![]() It will install it using the new gcc compilers. Mark the file as executable(I right click on the file in desktop). I ended up installing the 9.1 run file for Ubuntu 17.04. (I would probably skip this one, but go to it if other stuff is giving issues) sudo apt install nvidia-cuda-toolkit You can try using nvidia-cuda-toolkit, but the paths to the libraries wasn't familiar to me. As of today nvidia driver 396 is available. I use the GUI updater for the most part called Software & Updates, in the Additional Drivers tab. sudo add-apt-repository ppa:graphics-drivers/ppa (I would say this is required before installing, unless you want to risk some login loop of death). There might be added extra stuff that I could have probably not had to do, but I am going to include it anyways.įirst get the ppa repository drivers. The second method has the downside that it's not as easy to upgrade or remove. Make sure you don’t agree to install the new driver. Accept the terms and conditions, say yes to installing with an unsupported configuration, and no to “Install NVIDIA Accelerated Graphics Driver for Linux-x86_64 384.81?”.make the downloaded file executable with sudo chmod +x.After installing the proprietary NVIDIA driver, download CUDA 9 installation from their site (get Ubuntu the 17.04 runfile version).CUDA requires gcc6, use update-alternatives to maintain both gcc7 and gcc6 as explained here.Īlternatively you can follow Taylor's instructions:. ![]()
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