000:09:00: GPU-7276b506-d343-19d6-901c-e9b2d011f0b4
[ 350.982868] NVRM: GPU Board Serial Number:
[ 350.982873] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000020 intr 00040000
[ 355.100050] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000028 intr 00040000
[ 409.548334] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 31, Ch 00000028, engmask 00000101, intr 10000000
[ 413.293746] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000028 intr 00040000
[ 4082.537408] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000020 intr 00040000
but these Xid errors don't mean a whole lot to me.
xrandr
gives
Screen 0: minimum 8 x 8, current 2806 x 900, maximum 32767 x 32767
DVI-D-0 connected primary 1440x900+0+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 410mm x 256mm
1440x900 59.89*+
1280x800 59.81
1280x720 60.00
1152x864 75.00
1024x768 75.03 70.07 60.00
800x600 75.00 72.19 60.32 56.25
640x480 75.00 72.81 59.94
HDMI-0 connected 1366x768+1440+132 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 410mm x 230mm
1366x768 59.86*+
1920x1080 59.94
1280x1024 75.02 60.02
1280x960 60.00
1280x800 59.81
1280x720 60.00 59.94
1152x864 75.00
1024x768 75.03 70.07 60.00
800x600 75.00 72.19 60.32 56.25
720x480 59.94
640x480 75.00 72.81 59.94 59.93
DP-0 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis)
DP-1 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis)
I have a GeForce GTX 1050 Ti. Any ideas on what I might try?
debian x11 nvidia
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 6 hours ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
add a comment |
I recently built a new system, and my graphics are having... problems. The GUI will freeze up frequently and for minutes at a time. I'm running the proprietary drivers, and didn't have this problem with nouveau, but nouveau also didn't recognize my GPU or let me set up my second monitor.
Running dmesg | grep NVRM
yields
[ 3.909853] NVRM: loading NVIDIA UNIX x86_64 Kernel Module 375.66 Mon May 1 15:29:16 PDT 2017 (using threaded interrupts)
[ 350.982860] NVRM: GPU at PCI:0000:09:00: GPU-7276b506-d343-19d6-901c-e9b2d011f0b4
[ 350.982868] NVRM: GPU Board Serial Number:
[ 350.982873] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000020 intr 00040000
[ 355.100050] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000028 intr 00040000
[ 409.548334] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 31, Ch 00000028, engmask 00000101, intr 10000000
[ 413.293746] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000028 intr 00040000
[ 4082.537408] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000020 intr 00040000
but these Xid errors don't mean a whole lot to me.
xrandr
gives
Screen 0: minimum 8 x 8, current 2806 x 900, maximum 32767 x 32767
DVI-D-0 connected primary 1440x900+0+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 410mm x 256mm
1440x900 59.89*+
1280x800 59.81
1280x720 60.00
1152x864 75.00
1024x768 75.03 70.07 60.00
800x600 75.00 72.19 60.32 56.25
640x480 75.00 72.81 59.94
HDMI-0 connected 1366x768+1440+132 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 410mm x 230mm
1366x768 59.86*+
1920x1080 59.94
1280x1024 75.02 60.02
1280x960 60.00
1280x800 59.81
1280x720 60.00 59.94
1152x864 75.00
1024x768 75.03 70.07 60.00
800x600 75.00 72.19 60.32 56.25
720x480 59.94
640x480 75.00 72.81 59.94 59.93
DP-0 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis)
DP-1 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis)
I have a GeForce GTX 1050 Ti. Any ideas on what I might try?
debian x11 nvidia
I recently built a new system, and my graphics are having... problems. The GUI will freeze up frequently and for minutes at a time. I'm running the proprietary drivers, and didn't have this problem with nouveau, but nouveau also didn't recognize my GPU or let me set up my second monitor.
