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It doesn’t hurt to re-check with pidstat. Only, of course, if the new location is not on your SSD, but e.g. If so, remove your old one and cheer to a long living SSD. + test -z "$KDE_SESSION_VERSION" || breakĭone logout, restart KDM, re-login and check if the xsession-errors* exists at the new location. # Once if KDM does handle this its self
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Then proceed installing the nvidia driver by choosing the appropriate package on the openSUSE Community website.
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This should return the values assigned before, i.e. Reboot and verify that the settings have actually been applied by running the setpci command on the command line as root without the part after the equal sign (e.g.
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(Please note that using only the setpci command as suggested in that post for Ubuntu systems does not suffice on openSUSE systems, because on this system the setpci functionality is provided as a separate GRUB module and must be loaded explicitly with the insmod command since the GRUB modules are not installed on the boot partition, their location has to be mounted first using the btrfs-mount-subvol command.) Be aware that you might need to determine the PCI bus ids for your machine first by running lshw -businfo -class bridge -class display as described in this post on askubuntu.
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# Initialize the PCI-E registers of MBA 3,1 for the nvidia driverītrfs-mount-subvol /dev/sda3 /boot/grub2/x86_64-efi setpciĪnd run grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/grub2/grub.cfg to update the bootloader configuration. In order to use the proprietary NVIDIA driver on a MacBook Air 3,1 (11-inch, late 2010) with the NVIDIA GeForce 320M chipset booting openSUSE Leap 42.1 in EFI mode, create the file /etc/grub.d/01_enable_vga.conf with the following content: #!/bin/sh