My Weekend Linux Misadventure
-
@black3dynamite UEFI is enabled and I did get numerous prompts to set a password for the linux version of secure boot.
This happened nearly every time I would install or reinstall a driver.I've never messed with the bios on this particular laptop, never needed to.
But do you think or suspect secure boot being an issue? -
@kamidon said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
@black3dynamite UEFI is enabled and I did get numerous prompts to set a password for the linux version of secure boot.
This happened nearly every time I would install or reinstall a driver.I've never messed with the bios on this particular laptop, never needed to.
But do you think or suspect secure boot being an issue?I don't know. Just noticed this
https://www.linuxbabe.com/ubuntu/install-nvidia-driver-ubuntu-18-04
And another thing I forgot to asked. With your Fedora install, were you using Fedora Workstation (GNOME3)? Because by default it uses Wayland instead Xorg for its display server. And from what I've read tell Nvidia doesn't play nice when using Wayland.
-
@black3dynamite said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
@kamidon said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
@black3dynamite UEFI is enabled and I did get numerous prompts to set a password for the linux version of secure boot.
This happened nearly every time I would install or reinstall a driver.I've never messed with the bios on this particular laptop, never needed to.
But do you think or suspect secure boot being an issue?I don't know. Just noticed this
https://www.linuxbabe.com/ubuntu/install-nvidia-driver-ubuntu-18-04
And another thing I forgot to asked. With your Fedora install, were you using Fedora Workstation (GNOME3)? Because by default it uses Wayland instead Xorg for its display server. And from what I've read tell Nvidia doesn't play nice when using Wayland.
Damn. Wish I saw that sooner. I installed 19.04 first though, but I need to try that next time.
I'll disable Secure boot and try again one of these days.I used this: https://getfedora.org/en/workstation/download/
Workstation 30 -
@kamidon said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
@black3dynamite said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
@kamidon said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
@black3dynamite UEFI is enabled and I did get numerous prompts to set a password for the linux version of secure boot.
This happened nearly every time I would install or reinstall a driver.I've never messed with the bios on this particular laptop, never needed to.
But do you think or suspect secure boot being an issue?I don't know. Just noticed this
https://www.linuxbabe.com/ubuntu/install-nvidia-driver-ubuntu-18-04
And another thing I forgot to asked. With your Fedora install, were you using Fedora Workstation (GNOME3)? Because by default it uses Wayland instead Xorg for its display server. And from what I've read tell Nvidia doesn't play nice when using Wayland.
Damn. Wish I saw that sooner. I installed 19.04 first though, but I need to try that next time.
I'll disable Secure boot and try again one of these days.I used this: https://getfedora.org/en/workstation/download/
Workstation 30It looks like they updated the installer to no longer ask about the desktop experience.
I have it installing now, but I assume it will be Gnome3 / Wayland.
To get the Cinnamon download, you have to go to: https://spins.fedoraproject.org
-
Install completed, and yes, that ISO goes straight to GNOME.
-
Unlike the bastardized step child that is Ubuntu, the point of Fedora is that it is a clean FOSS install. If you need to put anything on it that is not truly FOSS, you have to add an external repository.
For example, you cannot even decode HTML5 because of FOSS concerns with the licenses.
The most common, and best IMO, solution is to add the RPM Fusion repo: https://rpmfusion.org/Configuration
-
For the record, I jsut checked and the NetInstall ISO lets you pick your desktop. THough defaults to GNOME (simply called "Workstation").
Click on Software Selection.
And you are presented with options.
Also, always use the NetInstall because why download shit twice? Once to download all the old packages as of the date of the ISO, and then once as soon as it is installed, you will need to run updates.
Instead the NetInstall just downloads current at time of install.
Oh look I wrote a pseudo guide...
https://www.republicofit.com/topic/15907/setting-up-a-cinnamon-based-fedora-desktop -
@JaredBusch said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
Unlike the bastardized step child that is Ubuntu
LOL
-
@black3dynamite said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
@JaredBusch said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
Unlike the bastardized step child that is Ubuntu
LOL
Well, it is..... According to me.
Some day something might happen the requires me to switch lots of things to Ubuntu, but I doubt it.
Yes, my feelings towards Ubuntu are from when they didn't do thigns as smooth as they do now.
