Anil F Duggirala (12025-01-05):
> sudo mv /usr/lib/udev/rules.d/61-gdm.rules /usr/lib/udev/rules.d/61-
> gdm.rules.bak
Unrelated to the actual issue: IIRC you can achieve the same result of
disabling a system udev rule by creating an empty rule file in /etc with
the exact same name. It has the ben
Thank you Olafur and George for your answers.
I am using Gnome, so that is not the issue here.
Doing:
sudo mv /usr/lib/udev/rules.d/61-gdm.rules /usr/lib/udev/rules.d/61-
gdm.rules.bak
Worked for me. I get gdm with options and Wayland by default. I'm back
in business thanks to you.
I however d
On Sun, Jan 05, 2025 at 09:07:09AM -0500, Anil F Duggirala wrote:
> Thank you both for your instructions. I have followed the exact
> instructions as proposed by Oli and have managed to successfully
> install and load the nvidia driver.
>
> However, apparently I am now stuck in an X session instea
Thank you both for your instructions. I have followed the exact
instructions as proposed by Oli and have managed to successfully
install and load the nvidia driver.
However, apparently I am now stuck in an X session instead of the
Wayland session I had before.
I have followed the additional instr
Are you using Gnome or KDE? (or something else). I ask this as my KDE with the
packaged Nvidia 535 drivers is unable to run Wayland. So for now I use X11 with
KDE.
It is my understanding that KDE will work with Wayland when using the Nvidia
stable version 560.35.03 however this version has y
Thank you both for your instructions. I have followed the exact
instructions as proposed by Oli and have managed to successfully
install and load the nvidia driver.
However, apparently I am now stuck in an X session instead of the
Wayland session I had before.
I have followed the additional instr
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