How to install the Nvidia proprietary drivers in LinuxMint
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Re: How to install the Nvidia proprietary drivers in LinuxMi
I read through most of this thread trying to figure out how to install a driver for my GeForce MX4000 AGP card on an older system. I've used linux years ago and thought I'd throw something together out of the scrape pile downstairs and let my family use this one upstairs. Anyways, I tried Mint 15 [Olivia] and didn't have much luck with that. Kept having too include nomodeset xforcevesa on the bootup to get it to come up where I could read everything. Someone in the chat room suggested I try Mint 13 [Maya]. So I have that on the machine currently and have downloaded the driver from Nvidia for my card and it would not install at all. Kept complaining about the x server running. I finally got my machine to boot into the tty terminal. So I started to install the driver and got this:
ERROR: The Nouveau kernal driver is currently in use by your system.
This driver is incompatible with the NVIDIA driver, and must be disabled before proceeding. Please consult the NVIDIA driver README and your linux distribution's documentation for details on how to correctly disable the Nouveau kernal driver.
Then after hitting okay!
For some distributions, Nouveau can be disabled by adding a file in the modprobe configuration directory. Would you like nvidia-installer to attempt to create this modprobe file for you?
I hit Yes! and got this.
The modprobe configuration file to disable Nouveau, /ect/modprobe.d/nvidia-installer-disable-nouveau.conf, has been written.
For some distributions, this may be sufficient to disable Nouveau; other distributions may require modification of the initial ramdisk.
Please reboot your system and attempt NVIDIA driver installation again.
Note if you later wish to reenable Nouveau, you will need to delete the file /etc/modprobe.d/nvidia-installer-disable-nouveau.conf.
And after all that I pressed 'Okay' and this shows up.
ERROR: Installation has failed. Please see the file '/var/log/nvidia-installer.log'. For details. You may find suggestions on fixing installation problems in the README available on the Linux driver download page at http://www.nvidia.com.
Now my system boots up and the backdrop looks okay but I have no icons and no menu to click on. Just the cursor. Did I forget to startup mdm? Or is there something else missing?
Thanks
Thomas
ERROR: The Nouveau kernal driver is currently in use by your system.
This driver is incompatible with the NVIDIA driver, and must be disabled before proceeding. Please consult the NVIDIA driver README and your linux distribution's documentation for details on how to correctly disable the Nouveau kernal driver.
Then after hitting okay!
For some distributions, Nouveau can be disabled by adding a file in the modprobe configuration directory. Would you like nvidia-installer to attempt to create this modprobe file for you?
I hit Yes! and got this.
The modprobe configuration file to disable Nouveau, /ect/modprobe.d/nvidia-installer-disable-nouveau.conf, has been written.
For some distributions, this may be sufficient to disable Nouveau; other distributions may require modification of the initial ramdisk.
Please reboot your system and attempt NVIDIA driver installation again.
Note if you later wish to reenable Nouveau, you will need to delete the file /etc/modprobe.d/nvidia-installer-disable-nouveau.conf.
And after all that I pressed 'Okay' and this shows up.
ERROR: Installation has failed. Please see the file '/var/log/nvidia-installer.log'. For details. You may find suggestions on fixing installation problems in the README available on the Linux driver download page at http://www.nvidia.com.
Now my system boots up and the backdrop looks okay but I have no icons and no menu to click on. Just the cursor. Did I forget to startup mdm? Or is there something else missing?
Thanks
Thomas
Re: How to install the Nvidia proprietary drivers in LinuxMi
you have to unload the nouveau driver I had to blacklist it and reboot, look for how to blacklist and that should get you started. After you have sucessfully prevented it from loading you have to retry the nvidia install.
