GT218 (GF 210) unsupported
Affects | Status | Importance | Assigned to | Milestone | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
nvclock (Ubuntu) |
New
|
Undecided
|
Unassigned |
Bug Description
Binary package hint: nvclock
This is hardly a bug, but support for the GT218 would be good.
`nvclock -i` outputs this to stderr:
It seems your card isn't officialy supported in NVClock yet.
The reason can be that your card is too new.
If you want to try it anyhow [DANGEROUS], use the option -f to force the setting(s).
NVClock will then assume your card is a 'normal', it might be dangerous on other cards.
Also please email the author the pci_id of the card for further investigation.
[Get that value using the -i option].
Same output from `nvclock -T`.
`nvclock -d -s` outputs (to stdout):
m=0 n=0 p=0
m=0 n=0 p=0
Card: Unknown Nvidia card
Card number: 1
MPLL_COEFF=00000000
m=0 n=0 p=0
Memory clock: -2147483.750 MHz
NVPLL_COEFF=
m=0 n=0 p=0
GPU clock: -2147483.750 MHz
The actual card is a EVGA GeForce 210 w/ Passive Heatsink (EVGA Part number 512-P3-1213-XX).
ProblemType: Bug
DistroRelease: Ubuntu 10.04
Package: nvclock 0.8b4-1ubuntu3
ProcVersionSign
Uname: Linux 2.6.32-22-generic x86_64
NonfreeKernelMo
Architecture: amd64
Date: Sun Jun 13 15:28:37 2010
InstallationMedia: Ubuntu 10.04 "Lucid Lynx" - Beta amd64 (20100406.1)
ProcEnviron:
PATH=(custom, user)
LANG=en_US.UTF-8
SHELL=/bin/bash
SourcePackage: nvclock
The same behaviour is seen when the card is replaced with a GT215 (GT 240) based
SPARKLE SXT2401024S3L-NMP.