Having their cards run in servers is a big part of their business model, and Linux owns that market, so I’m surprised if their support is getting worse.
Things like poor Wayland support—sure. But then, why would somebody use this matrix-multiplication accelerator to draw graphics, right?
On my home system I've been running 2x RTX 2070's on Fedora and have had serious enough problems. It's been fairly stable for a while, but the last week or so I keep having the screen go black and not come back. I'm going to try Debian as it's supposed to have better support for nvidia cards. I've been using Fedora or Redhat for a long time, and I'd rather not switch, but these driver issues make the system unusable.
The screen goes dark & unrecoverable during normal use, not while using ml tools, so I just assumed it was a problem with nvidia's drivers being generally disagreeable with Fedora.
You make a a good point, I've been having one card do double-duty as hdmi output and GPGPU. I'll try the motherboard's built-in hdmi and see how that goes.
I've been really busy with other stuff for a few weeks and haven't really thought about the best way to fix this. Thanks for the suggestion!
Having their cards run in servers is a big part of their business model, and Linux owns that market, so I’m surprised if their support is getting worse.
Things like poor Wayland support—sure. But then, why would somebody use this matrix-multiplication accelerator to draw graphics, right?