On Fri, 14 Jan 2022 14:10:31 +0100 Andreas Beckmann <a...@debian.org> wrote: > On 14/01/2022 02.03, Сергей Petrov wrote: > > Package: nvidia-legacy-340xx-driver > > Version: 340.108-12 > > There is not much infomation in this bug report. I'll try to guess, if > I'm wrong please install reportbug and run > reportbug -N 1003707 > to collect additional information about your setup and have it sent to > the bug report. (Creating the initial bug report with reportbug is > recommended.) > > So you want to use the unsupported 340xx legacy driver? > > But there are also some packages from the current driver installed? > You can probably remove them (unless you really want to have both > drivers installed). That might already fix your problem. > > It it doesn't, what are the nvidia and glx alternatives pointing to? > update-glx --display glx > update-glx --display nvidia > (that information would have been collected by reportbug) > if glx is not pointing to nvidia or nvidia is not pointing to the legacy > driver, you can change that with > update-glx --config glx > update-glx --config nvidia > > Andreas > >
apt-file search libnvidia-cfg.so.460.91.03 libnvidia-cfg1: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/nvidia/current/libnvidia-cfg.so.460.91.03 libnvidia-tesla-460-cfg1: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/nvidia/tesla-460/libnvidia-cfg.so.460.91.03 Why, if I install nvidia-legacy-340xx-driver in my system available /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/nvidia/current/libnvidia-cfg.so.460.91.03 File from another driver version. This normal or wrong?