Device Driver Manager Debian Jessie

Debian 8 'Jessie' As of jessie, if you only need basic functionality and don't care about performances, the need for the proprietary drivers is pretty much over - nouveau now works quite well and works with dual-headed displays by simple and easy configuring from within your desktop (for KDE Plasma see. Usually, after installing Debian Jessie on your computer running an Intel processor with integrated GPU, the first question that comes in mind is Next, you might want to ensure that you are running the latest drivers available. Honestly, the simple answer for first question is that; Debian Linux desktop.

I have SparkyLinux 4.0 (XFCE). This system uses a DDM. My DDM (device-driver-manager) does not start. Console produces the following: sparky@home-pc:~$ ddm Fontconfig warning: «/etc/fonts/conf.d/50-user.conf», line 14: reading configurations from ~/.fonts.conf is deprecated.

Please move it to /home/sparky/.config/fontconfig/fonts.conf manually sparky@home-pc:~$ I was advised to: Remove ~HOME/.fonts.conf file (it's hidden) Result: sparky@home-pc:~$ ddm sparky@home-pc:~$ (DDM does not start). If forced to run: sudo ddm --force DDM starts with a warning: 'DDM did not find any supported hardware.' Please help solve the problem. My computer: AMD Phenom 2 x6 1100T, ASUS SABERTOOTH 990FX R2, DDR3 1866 8x2 Gb, GeForce GTX760. Sincerely, Fox909. Sound driver for windows 7. Code: get_lspci_info DEBUG lspci output = ['01:00.0 VGA compatible controller [0300]: NVIDIA Corporation GK104 [GeForce GTX 760] [10de:1187] (rev a1)'] get_nvidia DEBUG Device(s): [['NVIDIA Corporation GK104 [GeForce GTX 760]', '10de', '1187']] get_nvidia DEBUG Loaded graphical driver: nouveau get_nvidia DEBUG Nvidia device found: NVIDIA Corporation GK104 [GeForce GTX 760] get_nvidia DEBUG Nvidia driver to use: get_lspci_info DEBUG lspci output = ['] get_pae DEBUG PAE check: machine=x86_64 / release=4.0.0-2-amd64 fill_treeview_ddm DEBUG DDM did not find any supported hardware.

Get_lspci_info DEBUG lspci output = ['01:00.0 VGA compatible controller [0300]: NVIDIA Corporation GK104 [GeForce GTX 760] [10de:1187] (rev a1)'] get_nvidia DEBUG Device(s): [['NVIDIA Corporation GK104 [GeForce GTX 760]', '10de', '1187']] get_nvidia DEBUG Loaded graphical driver: nouveau get_nvidia DEBUG Nvidia device found: NVIDIA Corporation GK104 [GeForce GTX 760] get_nvidia DEBUG Nvidia driver to use: get_lspci_info DEBUG lspci output = ['] get_pae DEBUG PAE check: machine=x86_64 / release=4.0.0-2-amd64 fill_treeview_ddm DEBUG DDM did not find any supported hardware. Get_lspci_info DEBUG lspci output = ['01:00.0 VGA compatible controller [0300]: NVIDIA Corporation GK104 [GeForce GTX 760] [10de:1187] (rev a1)'] get_nvidia DEBUG Device(s): [['NVIDIA Corporation GK104 [GeForce GTX 760]', '10de', '1187']] get_nvidia DEBUG Loaded graphical driver: nouveau get_nvidia DEBUG Nvidia device found: NVIDIA Corporation GK104 [GeForce GTX 760] get_nvidia DEBUG Nvidia driver to use: get_lspci_info DEBUG lspci output = ['] get_pae DEBUG PAE check: machine=x86_64 / release=4.0.0-2-amd64 fill_treeview_ddm DEBUG DDM did not find any supported hardware. On both the EEs and SparkyLinux (which is also based on Testing) the contents of /etc/debian_version is 'stretch/sid'.

This is as provided by Debian itself, so can be assumed to be correct. However, the current version of the nvidia-detect script (which is more recent than the one in that filewatcher posting) can't detect anything more recent than jessie. So the real 'solution' would appear to be to poke the maintainers of the nvidia-detect package (which is part of the source package nvidia-graphics-drivers) to get with the program.

Alternatively, hack the /etc/debian_version file to make the release look like jessie, but I'm not sure that's a good idea. Bluestacks hd appplayerpro setup 0.7.3.766_rel.msi. Edit Another alternative - equally bad idea, probably - is to hack /usr/bin/nvidia-detect so it accepts stretch as a valid Debian release. Change jessie to stretch in line 195. However, don't blame me if things go poof. Hi I have found a problem and know how to solve it.

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