

Discovering what 'architecture' (Fermi/Maxwell/Kepler etc.) your card is will take you a long way in finding out whether it's actually supported or not. Take their officially supported hardware list with a grain of salt, and do your research. Nvidia is… pretty bad at actually supporting the cards they say they support.
#GEFORCE QWIKI DRIVERS#
As of writing, these options are true, 495, 470 390 or legacy ( legacy refers to the drivers used in the last “legacy Nvidia drivers” version available on the download page, this image is no longer updated). Use the major version from any version from Production Branch Version back to Version 390 to use that version instead. True will force the latest Nvidia produciton drivers to be used. # enable nvidia prime switcher, helps with modern laptops (post-2018) with hybrid graphics that default to using integrated graphics
#GEFORCE QWIKI DRIVER#
# see driver details & supported GPU's here. # to enable the alternative nvidia 'legacy' driver - set to nvidia-driver=legacy In the latest config file, it should look like this: If the line is not present, add it anywhere. remove the initial #) the nvidia-driver=true line. At the top level, find the nf file and uncomment (i.e. To override the automatic setting, plug your SD-card/USB drive into a computer. Batocera will guess the “best” drivers to use automatically, but this decision can be overridden in case of false detection or desire to use a specific version. Write themes for batocera-emulationstationīatocera includes most available Linux versions of the Nvidia drivers available at the time of a new release.Redirect upgrades from any board to my own builds.Raspberry Pi: Add power buttons/switches.Sync files across multiple devices (Syncthing).Future NVIDIA microarchitectures (e.g.More information on GPUs supporting NVENCįor more information on GPUs supporting NVENC, see these Wikipedia pages: Three versions have the codename GK107(-301-A2) and one version has the codename GK208-400-A1 all these four graphic cards do support NVENC.


One version has the codename GF116 and does not support NVENC. There are five versions/revisions of the GeForce GT 640.The GeForce GTX 670M has the codename GF114 and does not support NVENC.The GeForce GTX 660M has the codename GK107 and does support NVENC.In both cases, you will need to use the other elements of the comparison table in order to find out what is the right version/revision and the right codename of your graphic card. Other graphic cards may be listed only once but with several codenames (e.g. the "GeForce GT 640" is listed five times). Important note: some NVIDIA graphic cards exist in different versions or revisions and are listed more than once in the Wikipedia page above, either with the same or with different codenames (e.g. The above page also describes different models with their codenames as well as their supported encoding modes and features. If the codename of your graphic card begins with G K (Kepler microarchitecture), G M (Maxwell microarchitecture), or G P (Pascal microarchitecture), TU (Turing microarchitecture) then your graphic card does support NVENC if not, then your graphic card likely does not support NVENC.Go to this Wikipedia page, search for the exact name of your graphic card in the comparison tables and note the codename(s) of your graphic card:.Check what is the exact name of your graphic card, e.g.In order to find out if your NVIDIA GeForce graphic cards support NVENC technology, process as follow: Many NVIDIA GPUs support this technology, among others some GeForce GPUs used in desktop and mobile computers. NVENC is a technology used by NVIDIA that handles video hardware encoding.
