Am 11.11.21 um 08:54 schrieb Linux User #330250:> On 02 Nov 2021, 02:24, Karol Herbst wrote:
>> On Tue, Oct 26, 2021 at 9:56 PM Linux User #330250
>> <linuxuser330250 at gmx.net> wrote:
>>>
>>> Hello!
>>>
>>> I have a ThinkPad T61 with an Nvidia Quadro G86M [NVS 140M]
graphics
>>> card. Recently the nvidia binary driver, version 340.x, has been
removed
>>> from most Linux distributions, forcing the use of nouveau.
>>>
>>> In the past, when nouveau was unstable/unusable, people moved to
the
>>> binary driver. Since this in no longer an option, nouveau is now
the
>>> only option. And I'm totally okay with it, I would have
prferred an open
>>> source solution anyway... BUT.
>>>
>>> BUT nouveau is unstable. I experience random freezes, like others
too:
>>> https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=995866
>>>
>>> The only option was to use nomodeset and to have an unaccelerated
>>> graphics output. But if you want to use the laptop as a desktop
machine,
>>> this is not much fun.
>>>
>>> Long story short, the question I have:
>>>
>>> According to https://nouveau.freedesktop.org/HardwareDonations.html
such
>>> a graphics card could be of use?
>>>
>>
>> If you are willing to give away the system anyway, it might make sense
>> to retest with recent software, like newest Fedora or debian sid. We
>> usually fix bugs, but often fixes are not added downstream. And I
>> think the issue shown in this bug is actually fixed already as I
>> remember seeing something like this and we fixed it.
>>
>> If the issue is still there with a recent kernel (newest 5.14 or even
>> 5.15) we can look into it.
>>
>> Thanks
>
> Hi!
> Sorry for the late reply. I don't have the time at the moment, but I
> will try the newest Debian testing on that system and report back. If
> that does work, it is an option to actually keep the system and use it
> as originally intended.
>
> If it doesn't work, I'm thinking about 1) Fedora and 2) Gentoo
(because
> that's what I normally use). Even though the later would be quite time
> consuming, I'd certainly get the newest available sources to the
hardware.
Hi,
if you don't have time to compile a whole new Gentoo system then take a look
at Arch Linux where you
will find the latest kernel release only a few days after there were released.
I was using Gentoo for many years but it became too time consuming and the
change to Arch was time
well spent (in regards to how much time I need now to keep the systems up to
date).
(This post's intention is not to start discussions regarding distributions,
only to bring awareness
to Arch as rolling update distribution using the newest kernel and drivers.)
Regards,
Uwe
>
>>> Thanks,
>>> Linux User #330250