Nvidia Linux ARM Display Driver is a proprietary 3D OpenGL native video driver that aims to support Nvidia graphics cards on Linux operating systems that run on ARM hardware. It’s distributed in two main branches, as Short Lived (short term supported) or Long Lived (long term supported), offering support only for the 32-bit (x86) instruction set architectures.
In order to install the Nvidia Linux ARM Display Driver, download the binary package from the Downloads section, and execute the sh ./NVIDIA-Linux-armv7l-gnueabihf-xxx.xx.run command as root in a Linux Terminal (where xxx.xx is the version number) to install the driver.
During the installation, users will be asked if they want to edit the X configuration file manually or let the installer do all the work. Alternatively, after installation, you can run the nvidia-xconfig command via a Linux Terminal to set the new driver as default.
Yes, most probably! You will be able to install the Nvidia Linux ARM Display Driver on any ARM hardware, but keep in mind that this drive only supports 32-bit instruction set architectures. If you’re running it on a 64-bit ARM computer, it won’t work.
This is a recent driver that has been designed to support only relatively new graphics cards produced by Nvidia in the last couple of years. No legacy video card is supported by this driver. If you encounter issues with your GPU, try to install the Short Lived branch first, and then the Long Lived branch, after uninstalling the former.
Go to the Softpas website, press the 'Downloads' button, and pick the app you want to download and install—easy and fast!
SoftPas is your platform for the latest software and technology news, reviews, and guides. Stay up to date with cutting-edge trends in tech and software development.
Subscribe to newsletter
© Copyright 2024, SoftPas, All Rights Reserved.