> Check to see if you have a symbolic link "nvidia" > in /usr/lib/nvidia which eventually points > to /usr/lib/nvidia/current/nvidia_drv.so yes i have:
/usr/lib/nvidia/nvidia: symbolic link to `/etc/alternatives/nvidia' /etc/alternatives/nvidia: symbolic link to `/usr/lib/nvidia/current' # file /usr/lib/nvidia/current /usr/lib/nvidia/current: directory # ls /usr/lib/nvidia/current libglx.so nv-control-dpy nvidia_drv.so nvidia-settings nvidia-settings.desktop libglx.so.304.88 nvidia-bug-report.sh nvidia.ids nvidia-settings.1.gz > > And if you're trying to install the nvidia graphics driver, modprobe > isn't the way to do it, at least, on Wheezy. You need to create an > xorg.conf file in /etc/X11 and blacklist the default driver, most > likely nouveau, in /etc/modprobe.d, then reboot. Google for the > specific instructions. i have jessy. why modprobe cannot find nvidia_drv.so? when i used wheezy i didnot need the xorg.conf. it stopped to work after upgrading. There was no problem when i had upgraded from wheeze to jessy. But when kernel version was changed to 3.9 the problem was occuring. What can be broken? -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/847472d8c7cb34b54ef87267d0471391.squir...@newmail.bilkent.edu.tr