Running dmesg | grep NVRM
yields
[ 3.909853] NVRM: loading NVIDIA UNIX x86_64 Kernel Module 375.66 Mon May 1 15:29:16 PDT 2017 (using threaded interrupts)
[ 350.982860] NVRM: GPU at PCI:0000:09:00: GPU-7276b506-d343-19d6-901c-e9b2d011f0b4
[ 350.982868] NVRM: GPU Board Serial Number:
[ 350.982873] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000020 intr 00040000
[ 355.100050] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000028 intr 00040000
[ 409.548334] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 31, Ch 00000028, engmask 00000101, intr 10000000
[ 413.293746] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000028 intr 00040000
[ 4082.537408] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000020 intr 00040000
but these Xid errors don't mean a whole lot to me.
xrandr
gives
Screen 0: minimum 8 x 8, current 2806 x 900, maximum 32767 x 32767
DVI-D-0 connected primary 1440x900+0+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 410mm x 256mm
1440x900 59.89*+
1280x800 59.81
1280x720 60.00
1152x864 75.00
1024x768 75.03 70.07 60.00
800x600 75.00 72.19 60.32 56.25
640x480 75.00 72.81 59.94
HDMI-0 connected 1366x768+1440+132 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 410mm x 230mm
1366x768 59.86*+
1920x1080 59.94
1280x1024 75.02 60.02
1280x960 60.00
1280x800 59.81
1280x720 60.00 59.94
1152x864 75.00
1024x768 75.03 70.07 60.00
800x600 75.00 72.19 60.32 56.25
720x480 59.94
640x480 75.00 72.81 59.94 59.93
DP-0 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis)
DP-1 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis)
I have a GeForce GTX 1050 Ti. Any ideas on what I might try?
debian x11 nvidia
debian x11 nvidia
asked Jul 1 '17 at 0:01
saninesanine
62
62
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 6 hours ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 6 hours ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
add a comment |
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
I can't add comments yet, so have to ask here. How did you install the proprietary drivers? I've done it a number of times on my systems, and keep forgetting the exact steps, but I just run the one-file download from nvidia from the shell, and it guides me (generally run from terminal with root - without X). It's important that it compiles necessary libs with your current kernel libs.
Also, did you check /usr/bin/nvidia-settings ? (just to do a general check on settings, I guess).
What about the Xorg.0.log? It should give more details on errors than dmesg.
I installed it from the Debian repos, as per this guide (though using the Buster repos rather than the Jessie ones). I can open nvidia-settings, but I don't see anything in particular that seems unusual - what should I be looking for?
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 1:33
You can consider downloading a driver from nvidia and running their installer. They are pretty good.
– MattAPiroglu
Jul 1 '17 at 1:42
I haven't had luck with those in the past, but I'll give it a shot!
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 1:48
It seems I have the same driver as the current version distributed by nvidia.
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 2:01
My Xorg.0.log here
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 2:06
|
show 1 more comment
Quoting NVIDIA's XID Errors page:
The Xid message is an error report from the NVIDIA driver that is printed to the operating system's kernel log or event log. Xid messages indicate that a general GPU error occurred, most often due to the driver programming the GPU incorrectly or to corruption of the commands sent to the GPU. The messages can be indicative of a hardware problem, an NVIDIA software problem, or a user application problem.
[ 350.982873] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000020 intr 00040000
PCI:0000:09:00
is the device ID, and 32
is XID error id, in this case:
Invalid or corrupted push buffer stream
- You can try reinstalling all nvidia packages (
apt purge nvidia.
) Debian provides. - If that does not help, then try the newest drivers from NVIDIA.
add a comment |
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2 Answers
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2 Answers
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I can't add comments yet, so have to ask here. How did you install the proprietary drivers? I've done it a number of times on my systems, and keep forgetting the exact steps, but I just run the one-file download from nvidia from the shell, and it guides me (generally run from terminal with root - without X). It's important that it compiles necessary libs with your current kernel libs.
Also, did you check /usr/bin/nvidia-settings ? (just to do a general check on settings, I guess).
What about the Xorg.0.log? It should give more details on errors than dmesg.
I installed it from the Debian repos, as per this guide (though using the Buster repos rather than the Jessie ones). I can open nvidia-settings, but I don't see anything in particular that seems unusual - what should I be looking for?
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 1:33
You can consider downloading a driver from nvidia and running their installer. They are pretty good.
– MattAPiroglu
Jul 1 '17 at 1:42
I haven't had luck with those in the past, but I'll give it a shot!
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 1:48
It seems I have the same driver as the current version distributed by nvidia.
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 2:01
My Xorg.0.log here
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 2:06
|
show 1 more comment
I can't add comments yet, so have to ask here. How did you install the proprietary drivers? I've done it a number of times on my systems, and keep forgetting the exact steps, but I just run the one-file download from nvidia from the shell, and it guides me (generally run from terminal with root - without X). It's important that it compiles necessary libs with your current kernel libs.
Also, did you check /usr/bin/nvidia-settings ? (just to do a general check on settings, I guess).
What about the Xorg.0.log? It should give more details on errors than dmesg.
I installed it from the Debian repos, as per this guide (though using the Buster repos rather than the Jessie ones). I can open nvidia-settings, but I don't see anything in particular that seems unusual - what should I be looking for?
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 1:33
You can consider downloading a driver from nvidia and running their installer. They are pretty good.
– MattAPiroglu
Jul 1 '17 at 1:42
I haven't had luck with those in the past, but I'll give it a shot!
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 1:48
It seems I have the same driver as the current version distributed by nvidia.
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 2:01
My Xorg.0.log here
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 2:06
|
show 1 more comment
I can't add comments yet, so have to ask here. How did you install the proprietary drivers? I've done it a number of times on my systems, and keep forgetting the exact steps, but I just run the one-file download from nvidia from the shell, and it guides me (generally run from terminal with root - without X). It's important that it compiles necessary libs with your current kernel libs.
Also, did you check /usr/bin/nvidia-settings ? (just to do a general check on settings, I guess).
What about the Xorg.0.log? It should give more details on errors than dmesg.
I can't add comments yet, so have to ask here. How did you install the proprietary drivers? I've done it a number of times on my systems, and keep forgetting the exact steps, but I just run the one-file download from nvidia from the shell, and it guides me (generally run from terminal with root - without X). It's important that it compiles necessary libs with your current kernel libs.
Also, did you check /usr/bin/nvidia-settings ? (just to do a general check on settings, I guess).
What about the Xorg.0.log? It should give more details on errors than dmesg.
edited Jul 1 '17 at 1:37
answered Jul 1 '17 at 1:21
MattAPirogluMattAPiroglu
1114
1114
I installed it from the Debian repos, as per this guide (though using the Buster repos rather than the Jessie ones). I can open nvidia-settings, but I don't see anything in particular that seems unusual - what should I be looking for?
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 1:33
You can consider downloading a driver from nvidia and running their installer. They are pretty good.
– MattAPiroglu
Jul 1 '17 at 1:42
I haven't had luck with those in the past, but I'll give it a shot!
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 1:48
It seems I have the same driver as the current version distributed by nvidia.
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 2:01
My Xorg.0.log here
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 2:06
|
show 1 more comment
I installed it from the Debian repos, as per this guide (though using the Buster repos rather than the Jessie ones). I can open nvidia-settings, but I don't see anything in particular that seems unusual - what should I be looking for?
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 1:33
You can consider downloading a driver from nvidia and running their installer. They are pretty good.
– MattAPiroglu
Jul 1 '17 at 1:42
I haven't had luck with those in the past, but I'll give it a shot!
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 1:48
It seems I have the same driver as the current version distributed by nvidia.
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 2:01
My Xorg.0.log here
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 2:06
I installed it from the Debian repos, as per this guide (though using the Buster repos rather than the Jessie ones). I can open nvidia-settings, but I don't see anything in particular that seems unusual - what should I be looking for?