Re: How to install the Nvidia proprietary drivers in LinuxMi
I have an HP tower that has the NVIDIA 6150 SE graphics card. When I tried running linix mint 15 from usb my screen kept going all wonky (as soon as the desktop would load) and I would not have enough time to install the proprietary driver. I currently have linux mint 13 installed and have no problems or complaints, but I'm curious as to how I would solve that problem. Is there an ISO available that has the proprietary drivers already installed? I know that would fix the problem, but I am unsure how to go about doing that.
Visit my blog; http://www.sukiblue.com/
Re: How to install the Nvidia proprietary drivers in LinuxMi
The easiest way to get Nvidia drivers installed is to use SGFXI.
[url]http://smxi.org/[/url]
I have used this in Ubuntu, Mint, Mepis, Bodhi, and Crunchbang to successfully install an Nvidia driver to various computers.
[url]http://smxi.org/[/url]
I have used this in Ubuntu, Mint, Mepis, Bodhi, and Crunchbang to successfully install an Nvidia driver to various computers.
Re: How to install the Nvidia proprietary drivers in LinuxMi
Usually I don't have a problem installing the proprietary drivers. I know it's an issue with the 3.10 kernels & later as I've had this issue with other distros. As long as mint 13 keeps working I'll be happy!
Visit my blog; http://www.sukiblue.com/
Re: How to install the Nvidia proprietary drivers in LinuxMi
I get this "you apeer to be running an x server" error message. I have tried the following comands to shut it down and none of them worked.
Edit:
Gave up and installed bumblebee.
Code: Select all
telinit 3
Code: Select all
sudo service lightdm stop
Code: Select all
stopx
Gave up and installed bumblebee.
Re: How to install the Nvidia proprietary drivers in LinuxMi
So, after reading 6 pages of posts, I come down to 1 question. Has anyone come up with a foolproof method of installing the proprietary nvidia drivers? I have tried most of the steps I could folow in this thread, but with no success. My vid card is
inxi -Gx
Graphics: Card: NVIDIA GK106 [GeForce GTX 650 Ti] bus-ID: 01:00.0
X.Org: 1.14.3 drivers: nvidia (unloaded: fbdev,vesa,nouveau) Resolution: 1024x768@60.0hz
GLX Renderer: GeForce GTX 650 Ti/PCIe/SSE2 GLX Version: 4.4.0 NVIDIA 331.20 Direct Rendering: Yes
When I run xrandr I get this.
xrandr
Screen 0: minimum 8 x 8, current 1024 x 768, maximum 16384 x 16384
DVI-I-0 connected primary 1024x768+0+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 0mm x 0mm
1024x768 60.0*+
1360x768 60.0 59.8
1152x864 60.0
800x600 72.2 60.3 56.2
680x384 60.0 59.8
640x480 59.9
512x384 60.0
400x300 72.2
320x240 60.1
DVI-I-1 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis)
HDMI-0 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis)
DVI-D-0 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis)
When I try to force a mod to use 1600x900 resolution it tells me that it can't find DVI-I-0, but right above it says it is using it. This has ben one of my most frustrating experiences I have had. Almost makes me want to go back to windows.
My thread since my first forey into Linux
http://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.php?f=46&t=149878
inxi -Gx
Graphics: Card: NVIDIA GK106 [GeForce GTX 650 Ti] bus-ID: 01:00.0
X.Org: 1.14.3 drivers: nvidia (unloaded: fbdev,vesa,nouveau) Resolution: 1024x768@60.0hz
GLX Renderer: GeForce GTX 650 Ti/PCIe/SSE2 GLX Version: 4.4.0 NVIDIA 331.20 Direct Rendering: Yes
When I run xrandr I get this.
xrandr
Screen 0: minimum 8 x 8, current 1024 x 768, maximum 16384 x 16384
DVI-I-0 connected primary 1024x768+0+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 0mm x 0mm
1024x768 60.0*+
1360x768 60.0 59.8
1152x864 60.0
800x600 72.2 60.3 56.2
680x384 60.0 59.8
640x480 59.9
512x384 60.0
400x300 72.2
320x240 60.1
DVI-I-1 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis)
HDMI-0 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis)
DVI-D-0 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis)
When I try to force a mod to use 1600x900 resolution it tells me that it can't find DVI-I-0, but right above it says it is using it. This has ben one of my most frustrating experiences I have had. Almost makes me want to go back to windows.
