On Fri, Apr 13, 2018 at 8:50 PM, Phil Perry <pperry@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Your device is supported: > > $ nvidia-detect -l | grep -i 1cb2 > [10de:1cb2] NVIDIA Corporation GP107GL [Quadro P600] > > Support was added in the 375.39 NVIDIA driver. I assume the driver works as > expected for you? Yes it works perfectly fine. > If you are able to offer any more clues, please feel free to open a bug > report on elrepo.org/bugs for us to track. Happy to help if I can. > I created a bugreport: http://elrepo.org/bugs/view.php?id=839 >> # lspci | grep VGA >> 00:1f.5 Non-VGA unclassified device: Intel Corporation Device a2a4 >> 21:00.0 VGA compatible controller: NVIDIA Corporation Device 1cb2 (rev a1 >> >> # lspci -n | egrep '00:1f.5|21:00.0' >> 00:1f.5 0000: 8086:a2a4 >> 21:00.0 0300: 10de:1cb2 (rev a1) This part makes me wander though, if I'm correct the second column in the "lspci -n" output seems to be the class identification. If you look at the first line of the lcpi output, lspci (or the kernel?) doesn't seem to recognize the class of some other Intel device, that probably has nothing to do with the nvidia device at all. It's numeric class identification seems to be "0000" though (for unclassified?) Could it be that in the piece of code below (from nvidia-detect), the device_class is zero because of that line, and nvidia-detect exits? if (!dev->device_class) { fprintf(stderr, "Error getting device_class\n"); ret = -1; goto exit; } -- Regards, Danny _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos