Can't install Nvidia Drivers on Ubuntu 18.04.2 LTS (GTX 1050 Mobile, AMD Ryzen 5 2500u) [duplicate]
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This question already has an answer here:
Why do I get “Required key not available” when install 3rd party kernel modules or after a kernel upgrade?
4 answers
I've tried for hours to install nvidia drivers for my laptop. The standard nvidia-390, the newer nvidia-418 through the repo, various other versions, the .run files from Nvidia's website, tried changing into lightdm, tried the various grub parameters like nomodeset etc. Last thing I tried was installing nvidia-384 because why the hell not at this point, which resulted in a login loop. Not the first time this is happening either, the standard nvidia-390 does the same and I have no idea why. Has someone managed to install nvidia drivers in a similar system that could help me? Thank you.
Edit: I've disabled secure boot, so unless my BIOS is lying to me, this shouldn't be an issue...
EDIT 2:
After installing nvidia-driver-418 I can boot the system, but the command nvidia-settings give me this output:
ERROR: Unable to load info from any available system
(nvidia-settings:2477): GLib-GObject-CRITICAL **: 12:22:32.065: g_object_unref: assertion 'G_IS_OBJECT (object)' failed
** Message: 12:22:32.070: PRIME: No offloading required. Abort
** Message: 12:22:32.070: PRIME: is it supported? no
And the nvidia-settings window is empty. Any ideas?
drivers 18.04 nvidia xorg
marked as duplicate by mikewhatever, Eric Carvalho, Fabby, N0rbert, mniess Apr 13 at 13:30
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
add a comment |
This question already has an answer here:
Why do I get “Required key not available” when install 3rd party kernel modules or after a kernel upgrade?
4 answers
I've tried for hours to install nvidia drivers for my laptop. The standard nvidia-390, the newer nvidia-418 through the repo, various other versions, the .run files from Nvidia's website, tried changing into lightdm, tried the various grub parameters like nomodeset etc. Last thing I tried was installing nvidia-384 because why the hell not at this point, which resulted in a login loop. Not the first time this is happening either, the standard nvidia-390 does the same and I have no idea why. Has someone managed to install nvidia drivers in a similar system that could help me? Thank you.
Edit: I've disabled secure boot, so unless my BIOS is lying to me, this shouldn't be an issue...
EDIT 2:
After installing nvidia-driver-418 I can boot the system, but the command nvidia-settings give me this output:
ERROR: Unable to load info from any available system
(nvidia-settings:2477): GLib-GObject-CRITICAL **: 12:22:32.065: g_object_unref: assertion 'G_IS_OBJECT (object)' failed
** Message: 12:22:32.070: PRIME: No offloading required. Abort
** Message: 12:22:32.070: PRIME: is it supported? no
And the nvidia-settings window is empty. Any ideas?
drivers 18.04 nvidia xorg
marked as duplicate by mikewhatever, Eric Carvalho, Fabby, N0rbert, mniess Apr 13 at 13:30
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
I've disabled secure boot.
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 9:07
add a comment |
This question already has an answer here:
Why do I get “Required key not available” when install 3rd party kernel modules or after a kernel upgrade?
4 answers
I've tried for hours to install nvidia drivers for my laptop. The standard nvidia-390, the newer nvidia-418 through the repo, various other versions, the .run files from Nvidia's website, tried changing into lightdm, tried the various grub parameters like nomodeset etc. Last thing I tried was installing nvidia-384 because why the hell not at this point, which resulted in a login loop. Not the first time this is happening either, the standard nvidia-390 does the same and I have no idea why. Has someone managed to install nvidia drivers in a similar system that could help me? Thank you.
Edit: I've disabled secure boot, so unless my BIOS is lying to me, this shouldn't be an issue...
EDIT 2:
After installing nvidia-driver-418 I can boot the system, but the command nvidia-settings give me this output:
ERROR: Unable to load info from any available system
(nvidia-settings:2477): GLib-GObject-CRITICAL **: 12:22:32.065: g_object_unref: assertion 'G_IS_OBJECT (object)' failed
** Message: 12:22:32.070: PRIME: No offloading required. Abort
** Message: 12:22:32.070: PRIME: is it supported? no
And the nvidia-settings window is empty. Any ideas?
drivers 18.04 nvidia xorg
This question already has an answer here:
Why do I get “Required key not available” when install 3rd party kernel modules or after a kernel upgrade?
4 answers
I've tried for hours to install nvidia drivers for my laptop. The standard nvidia-390, the newer nvidia-418 through the repo, various other versions, the .run files from Nvidia's website, tried changing into lightdm, tried the various grub parameters like nomodeset etc. Last thing I tried was installing nvidia-384 because why the hell not at this point, which resulted in a login loop. Not the first time this is happening either, the standard nvidia-390 does the same and I have no idea why. Has someone managed to install nvidia drivers in a similar system that could help me? Thank you.
Edit: I've disabled secure boot, so unless my BIOS is lying to me, this shouldn't be an issue...
EDIT 2:
After installing nvidia-driver-418 I can boot the system, but the command nvidia-settings give me this output:
ERROR: Unable to load info from any available system
(nvidia-settings:2477): GLib-GObject-CRITICAL **: 12:22:32.065: g_object_unref: assertion 'G_IS_OBJECT (object)' failed
** Message: 12:22:32.070: PRIME: No offloading required. Abort
** Message: 12:22:32.070: PRIME: is it supported? no
And the nvidia-settings window is empty. Any ideas?
This question already has an answer here:
Why do I get “Required key not available” when install 3rd party kernel modules or after a kernel upgrade?
4 answers
drivers 18.04 nvidia xorg
drivers 18.04 nvidia xorg
edited Apr 6 at 9:23
Antonis Karvelas
asked Apr 6 at 8:42
Antonis KarvelasAntonis Karvelas
11
11
marked as duplicate by mikewhatever, Eric Carvalho, Fabby, N0rbert, mniess Apr 13 at 13:30
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
marked as duplicate by mikewhatever, Eric Carvalho, Fabby, N0rbert, mniess Apr 13 at 13:30
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
I've disabled secure boot.
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 9:07
add a comment |
I've disabled secure boot.
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 9:07
I've disabled secure boot.
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 9:07
I've disabled secure boot.
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 9:07
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
I was faced with a similar problem while trying to install the Nvidia drivers for the RTX 2070.
May I suggest you look at how I solved the problem in this post, in case it helps.
The two important things to note are:
- You need to install a driver which is compatible with your graphics card. You can check compatible drivers on the Nvidia website. From what I see there, the latest version 418 supports your graphics card (but please check yourself to make sure).
- Make sure you use the command
sudo apt-get install nvidia-driver-418
when installing your driver (notsudo apt-get install nvidia-418
which is obsolete).
Please let me know how if it worked.
Thanks for the reply. This does not work unfortunately, at least not the last 3 or so times I've tried it (I always purge nvidia packages beforehand, so it's not that). I'm now reinstalling Ubuntu but with the third-party software option checked, I think I read somewhere that this may help. If it doesn't change anything, I'll install 418 and get back to you.
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 9:05
Tried installing nvidia-driver-418, didn't work, please see edited post.
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 9:24
I don't know if it can help, but have you tried blacklisting nouveau? Check out Marmayogi's answer on this post for instructions.
– johnwolf1987
Apr 6 at 9:27
Alternatively, you can try to update kernel. See Frank's answer on the same post for instructions. I hope one of these options work...
– johnwolf1987
Apr 6 at 9:30
Updating to newest kernel and blacklisting nouveau doesn't work. Currently stuck at black screen on boot...
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 10:32
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
I was faced with a similar problem while trying to install the Nvidia drivers for the RTX 2070.
May I suggest you look at how I solved the problem in this post, in case it helps.
The two important things to note are:
- You need to install a driver which is compatible with your graphics card. You can check compatible drivers on the Nvidia website. From what I see there, the latest version 418 supports your graphics card (but please check yourself to make sure).
- Make sure you use the command
sudo apt-get install nvidia-driver-418
when installing your driver (notsudo apt-get install nvidia-418
which is obsolete).
Please let me know how if it worked.
Thanks for the reply. This does not work unfortunately, at least not the last 3 or so times I've tried it (I always purge nvidia packages beforehand, so it's not that). I'm now reinstalling Ubuntu but with the third-party software option checked, I think I read somewhere that this may help. If it doesn't change anything, I'll install 418 and get back to you.
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 9:05
Tried installing nvidia-driver-418, didn't work, please see edited post.
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 9:24
I don't know if it can help, but have you tried blacklisting nouveau? Check out Marmayogi's answer on this post for instructions.
– johnwolf1987
Apr 6 at 9:27
Alternatively, you can try to update kernel. See Frank's answer on the same post for instructions. I hope one of these options work...
– johnwolf1987
Apr 6 at 9:30
Updating to newest kernel and blacklisting nouveau doesn't work. Currently stuck at black screen on boot...
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 10:32
add a comment |
I was faced with a similar problem while trying to install the Nvidia drivers for the RTX 2070.
May I suggest you look at how I solved the problem in this post, in case it helps.
The two important things to note are:
- You need to install a driver which is compatible with your graphics card. You can check compatible drivers on the Nvidia website. From what I see there, the latest version 418 supports your graphics card (but please check yourself to make sure).
- Make sure you use the command
sudo apt-get install nvidia-driver-418
when installing your driver (notsudo apt-get install nvidia-418
which is obsolete).
Please let me know how if it worked.
Thanks for the reply. This does not work unfortunately, at least not the last 3 or so times I've tried it (I always purge nvidia packages beforehand, so it's not that). I'm now reinstalling Ubuntu but with the third-party software option checked, I think I read somewhere that this may help. If it doesn't change anything, I'll install 418 and get back to you.
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 9:05
Tried installing nvidia-driver-418, didn't work, please see edited post.
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 9:24
I don't know if it can help, but have you tried blacklisting nouveau? Check out Marmayogi's answer on this post for instructions.
– johnwolf1987
Apr 6 at 9:27
Alternatively, you can try to update kernel. See Frank's answer on the same post for instructions. I hope one of these options work...
– johnwolf1987
Apr 6 at 9:30
Updating to newest kernel and blacklisting nouveau doesn't work. Currently stuck at black screen on boot...
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 10:32
add a comment |
I was faced with a similar problem while trying to install the Nvidia drivers for the RTX 2070.
May I suggest you look at how I solved the problem in this post, in case it helps.
The two important things to note are:
- You need to install a driver which is compatible with your graphics card. You can check compatible drivers on the Nvidia website. From what I see there, the latest version 418 supports your graphics card (but please check yourself to make sure).
- Make sure you use the command
sudo apt-get install nvidia-driver-418
when installing your driver (notsudo apt-get install nvidia-418
which is obsolete).
Please let me know how if it worked.
I was faced with a similar problem while trying to install the Nvidia drivers for the RTX 2070.
May I suggest you look at how I solved the problem in this post, in case it helps.
The two important things to note are:
- You need to install a driver which is compatible with your graphics card. You can check compatible drivers on the Nvidia website. From what I see there, the latest version 418 supports your graphics card (but please check yourself to make sure).
- Make sure you use the command
sudo apt-get install nvidia-driver-418
when installing your driver (notsudo apt-get install nvidia-418
which is obsolete).
Please let me know how if it worked.
answered Apr 6 at 9:01
johnwolf1987johnwolf1987
256
256
Thanks for the reply. This does not work unfortunately, at least not the last 3 or so times I've tried it (I always purge nvidia packages beforehand, so it's not that). I'm now reinstalling Ubuntu but with the third-party software option checked, I think I read somewhere that this may help. If it doesn't change anything, I'll install 418 and get back to you.
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 9:05
Tried installing nvidia-driver-418, didn't work, please see edited post.
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 9:24
I don't know if it can help, but have you tried blacklisting nouveau? Check out Marmayogi's answer on this post for instructions.
– johnwolf1987
Apr 6 at 9:27
Alternatively, you can try to update kernel. See Frank's answer on the same post for instructions. I hope one of these options work...
– johnwolf1987
Apr 6 at 9:30
Updating to newest kernel and blacklisting nouveau doesn't work. Currently stuck at black screen on boot...
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 10:32
add a comment |
Thanks for the reply. This does not work unfortunately, at least not the last 3 or so times I've tried it (I always purge nvidia packages beforehand, so it's not that). I'm now reinstalling Ubuntu but with the third-party software option checked, I think I read somewhere that this may help. If it doesn't change anything, I'll install 418 and get back to you.
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 9:05
Tried installing nvidia-driver-418, didn't work, please see edited post.
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 9:24
I don't know if it can help, but have you tried blacklisting nouveau? Check out Marmayogi's answer on this post for instructions.
– johnwolf1987
Apr 6 at 9:27
Alternatively, you can try to update kernel. See Frank's answer on the same post for instructions. I hope one of these options work...
– johnwolf1987
Apr 6 at 9:30
Updating to newest kernel and blacklisting nouveau doesn't work. Currently stuck at black screen on boot...
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 10:32
Thanks for the reply. This does not work unfortunately, at least not the last 3 or so times I've tried it (I always purge nvidia packages beforehand, so it's not that). I'm now reinstalling Ubuntu but with the third-party software option checked, I think I read somewhere that this may help. If it doesn't change anything, I'll install 418 and get back to you.
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 9:05
Thanks for the reply. This does not work unfortunately, at least not the last 3 or so times I've tried it (I always purge nvidia packages beforehand, so it's not that). I'm now reinstalling Ubuntu but with the third-party software option checked, I think I read somewhere that this may help. If it doesn't change anything, I'll install 418 and get back to you.
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 9:05
Tried installing nvidia-driver-418, didn't work, please see edited post.
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 9:24
Tried installing nvidia-driver-418, didn't work, please see edited post.
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 9:24
I don't know if it can help, but have you tried blacklisting nouveau? Check out Marmayogi's answer on this post for instructions.
– johnwolf1987
Apr 6 at 9:27
I don't know if it can help, but have you tried blacklisting nouveau? Check out Marmayogi's answer on this post for instructions.
– johnwolf1987
Apr 6 at 9:27
Alternatively, you can try to update kernel. See Frank's answer on the same post for instructions. I hope one of these options work...
– johnwolf1987
Apr 6 at 9:30
Alternatively, you can try to update kernel. See Frank's answer on the same post for instructions. I hope one of these options work...
– johnwolf1987
Apr 6 at 9:30
Updating to newest kernel and blacklisting nouveau doesn't work. Currently stuck at black screen on boot...
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 10:32
Updating to newest kernel and blacklisting nouveau doesn't work. Currently stuck at black screen on boot...
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 10:32
add a comment |
I've disabled secure boot.
– Antonis Karvelas
Apr 6 at 9:07