My thread since my first forey into Linux
http://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.php?f=46&t=149878
Re: How to install the Nvidia proprietary drivers in LinuxMi
So i've got a new to Mint Lenovo W530 with the hybrid videocards but I'm not planning on using the switching functions (I do a lot of graphic deisgn work, but its a dual-boot and I'll be using all my graphics programs in windows). I would like to connect HMDI through Mint though and I've been having issues with the generic drivers. Would this method help for me or do I need to try something else? I also should mention I'm pretty damn new to Linux so I may well be missing something obvious.
Re: How to install the Nvidia proprietary drivers in LinuxMi
Thank you, McLovin for this very helpful tutorial! It seems to have solved my problems, and I am most grateful.
Also, thanks to Enkidu, as I needed this advice as well:
If you're going to follow this tutorial, I highly recommend you print out the instructions or copy them out very clearly (if you're a n00b like me, that is) so that you can keep referring to them as you go, as you won't be able to see anything but the text interface when in tty1.
I hope this is the end of my graphics card issues. Thanks much!
Also, thanks to Enkidu, as I needed this advice as well:
Just to clarify for others, I entered the above commands in the tty1. Maybe you could do it in the bash shell, I don't know, but I figured I'd stick with the text interface I'd already been using. (Newbie, I certainly am, so I don't even know if it matters that much) So then I could get nVidia going after that.Enkidu wrote:When you get this error message
after you have rebooted your system, do the following steps:WARNING: The modprobe configuration file to disable Nouveau, /etc/modprobe.d/nvidia-installer-disable-nouveau.conf, is already
present. Please be sure you have rebooted your system since that file was written. If you have rebooted, then
Nouveau may be enabled for other reasons, such as being included in the system initial ramdisk or in your X
configuration file. Please consult the NVIDIA driver README and your Linux distribution's documentation for details
on how to correctly disable the Nouveau kernel driver.
and reboot again.Code: Select all
sudo apt-get purge xserver-xorg-video-nouveau libdrm-nouveau1a nvidia* sudo update-initramfs -u -k all
Enkidu
If you're going to follow this tutorial, I highly recommend you print out the instructions or copy them out very clearly (if you're a n00b like me, that is) so that you can keep referring to them as you go, as you won't be able to see anything but the text interface when in tty1.
I hope this is the end of my graphics card issues. Thanks much!
Re: How to install the Nvidia proprietary drivers in LinuxMi
I just installed Mint 16 (64-bit Cinnamon) alongside Debian.
I've installed the latest Nvidia drivers plenty of times before on Debian so I'm familiar with how that goes.
On Debian I used to do what is described here in post # 16 before installing the Nvidia drivers.
When I received the installers' question about the 32-bit libs on Mint, I cancelled the install and I went searching for the /usr/lib32 folder but couldn't find it. I posted a question about that here and were advised to ask here.
So, long story short. When I install the latest Nvidia drivers on a fresh 64-bit install, what am I supposed to do with that 32-bit library question?
Thanks!
Ps. system is a i7 2600k with GTX580. Nouveau disabled.
I've installed the latest Nvidia drivers plenty of times before on Debian so I'm familiar with how that goes.
On Debian I used to do what is described here in post # 16 before installing the Nvidia drivers.
When I received the installers' question about the 32-bit libs on Mint, I cancelled the install and I went searching for the /usr/lib32 folder but couldn't find it. I posted a question about that here and were advised to ask here.
So, long story short. When I install the latest Nvidia drivers on a fresh 64-bit install, what am I supposed to do with that 32-bit library question?
Thanks!
