NVIDIA
nouveau (Open Source Driver)
This is a reverse engineered driver largely developed by the community, with some documentation provided by Nvidia. It tends to perform well on older hardware, and is required to use a large portion of the available Wayland compositors.
OpenGL
The accelerated OpenGL driver is provided by mesa-dri. This is a dependency of
the xorg metapackage, but must be manually installed when using xorg-minimal
or a Wayland compositor.
Vulkan
Cards starting with Kepler (GTX 6xx) are supported by the Vulkan nouveau driver.
Install vulkan-loader and mesa-vulkan-nouveau. Older cards may perform
poorly or unreliably with Vulkan.
Xorg
The xorg metapackage pulls in the xf86-video-nouveau video driver. This will
need to be manually installed when xorg-minimal is installed instead. You can
also use the universal modesetting driver bundled with Xorg (this is the only
option on Tegra-based ARM boards). When in doubt, it's a good idea to try
xf86-video-nouveau first. This driver will likely perform better.
Reclocking
Only first generation Maxwell, Kepler, and some Tesla cards support manual
reclocking. Cards past Turing (GTX 16xx) support automatic reclocking. Graphics
cards starting with second generation Maxwell (GTX 9xx) do not support
reclocking because the linux-firmware collection is missing signed firmware
blobs needed to reclock these cards past their boot frequencies.
nvidia (Proprietary Driver)
The proprietary drivers are available in the nonfree repository.
Check if your graphics card belongs to the legacy
branch. If it does not,
install the nvidia package. Otherwise you should install the appropriate
legacy driver, nvidia470 or nvidia390. The older legacy driver, nvidia340,
is no longer available, and users are encouraged to switch to
nouveau.
| Brand | Type | Model | Driver Package |
|---|---|---|---|
| NVIDIA | Proprietary | 800+ | nvidia |
| NVIDIA | Proprietary | 600/700 | nvidia470 |
| NVIDIA | Proprietary | 400/500 Series | nvidia390 |
The proprietary driver integrates in the kernel through DKMS.
This driver offers better performance and power handling, and is recommended where performance is needed.
32-bit program support (glibc only)
In order to run 32-bit programs with driver support, you need to install additional packages.
If using the nouveau driver, install the mesa-dri-32bit package.
If using the nvidia driver, install the nvidia<x>-libs-32bit package. <x>
represents the legacy driver version (470 or 390) or can be left empty for
the main driver.
Reverting from nvidia to nouveau
Uninstalling nvidia
In order to revert to the nouveau driver, install the nouveau
driver (if it was not installed already), then
remove the nvidia, nvidia470, or nvidia390 package, as appropriate.
If you were using the obsolete nvidia340 driver, you might need to install the
libglvnd package after removing the nvidia340 package.
Keeping both drivers
It is possible to use the nouveau driver while still having the nvidia
driver installed. To do so, remove the blacklisting of nouveau in
/etc/modprobe.d/nouveau_blacklist.conf, /usr/lib/modprobe.d/nvidia.conf, or
/usr/lib/modprobe.d/nvidia-dkms.conf by commenting it out:
#blacklist nouveau
For Xorg, specify that it should load the nouveau driver rather than the
nvidia driver by creating the file /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/20-nouveau.conf with
the following content:
Section "Device"
Identifier "Nvidia card"
Driver "nouveau"
EndSection
You may need to reboot your system for these changes to take effect.