Note: top-posting fixed, some quotes trimmed.

On Thu, Nov 15, 2018 at 2:54 PM Alexander V. Makartsev <avbe...@gmail.com <mailto:avbe...@gmail.com>> wrote:

    I don't understand what are you talking about. There is no need to
    do things you describe on Debian manually.
    Installation of "nvidia-driver" package is very straight forward
    and it's dependencies takes care of nouveau blacklisting for you,
    among the other things.


    On 11/15/2018 08:13 PM, Tom D. wrote:
    Thank you for your kind reply. I downloaded the driver from
    www.nvidia.com <http://www.nvidia.com>for NVIDIA geforce GTX 678
    video card driver.

    It was a shell script with sh extension.

    So until I blacklist nouveau completely from the Debian OS,
    Nvidia driver won't install. As a result, I had to blacklist
    nouveau completely and do other things.

    One of the reasons for installing that driver is Cuda support on
    Debian.

    So I was just saying if there were an easier method to choose
    between NVIDIA's driver from their website or nvidia-package and
    disable nouveau accordingly that would be great? Because Linux is
    about giving people choice alternative options. Isn't it?

    Sincerely
    Adrian D'Costa

Tom (or Adrian?): what Alexander is saying is that if you ignore the
direct download from the nVIDIA site, and just

    apt install nvidia-driver

it will download a copy of the proprietary driver and install it for
you, while simultaneously removing nouveau. That's the Debian Way to
install the commercial driver.

--
Carl Fink          c...@finknetwork.com
Thinking and logic and stuff at Reasonably Literate
http://reasonablyliterate.com

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