Ps. system is a i7 2600k with GTX580. Nouveau disabled.
Re: How to install the Nvidia proprietary drivers in LinuxMi
I think I fixed it although I'm unsure why this isn't in any of the guides here or elsewhere on the internet (maybe this can be added for the people that run into this as well?).
First I created the directory structure for Nvidia Libraries: mkdir -p /emul/ia32-linux/usr/lib
I added this directory to /etc/ld.so.conf.d/libc.conf and ran sudo ldconfig.
Installing the Nvidia drivers installed the 32-bit libraries without complaining and Steam/Games seem to like it as well.
First I created the directory structure for Nvidia Libraries: mkdir -p /emul/ia32-linux/usr/lib
I added this directory to /etc/ld.so.conf.d/libc.conf and ran sudo ldconfig.
Installing the Nvidia drivers installed the 32-bit libraries without complaining and Steam/Games seem to like it as well.
Re: How to install the Nvidia proprietary drivers in LinuxMi
The info in this thread is no longer current. I have started a new thread with an end to end tutorial that works. See :
http://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.php?f=59&t=154932
http://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.php?f=59&t=154932
Re: How to install the Nvidia proprietary drivers in LinuxMi
Thanks for the effort.kk5000 wrote:The info in this thread is no longer current. I have started a new thread with an end to end tutorial that works. See :
http://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.php?f=59&t=154932
Your post does not deal with the issue I posted about though.
On a 64-bit system, when you install the Nvidia driver, what do you answer when asked about the 32-bit libraries? If you say yes, do you get a message that the location does not exist?
I posted a possible solution (another option is to move /emul/ia32-linux/usr/lib to where your current 32-bit libraries are and create a link to it from /emul/ia32-linux/usr/lib, but I honestly think my solution is more elegant and less prone to problems).
SOLVED/I think/ more info/Nvidia proprietary drivers
finally, I can offer some help here (I am learning<g>)..and I hope this note is not premature:
i followed the excellent directions written by mclovin using a Dell m6800 and nvidia 331, something or other (64bit; from Nvidia site).
i got various messages during the process ..none discussed in these instructions.......they amounted to Mint 16 (cinnamon) offering to "overcome" (my word) certain requirements during the installation of the driver. These included something to do with "building"...I apologize I cannot recall...I was intent on using my intuition to say "yes" or "no" to various steps, as,as new to Linux as I am, I am a vet on PCs......but was able to OK my way to what appeared to be a successful install.
upon reinvoking display manager, my external mouse and keyboard would not work (this machine is docked).
as what I hope will be a helpful aside, when playing around prior to understanding how to do this install, i found that using the "display" utility that auto installed with mint, that if I unselected the checkbox for "mirror", i also lost my mouse and keyboard uniless I let that setting revert..while never getting display on both my monitors (I want an extended desktop).
anyway, when I could not enter my password after reinvoking display manager after what appeared to have been a successful install (i had to do a hard reboot a number of times and still got nothing), I selected "recovery" from the GRUB menu.
I could see during the screen echo of the process, that it indicated that the nvidia driver had "tainted" the kernel.
that said, the process went thru to a console prompt....i entered my log in information...and before I could reinvoke display manager again, the GUI appeared and voila, I was able to enter my log in information.
right now I am looking at desktop mirrors...and am almost afraid to try to create the extended desktop I need<g>...but of course I must.
assuming that works, and I am not able to actually use my screen real estate as I need to, I am hoping to finally drop windows as my manin OS.
in closing, and with thanks, again, to mclovin....i think I could have figured this out, but it would have taken much longer........I also hope that, given the ubuiquity of these nvidia cards, that some kind soul on the mint team will develop a utility specifically for this arcane process, taking into account, especially, the "what can go wrong with this" nature of the additional steps I had to take to make this work.
that is a helpful suggestion and not a criticism....mint 16 is beautiful.
anyway, hope this has been helpful......i will try to get this the way I need it now.