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 1:33
I installed it from the Debian repos, as per this guide (though using the Buster repos rather than the Jessie ones). I can open nvidia-settings, but I don't see anything in particular that seems unusual - what should I be looking for?
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 1:33
You can consider downloading a driver from nvidia and running their installer. They are pretty good.
– MattAPiroglu
Jul 1 '17 at 1:42
You can consider downloading a driver from nvidia and running their installer. They are pretty good.
– MattAPiroglu
Jul 1 '17 at 1:42
I haven't had luck with those in the past, but I'll give it a shot!
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 1:48
I haven't had luck with those in the past, but I'll give it a shot!
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 1:48
It seems I have the same driver as the current version distributed by nvidia.
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 2:01
It seems I have the same driver as the current version distributed by nvidia.
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 2:01
My Xorg.0.log here
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 2:06
My Xorg.0.log here
– sanine
Jul 1 '17 at 2:06
|
show 1 more comment
Quoting NVIDIA's XID Errors page:
The Xid message is an error report from the NVIDIA driver that is printed to the operating system's kernel log or event log. Xid messages indicate that a general GPU error occurred, most often due to the driver programming the GPU incorrectly or to corruption of the commands sent to the GPU. The messages can be indicative of a hardware problem, an NVIDIA software problem, or a user application problem.
[ 350.982873] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000020 intr 00040000
PCI:0000:09:00
is the device ID, and 32
is XID error id, in this case:
Invalid or corrupted push buffer stream
- You can try reinstalling all nvidia packages (
apt purge nvidia.
) Debian provides. - If that does not help, then try the newest drivers from NVIDIA.
add a comment |
Quoting NVIDIA's XID Errors page:
The Xid message is an error report from the NVIDIA driver that is printed to the operating system's kernel log or event log. Xid messages indicate that a general GPU error occurred, most often due to the driver programming the GPU incorrectly or to corruption of the commands sent to the GPU. The messages can be indicative of a hardware problem, an NVIDIA software problem, or a user application problem.
[ 350.982873] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000020 intr 00040000
PCI:0000:09:00
is the device ID, and 32
is XID error id, in this case:
Invalid or corrupted push buffer stream
- You can try reinstalling all nvidia packages (
apt purge nvidia.
) Debian provides. - If that does not help, then try the newest drivers from NVIDIA.
add a comment |
Quoting NVIDIA's XID Errors page:
The Xid message is an error report from the NVIDIA driver that is printed to the operating system's kernel log or event log. Xid messages indicate that a general GPU error occurred, most often due to the driver programming the GPU incorrectly or to corruption of the commands sent to the GPU. The messages can be indicative of a hardware problem, an NVIDIA software problem, or a user application problem.
[ 350.982873] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000020 intr 00040000
PCI:0000:09:00
is the device ID, and 32
is XID error id, in this case:
Invalid or corrupted push buffer stream
- You can try reinstalling all nvidia packages (
apt purge nvidia.
) Debian provides. - If that does not help, then try the newest drivers from NVIDIA.
Quoting NVIDIA's XID Errors page:
The Xid message is an error report from the NVIDIA driver that is printed to the operating system's kernel log or event log. Xid messages indicate that a general GPU error occurred, most often due to the driver programming the GPU incorrectly or to corruption of the commands sent to the GPU. The messages can be indicative of a hardware problem, an NVIDIA software problem, or a user application problem.
[ 350.982873] NVRM: Xid (PCI:0000:09:00): 32, Channel ID 00000020 intr 00040000
PCI:0000:09:00
is the device ID, and 32
is XID error id, in this case:
Invalid or corrupted push buffer stream
- You can try reinstalling all nvidia packages (
apt purge nvidia.
) Debian provides. - If that does not help, then try the newest drivers from NVIDIA.
answered Nov 26 '17 at 6:37
user1338062user1338062
31325
31325
add a comment |
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