Nicolas Kovacs wrote:
>
> I'm currently trying to install CentOS 7 (desktop) on a Lenovo
> workstation with an NVidia Quadro 2000 graphical card.
>
> Has anybody got this card to behave under RHEL/CentOS 7 ?
I'm using the following on CentOS 7.4:
uname -r :
3.10.0-693.5.2.el7.x86_64
Model:
We have a number of home directory servers running CentOS 6 exporting XFS file
systems over NFSv3
We enable user quotas for all users - with a relatively small allocation to
each user
Every now and then, we get a user that has a quota mismatch - where they are
(usually) over their quota, but t
Le 10/11/2017 à 09:39, James Pearson a écrit :
> I manually built the driver - from the nvidia-installer.log :
>
> nvidia-installer command line:
> ./nvidia-installer
> --accept-license
> --no-questions
> --silent
> --install-libglvnd
>
> The nouveau driver is blacklisted
Nicolas,
Did you play with nvidia-settings? Maybe also wipe out xorg.conf and start
afresh.
--
Sent from the Delta quadrant using Borg technology!
Nux!
www.nux.ro
- Original Message -
> From: "Nicolas Kovacs"
> To: "James Pearson" , "CentOS mailing list"
>
> Sent: Friday, 10 Novembe
Everyone,
I was hoping to be able to plug the Logitech Brio in and have it work,
but it did not. I can have it connect to a Windows 10 laptop and have
it function, so I know the camera works.
The Centos 7.4 is recognizing it when I plug in the usb 3.0 cable. The
results of dmesg demonstrated :
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