-
@kamidon said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
@Dashrender Oh I forgot Steam OS: https://itsfoss.com/linux-gaming-distributions/
Scott rant incoming ^_^
-
@wirestyle22 Uh oh...lol
-
@JaredBusch said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
@black3dynamite said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
@JaredBusch said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
Unlike the bastardized step child that is Ubuntu
LOL
Well, it is..... According to me.
Some day something might happen the requires me to switch lots of things to Ubuntu, but I doubt it.
Yes, my feelings towards Ubuntu are from when they didn't do thigns as smooth as they do now.
Yeah whenever I try again, soon, I definitely want to try it with Fedora. Just seemed so clean and fast.
I'll disable secure boot as well.
Thank you for your input, I have yet to use Cinnamon, though I've tried many others.
Hah, if I have issues with the damned driver, I'll post here.
No matter what, I'd love to try something new, different and as customizable as Linux full-time. Windows is great, but as we all are well aware, it's bloated. Not to mention telemetry and Microsoft selling our information. -
@kamidon said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
So I install the LTS 18.04 Ubuntu.
Long story short, I had a much worse time with this version...As is expected. That's two versions old and doesn't get treated as a first class citizen. It exists only for people addicted to not staying updated so gets fewer updates and less support and no official support (per Canonical themselves.) "Supported" here just means that they patch it and if you pay for support they will help you get to the actual supported version and help you then. Going backwards in versions is realistically never a good way to have a good experience, every thing from drivers to features will get worse.
-
@kamidon said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
Fired up the game again, "Your video card is not supported or drivers are not installed" something like that.
I thought, oh no problem.Did you allow Ubuntu to deploy third party packages during the install process? It should have picked up the Nvidia stuff at that time.
-
@scottalanmiller said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
@kamidon said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
Fired up the game again, "Your video card is not supported or drivers are not installed" something like that.
I thought, oh no problem.Did you allow Ubuntu to deploy third party packages during the install process? It should have picked up the Nvidia stuff at that time.
Yes! I followed what you said and ticked the box.
It sucks, I tried really hard and for a long while to get this going.
I'm disappointed, but I'll get this working eventually. It's just on my main computer so...I wanted to play some Warhammer badly haha. -
@Dashrender said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
Wasn't someone saying last week that nvidia on Linux still sucked? AMD/ATI was better?
Sucked and don't work aren't the same, though.
-
@kamidon said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
@scottalanmiller said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
@kamidon said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
Fired up the game again, "Your video card is not supported or drivers are not installed" something like that.
I thought, oh no problem.Did you allow Ubuntu to deploy third party packages during the install process? It should have picked up the Nvidia stuff at that time.
Yes! I followed what you said and ticked the box.
It sucks, I tried really hard and for a long while to get this going.
I'm disappointed, but I'll get this working eventually. It's just on my main computer so...I wanted to play some Warhammer badly haha.Breaking things is just a part of the learning process. It's helpful
-
Just to throw another couple of options in, if you're looking at other flavors of Linux, consider Manjaro and Sabayon, they're both rolling release and based on well-known projects (Arch and Gentoo respectively). I havn't tried gaming with either one but thye're both supposed to have support for the closed source drivers out of the box as well as Steam and playsonlinux (wine front end) support.
I was a long-time Linux Mint user (built on Ubuntu's LTS base) but have changed to Manjaro Cinnamon and XFCE (depending on the system's power)
-
@Dashrender said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
Scott and others were talking about some other Linux OS that was specifically designed with Windows like APIs for games that hadn't been ported - though I don't recall the name of it.
SteamOS is really just Ubuntu with Steam built in.
That doesn't address drivers, though.
And the Proton compatibility layer is available universally, it is built into the Steam agent.
-
@kamidon said in My Weekend Linux Misadventure:
Another issue it kept talking about the Noveau driver being installed so the install can't continue. Found a guide to disable and blacklist that driver, rebooted, installed nvidia driver again, install failed, but completed. Driver shows up under "Proprietary drivers in use", there were three nvidia drivers, game reported with each (after rebooting when switching) that no driver was found for display.
Noveau is an open source Nvidia driver replacement. If it is there, the commercial Nvidia drives can't be installed. Has to be one or the other.