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NVIDIA stable driver 550.135 released for Linux

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While NVIDIA continues working on new features for their 565 Beta series, and they have their current new-feature branch 560.35.03, they also have the slightly older and stable version that just updated to version 550.135.

The main highlights / changes in this release are:

  • In Linux kernel 6.11, drm_fbdev_generic was renamed to drm_fbdev_ttm.Use drm_fbdev_ttm when present to keep supporting direct frame buffer access needed for Wayland compositors to present content on newer kernels.
  • In linux-next commit 446d0f4849b1, output_poll_changed is removed from struct drm_mode_config_funcs. Do not implement the function pointer member when not present to ensure the driver can compile with newer kernels. The driver now supports enumerating modes on hotplug events through the DRM fbdev API.
  • Updated the kernel module build process to use CONFIG_CC_VERSION_TEXT from the Linux kernel's Kconfig to detect the compiler used to build the kernel. This may help select the correct compiler on systems where the kernel was built with a compiler other than the default one.
  • Fixed a bug that prevented kernel modules linked using precompiled kernel interface files from loading on recent Debian systems.

Since it's a stable driver, you should be fine to upgrade without issues. I imagine most of you gaming are likely at least on the 560 series that I covered previously. For this 550 series though NVIDIA describes it as: "This driver meets the quality levels applied to Windows drivers that pass testing in Windows Hardware Quality Labs (WHQL), therefore providing the same attention to driver reliability, robustness, and performance for non-Windows operating systems (e.g., Linux)".

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
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I am the owner of GamingOnLinux. After discovering Linux back in the days of Mandrake in 2003, I constantly came back to check on the progress of Linux until Ubuntu appeared on the scene and it helped me to really love it. You can reach me easily by emailing GamingOnLinux directly.
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6 comments

Bogomips about 3 hours ago
QuoteI imagine most of you gaming are likely at least on the 560 series that I covered previously.

As a Debian user, I never tried anything else than the stable branch :D
Stella about 3 hours ago
QuoteI imagine most of you gaming are likely at least on the 560 series that I covered previously.
Nop, still on 550 here. I recently upgraded from 535. I'm kind of anxious about new drivers as I've made so many bad experiences with updates both on Linux and Windows
Klaas about 3 hours ago
I've been haunted by the crash after hibernate issue in different forms for too long, so I'm not keen on any driver experiments.
Pyrate 1 hour ago
Which driver version is the one where Novideo stops being an embarrassment with Wayland?
Caldathras 56 minutes ago
Quoting: The ArticleI imagine most of you gaming are likely at least on the 560 series
Nope. I rolled back from Linux Mint 22 because I felt it was too early for it to take over from LM 21.3 as a gaming platform. As a result, I'm still on the 535 series, which is the highest that the Linux Mint Team natively supports in LM 21.3.

That being said, I'm surprised that GOL does not collect the driver version along with the rest of its user statistics ...


Last edited by Caldathras on 19 November 2024 at 6:33 pm UTC
tuubi 26 minutes ago
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Quoting: Caldathras
Quoting: The ArticleI imagine most of you gaming are likely at least on the 560 series
I rolled back from Linux Mint 22 because I felt it was too early for it to take over from LM 21.3 as a gaming platform.
Did your problems have something to do with your Nvidia hardware? Or did the switch to pipewire mess with your audio somehow? I haven't noticed any regressions myself.
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