robert
i followed the excellent directions written by mclovin using a Dell m6800 and nvidia 331, something or other (64bit; from Nvidia site).
i got various messages during the process ..none discussed in these instructions.......they amounted to Mint 16 (cinnamon) offering to "overcome" (my word) certain requirements during the installation of the driver. These included something to do with "building"...I apologize I cannot recall...I was intent on using my intuition to say "yes" or "no" to various steps, as,as new to Linux as I am, I am a vet on PCs......but was able to OK my way to what appeared to be a successful install.
upon reinvoking display manager, my external mouse and keyboard would not work (this machine is docked).
as what I hope will be a helpful aside, when playing around prior to understanding how to do this install, i found that using the "display" utility that auto installed with mint, that if I unselected the checkbox for "mirror", i also lost my mouse and keyboard uniless I let that setting revert..while never getting display on both my monitors (I want an extended desktop).
anyway, when I could not enter my password after reinvoking display manager after what appeared to have been a successful install (i had to do a hard reboot a number of times and still got nothing), I selected "recovery" from the GRUB menu.
I could see during the screen echo of the process, that it indicated that the nvidia driver had "tainted" the kernel.
that said, the process went thru to a console prompt....i entered my log in information...and before I could reinvoke display manager again, the GUI appeared and voila, I was able to enter my log in information.
right now I am looking at desktop mirrors...and am almost afraid to try to create the extended desktop I need<g>...but of course I must.
assuming that works, and I am not able to actually use my screen real estate as I need to, I am hoping to finally drop windows as my manin OS.
in closing, and with thanks, again, to mclovin....i think I could have figured this out, but it would have taken much longer........I also hope that, given the ubuiquity of these nvidia cards, that some kind soul on the mint team will develop a utility specifically for this arcane process, taking into account, especially, the "what can go wrong with this" nature of the additional steps I had to take to make this work.
that is a helpful suggestion and not a criticism....mint 16 is beautiful.
anyway, hope this has been helpful......i will try to get this the way I need it now.
robert
Re: How to install the Nvidia proprietary drivers in LinuxMi
I say yes, it proceeds without issues. The posted tutorial has been tried on 4 separate machines. Works end-to-end. No issues. These were all fresh installations though. If you have old stuff installed, there is no telling how it would conflict with things.inflatablemouse wrote:On a 64-bit system, when you install the Nvidia driver, what do you answer when asked about the 32-bit libraries? If you say yes, do you get a message that the location does not exist?kk5000 wrote:The info in this thread is no longer current. I have started a new thread with an end to end tutorial that works. See :
http://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.php?f=59&t=154932
Re: How to install the Nvidia proprietary drivers in LinuxMi
re my previous post "solution", sad to say, it turned out not to be one.
upon rebooting, while I could use my mouse to make a grub selection, I never could get it or my <external> keyboard to work to actually log on...at the log in screen, neither works, so I cannot log in.
I suspect this may be related to the dell m6800 docking station, although my external USB items are plugged right into my machine directly, even as it is docked (upon reflection at the moment, maybe that is the problem?)
either way, I am not there yet...and have run out of time, for now, to try to make it work.
back to windows until.......
upon rebooting, while I could use my mouse to make a grub selection, I never could get it or my <external> keyboard to work to actually log on...at the log in screen, neither works, so I cannot log in.
I suspect this may be related to the dell m6800 docking station, although my external USB items are plugged right into my machine directly, even as it is docked (upon reflection at the moment, maybe that is the problem?)
either way, I am not there yet...and have run out of time, for now, to try to make it work.
back to windows until.......
Re: How to install the Nvidia proprietary drivers in LinuxMi
re my previous post "solution", sad to say, it turned out not to be one.
upon rebooting, while I could use my mouse to make a grub selection, I never could get it or my <external> keyboard to work to actually log on...at the log in screen, neither works, so I cannot log in.
