Can't start Ubuntu 18.04 with GTX 970 (Ryzen 3 2200g GPU has no problem on boot)












1















I only could install Ubuntu 18.04 using the Ryzen 3 2200G GPU, because if I used the PCI-E videocard NVIDIA GTX 970, it was impossible causing the error




kernel panic fatal exception




with all Linux distros. After installing Ubuntu 18.04, I can only access it with the Ryzen GPU because if I used GTX 970, I got only a black screen and the system gets stuck.



My PC is a dual-boot system and the GTX 970 works fine with Windows 10.



My specs are:




  • Motherboard Asus A320M-K

  • DDR4 2400 8GB

  • SSD 120 GB Kingston (Windows 10 and boot grub)

  • Seagate HDD 2TB (Linux)

  • NVIDIA GTX 970

  • Ryzen 3 2200G with Vega Graphics










share|improve this question

























  • Please do not edit your post to say "Solved" in the title, instead post what you did to solve the problem and then accept your own answer as the solution.

    – Thomas Ward
    Aug 17 '18 at 20:38
















1















I only could install Ubuntu 18.04 using the Ryzen 3 2200G GPU, because if I used the PCI-E videocard NVIDIA GTX 970, it was impossible causing the error




kernel panic fatal exception




with all Linux distros. After installing Ubuntu 18.04, I can only access it with the Ryzen GPU because if I used GTX 970, I got only a black screen and the system gets stuck.



My PC is a dual-boot system and the GTX 970 works fine with Windows 10.



My specs are:




  • Motherboard Asus A320M-K

  • DDR4 2400 8GB

  • SSD 120 GB Kingston (Windows 10 and boot grub)

  • Seagate HDD 2TB (Linux)

  • NVIDIA GTX 970

  • Ryzen 3 2200G with Vega Graphics










share|improve this question

























  • Please do not edit your post to say "Solved" in the title, instead post what you did to solve the problem and then accept your own answer as the solution.

    – Thomas Ward
    Aug 17 '18 at 20:38














1












1








1








I only could install Ubuntu 18.04 using the Ryzen 3 2200G GPU, because if I used the PCI-E videocard NVIDIA GTX 970, it was impossible causing the error




kernel panic fatal exception




with all Linux distros. After installing Ubuntu 18.04, I can only access it with the Ryzen GPU because if I used GTX 970, I got only a black screen and the system gets stuck.



My PC is a dual-boot system and the GTX 970 works fine with Windows 10.



My specs are:




  • Motherboard Asus A320M-K

  • DDR4 2400 8GB

  • SSD 120 GB Kingston (Windows 10 and boot grub)

  • Seagate HDD 2TB (Linux)

  • NVIDIA GTX 970

  • Ryzen 3 2200G with Vega Graphics










share|improve this question
















I only could install Ubuntu 18.04 using the Ryzen 3 2200G GPU, because if I used the PCI-E videocard NVIDIA GTX 970, it was impossible causing the error




kernel panic fatal exception




with all Linux distros. After installing Ubuntu 18.04, I can only access it with the Ryzen GPU because if I used GTX 970, I got only a black screen and the system gets stuck.



My PC is a dual-boot system and the GTX 970 works fine with Windows 10.



My specs are:




  • Motherboard Asus A320M-K

  • DDR4 2400 8GB

  • SSD 120 GB Kingston (Windows 10 and boot grub)

  • Seagate HDD 2TB (Linux)

  • NVIDIA GTX 970

  • Ryzen 3 2200G with Vega Graphics







boot amd-graphics pcie






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Aug 17 '18 at 20:38









Thomas Ward

44.9k23125178




44.9k23125178










asked Aug 6 '18 at 15:08









Cesinhafogo DinizCesinhafogo Diniz

62




62













  • Please do not edit your post to say "Solved" in the title, instead post what you did to solve the problem and then accept your own answer as the solution.

    – Thomas Ward
    Aug 17 '18 at 20:38



















  • Please do not edit your post to say "Solved" in the title, instead post what you did to solve the problem and then accept your own answer as the solution.

    – Thomas Ward
    Aug 17 '18 at 20:38

















Please do not edit your post to say "Solved" in the title, instead post what you did to solve the problem and then accept your own answer as the solution.

– Thomas Ward
Aug 17 '18 at 20:38





Please do not edit your post to say "Solved" in the title, instead post what you did to solve the problem and then accept your own answer as the solution.

– Thomas Ward
Aug 17 '18 at 20:38










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















0














The problem returned and I had to uninstall Ubuntu. In short: I can only use linux if I use the integrated Ryzen card. I am still unable to use the GTX 970 because I can not install linux through it.






share|improve this answer

































    0














    Not solved. I have already been able to install correctly on Ubuntu Bionic Beaver 18.04 and Linux Mint Tara 19. The procedure was only possible this week after the appearance of the new 4.18 kernel that came with corrections for video. My procedure was with many steps but everything went well at the end:




    1. I placed the HDMI cable on the integrated motherboard video (Ryzen GPU 2200G) and I usually installed Ubuntu (or Mint).

    2. I updated the System and rebooted.

    3. I installed the UKUU (Ubuntu Kernel Update Utility) and updated the kernel to version 4.18.

    4. I turned off PC and changed the HDMI cable to the onboard GTX 960 VGA.

    5. Finally worked well but some boots after got fail again.


    Sorry



    Btw Im using now the CentOS. It is fine and without fails (I wonder when I could try Ubuntu again...)






    share|improve this answer


























    • FYI: Ask Ubuntu is an English-language only website. I have run your posts through Google Translate to get a rough approximation of what you were saying, however all answers need to continue to be in English.

      – Thomas Ward
      Aug 17 '18 at 20:38











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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    0














    The problem returned and I had to uninstall Ubuntu. In short: I can only use linux if I use the integrated Ryzen card. I am still unable to use the GTX 970 because I can not install linux through it.






    share|improve this answer






























      0














      The problem returned and I had to uninstall Ubuntu. In short: I can only use linux if I use the integrated Ryzen card. I am still unable to use the GTX 970 because I can not install linux through it.






      share|improve this answer




























        0












        0








        0







        The problem returned and I had to uninstall Ubuntu. In short: I can only use linux if I use the integrated Ryzen card. I am still unable to use the GTX 970 because I can not install linux through it.






        share|improve this answer















        The problem returned and I had to uninstall Ubuntu. In short: I can only use linux if I use the integrated Ryzen card. I am still unable to use the GTX 970 because I can not install linux through it.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Aug 17 '18 at 20:37









        Thomas Ward

        44.9k23125178




        44.9k23125178










        answered Aug 17 '18 at 20:36









        Cesinhafogo DinizCesinhafogo Diniz

        62




        62

























            0














            Not solved. I have already been able to install correctly on Ubuntu Bionic Beaver 18.04 and Linux Mint Tara 19. The procedure was only possible this week after the appearance of the new 4.18 kernel that came with corrections for video. My procedure was with many steps but everything went well at the end:




            1. I placed the HDMI cable on the integrated motherboard video (Ryzen GPU 2200G) and I usually installed Ubuntu (or Mint).

            2. I updated the System and rebooted.

            3. I installed the UKUU (Ubuntu Kernel Update Utility) and updated the kernel to version 4.18.

            4. I turned off PC and changed the HDMI cable to the onboard GTX 960 VGA.

            5. Finally worked well but some boots after got fail again.


            Sorry



            Btw Im using now the CentOS. It is fine and without fails (I wonder when I could try Ubuntu again...)






            share|improve this answer


























            • FYI: Ask Ubuntu is an English-language only website. I have run your posts through Google Translate to get a rough approximation of what you were saying, however all answers need to continue to be in English.

              – Thomas Ward
              Aug 17 '18 at 20:38
















            0














            Not solved. I have already been able to install correctly on Ubuntu Bionic Beaver 18.04 and Linux Mint Tara 19. The procedure was only possible this week after the appearance of the new 4.18 kernel that came with corrections for video. My procedure was with many steps but everything went well at the end:




            1. I placed the HDMI cable on the integrated motherboard video (Ryzen GPU 2200G) and I usually installed Ubuntu (or Mint).

            2. I updated the System and rebooted.

            3. I installed the UKUU (Ubuntu Kernel Update Utility) and updated the kernel to version 4.18.

            4. I turned off PC and changed the HDMI cable to the onboard GTX 960 VGA.

            5. Finally worked well but some boots after got fail again.


            Sorry



            Btw Im using now the CentOS. It is fine and without fails (I wonder when I could try Ubuntu again...)






            share|improve this answer


























            • FYI: Ask Ubuntu is an English-language only website. I have run your posts through Google Translate to get a rough approximation of what you were saying, however all answers need to continue to be in English.

              – Thomas Ward
              Aug 17 '18 at 20:38














            0












            0








            0







            Not solved. I have already been able to install correctly on Ubuntu Bionic Beaver 18.04 and Linux Mint Tara 19. The procedure was only possible this week after the appearance of the new 4.18 kernel that came with corrections for video. My procedure was with many steps but everything went well at the end:




            1. I placed the HDMI cable on the integrated motherboard video (Ryzen GPU 2200G) and I usually installed Ubuntu (or Mint).

            2. I updated the System and rebooted.

            3. I installed the UKUU (Ubuntu Kernel Update Utility) and updated the kernel to version 4.18.

            4. I turned off PC and changed the HDMI cable to the onboard GTX 960 VGA.

            5. Finally worked well but some boots after got fail again.


            Sorry



            Btw Im using now the CentOS. It is fine and without fails (I wonder when I could try Ubuntu again...)






            share|improve this answer















            Not solved. I have already been able to install correctly on Ubuntu Bionic Beaver 18.04 and Linux Mint Tara 19. The procedure was only possible this week after the appearance of the new 4.18 kernel that came with corrections for video. My procedure was with many steps but everything went well at the end:




            1. I placed the HDMI cable on the integrated motherboard video (Ryzen GPU 2200G) and I usually installed Ubuntu (or Mint).

            2. I updated the System and rebooted.

            3. I installed the UKUU (Ubuntu Kernel Update Utility) and updated the kernel to version 4.18.

            4. I turned off PC and changed the HDMI cable to the onboard GTX 960 VGA.

            5. Finally worked well but some boots after got fail again.


            Sorry



            Btw Im using now the CentOS. It is fine and without fails (I wonder when I could try Ubuntu again...)







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Aug 18 '18 at 23:26

























            answered Aug 15 '18 at 19:17









            Cesinhafogo DinizCesinhafogo Diniz

            62




            62













            • FYI: Ask Ubuntu is an English-language only website. I have run your posts through Google Translate to get a rough approximation of what you were saying, however all answers need to continue to be in English.

              – Thomas Ward
              Aug 17 '18 at 20:38



















            • FYI: Ask Ubuntu is an English-language only website. I have run your posts through Google Translate to get a rough approximation of what you were saying, however all answers need to continue to be in English.

              – Thomas Ward
              Aug 17 '18 at 20:38

















            FYI: Ask Ubuntu is an English-language only website. I have run your posts through Google Translate to get a rough approximation of what you were saying, however all answers need to continue to be in English.

            – Thomas Ward
            Aug 17 '18 at 20:38





            FYI: Ask Ubuntu is an English-language only website. I have run your posts through Google Translate to get a rough approximation of what you were saying, however all answers need to continue to be in English.

            – Thomas Ward
            Aug 17 '18 at 20:38


















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