![]() Now I’m not even able to log out (the log out option in IceWM menu only closes my applications and does nothing else).ĮDIT: I also tried drivers version 349.16 but the situation seems to be the same. Once I managed to log out and got the “Oh no!” screen again. In fact, I can’t even log out from IceWM. Then I installed the Nvidia 352.55 drivers and after similar changes as with KDE I now can boot to IceWM with the native resolution. I have tried to install the newest drivers from Nvidia website (352.55) using the “hard” way described here:īefore, I switched to IceWM (as opposed to Gnome) in the login screen (while still using the nouveau driver). However after some playing with nf and xrandr I was able to use the native resolution in KDE. The nvidia settings GUI utility didn’t offer the native resolution either. Nvidia-uvm-gfxG04-kmp-desktop-352.41_k3.16.6_2-16.1.x86_64Īny ideas? Feel free to ask me for any additional info you might need. ![]() I have these relevant packages installed: $ rpm -qa | grep nvidia I also tried to reinstall the driver packages. I wanted to check the log but there is nothing like /var/log/Xorg.0.log. lsmod shows that nvidia, nvidia_uvm and drm modules are loaded, nouveau is not. I can switch to console and log in as root. I tried to reboot several times (it was mentioned in other threads on the forums) but it didn’t help. A problem has occurred and the system can’t recover. Īfter the reboot I get white/grey screen with a sad smiley and “Oh no! Something has gone wrong. Then I installed the nvidia proprietary drivers using the “easy way” described here. I started with a fresh installation of OpenSUSE 13.2. Hi, I have a desktop PC with Gigabyte GV-N960G1 GAMING-2GD graphics card and I have problems with the proprietary drivers installation.
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