I suspect this may be related to the dell m6800 docking station, although my external USB items are plugged right into my machine directly, even as it is docked (upon reflection at the moment, maybe that is the problem?)
either way, I am not there yet...and have run out of time, for now, to try to make it work.
back to windows until.......
ps.... I am on a 64 bit system and downloaded a 64 bit driver, and therefore...for those folks asking about a 32 bit prompt...I never saw one.
upon rebooting, while I could use my mouse to make a grub selection, I never could get it or my <external> keyboard to work to actually log on...at the log in screen, neither works, so I cannot log in.
I suspect this may be related to the dell m6800 docking station, although my external USB items are plugged right into my machine directly, even as it is docked (upon reflection at the moment, maybe that is the problem?)
either way, I am not there yet...and have run out of time, for now, to try to make it work.
back to windows until.......
ps.... I am on a 64 bit system and downloaded a 64 bit driver, and therefore...for those folks asking about a 32 bit prompt...I never saw one.
Re: How to install the Nvidia proprietary drivers in LinuxMi
Hello, fellow strugglers.
I, like you guys have been struggling to get this figured out. After reading the several topics on this board regarding the Nvidia drivers, I finally fell upon the one set of instructions that not only got me working again, but got me to the most updated point I had hoped to achieve.
First of all, the many attempts by me were a mirror image of pretty much all that I have read on here. That stupid "Driver manager" was useless. It seemed that every time I tried installing anything be it Nouveau, Nvidia 331, 318, nvidia-current or nvidia-319-updates there was something stepping on something elses toes. There were always remnants of other crap I tried. Now, mind you, I never once reinstalled the operating system. I have been trying to avoid this even though this is essentially a brand new install on a computer I just built.
So here is what fixed it for me. **All credit goes to RNGd_in_the_womb** from, of all places, Reddit in the /linuxquestions sub. Feel free to look for it on there to see his initial struggle and his search for a fix. This is his "code" section from his post. I didn't have to do all of this so you may have to adjust to your needs.
sudo ppa-purge ppa:ubuntu-x-swat/x-updates
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:xorg-edgers/ppa
sudo apt-get update
sudo rm /etc/modprobe.d/bumblebee.conf (I removed current nvidia.conf)
sudo apt-get install nvidia-331
sudo modprobe nvidia (Returned with: ERROR: could not insert 'nvidia_331': No such device)
sudo nvidia-xconfig (Returned with: WARNING: Unable to locate/open X configuration file. New X configuration file written to '/etc/X11/xorg.conf')
By letting the installer do all of the work, all files were correctly written/rewritten/blacklisted, etc. It seems like I have tried most of this at one point or another but not in order like this. I think the key for me was removing the /etc/modprobe.d/nvidia* as I didn't have a bumblebee.conf file. I also didn't have to purge the x-swat ppa.
Thanks to this guide, I am now running with the 3.13rc8 kernel with the 331.38 drivers. As an aside, if you are going to update your kernel too, do that first.
Hope this helps somebody.
I, like you guys have been struggling to get this figured out. After reading the several topics on this board regarding the Nvidia drivers, I finally fell upon the one set of instructions that not only got me working again, but got me to the most updated point I had hoped to achieve.
First of all, the many attempts by me were a mirror image of pretty much all that I have read on here. That stupid "Driver manager" was useless. It seemed that every time I tried installing anything be it Nouveau, Nvidia 331, 318, nvidia-current or nvidia-319-updates there was something stepping on something elses toes. There were always remnants of other crap I tried. Now, mind you, I never once reinstalled the operating system. I have been trying to avoid this even though this is essentially a brand new install on a computer I just built.
So here is what fixed it for me. **All credit goes to RNGd_in_the_womb** from, of all places, Reddit in the /linuxquestions sub. Feel free to look for it on there to see his initial struggle and his search for a fix. This is his "code" section from his post. I didn't have to do all of this so you may have to adjust to your needs.
sudo ppa-purge ppa:ubuntu-x-swat/x-updates
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:xorg-edgers/ppa
sudo apt-get update
sudo rm /etc/modprobe.d/bumblebee.conf (I removed current nvidia.conf)
sudo apt-get install nvidia-331
sudo modprobe nvidia (Returned with: ERROR: could not insert 'nvidia_331': No such device)
sudo nvidia-xconfig (Returned with: WARNING: Unable to locate/open X configuration file. New X configuration file written to '/etc/X11/xorg.conf')
By letting the installer do all of the work, all files were correctly written/rewritten/blacklisted, etc. It seems like I have tried most of this at one point or another but not in order like this. I think the key for me was removing the /etc/modprobe.d/nvidia* as I didn't have a bumblebee.conf file. I also didn't have to purge the x-swat ppa.
Thanks to this guide, I am now running with the 3.13rc8 kernel with the 331.38 drivers. As an aside, if you are going to update your kernel too, do that first.
Hope this helps somebody.
Re: How to install the Nvidia proprietary drivers in LinuxMi
Didn't work for me...
Scott
Scott
ridobe wrote:Hello, fellow strugglers.
Hope this helps somebody.
Re: How to install the Nvidia proprietary drivers in LinuxMi
I am having a problem with the newest release Mint 16. I love the look, and it seems like once it is set up I will like it much more than my last OS. I have to be 100% honest, I really haven't used anything but Windows, but always wanted to try Linux.
Here is the problem. I have an old machine I am trying to keep going, and the lighter OS seems like the perfect match. It is a Pentium 4 machine with a 3.0Ghz processor. The reason I really tried to upgrade the computer for one major problem. My computer was freezing at times. Turned out to be the video card. It was a Nvidia GeForce 6200. It was overheated. I replaced that card with Another Nvidia AGP card. It is a NV35GL Quattro FX 3000.
Here is the problem. I used the Nvidia site to find the right drivers. They said it is the 173.14.39. I downloaded it. I then installed it with the method on page one. The first time after installing it, and the reboot, the xserver would not restart correctly. I never got the promp to remove the noveau driver though, so I went and looked up how to do that. I tried removing the noveau drivers and then intalling the right driver again. Still no dice. Since the install was new, I just decided that it would be easier to just reinstall mint vs try to fix this. I was hoping that the new install would ask to remove it on the new driver install.
Now I have installed Mint again, and downloaded the supposed right driver for the card. Upon following the instructions on page one again, this time I was met with this problem. "The libc header file is missing, please install the proper libc development package for your distro". I don't know where to find this, and I don't know why the same install and the same file have produced two different results.
any help would be greatly appreciated.
Here is the problem. I have an old machine I am trying to keep going, and the lighter OS seems like the perfect match. It is a Pentium 4 machine with a 3.0Ghz processor. The reason I really tried to upgrade the computer for one major problem. My computer was freezing at times. Turned out to be the video card. It was a Nvidia GeForce 6200. It was overheated. I replaced that card with Another Nvidia AGP card. It is a NV35GL Quattro FX 3000.
Here is the problem. I used the Nvidia site to find the right drivers. They said it is the 173.14.39. I downloaded it. I then installed it with the method on page one. The first time after installing it, and the reboot, the xserver would not restart correctly. I never got the promp to remove the noveau driver though, so I went and looked up how to do that. I tried removing the noveau drivers and then intalling the right driver again. Still no dice. Since the install was new, I just decided that it would be easier to just reinstall mint vs try to fix this. I was hoping that the new install would ask to remove it on the new driver install.
Now I have installed Mint again, and downloaded the supposed right driver for the card. Upon following the instructions on page one again, this time I was met with this problem. "The libc header file is missing, please install the proper libc development package for your distro". I don't know where to find this, and I don't know why the same install and the same file have produced two different results.
any help would be greatly appreciated.