It works!! alright it was a video driver problem, and for some reason I think there is a problem with the nouveau driver and the kernel. I read this thread, and I don't think the problem is fixed yet. I reloaded the nvidia-304xx driver and suspend and hibernate work fine.
Ok guys it was indefinetly a driver issue and is now solved, it was either the nvidia driver or the kernel but at any rate it's now fixed.And oh, Nvidia picked up all 3 monitors!
Rukiri
https://bbs.archlinux.org/profile.php?id=54040
2012-07-11T05:43:13Z
I just looked into the wikihttps://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/NVIDIA#InstallingYou will have to dopacman -Rdd libgl
hadrons123
https://bbs.archlinux.org/profile.php?id=53013
2013-03-16T15:11:04Z
I followed those instructions setting up my new laptop with Nvidia Optimus and never ran into an issue with anything ever wanting a nouveau driver. At any point in your installation do you install nouvea? You never need to do that as far as I know. Sorry I can't be more helpful.
mrunion
https://bbs.archlinux.org/profile.php?id=9190
2013-03-03T14:51:10Z
slopjong wrote:Btw. certain use cases require to have both installed e.g. trying to fix an issue with the nvidia driver.And vesa wouldn't work for that? Raise a bug if you feel this is really required, but it would require quite a bit of symlink hackery to have both nouveau and nvidia installed and usable on the same system, last I checked.
With nvidia driver I used:${execi 30 nvidia-settings -t -q GPUCoreTemp} °CNow with nouveau it's simpler:${hwmon 0 temp 1}°C
siriusb
https://bbs.archlinux.org/profile.php?id=32473
2013-05-20T09:38:34Z
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Fo … n_RequestsThat said, AMD provides better documentation for open-source developers so that driver (xf86-video-ati) gets developed easier, and nVidia does very little to help their open-source driver equivalent (xf86-video-nouveau). nVidia is regarded to have a better closed-source driver however.And like the etiquette says: 1 year from now people sear
Read the documentation for details -- especially for nvidia proprietary driver. You can use adaptive power mode with it as well as play with clock frequencies (I don't do it for security reasons, though) which let's you alter the way nvidia's GPU works. IMO it helps to improve the performance at least a little bit.
Now, after upgrading to just released nvidia version 304.32 (whereas 302.17-1 did not work for me), the output is shown as expected:extra/nvidia-utils 295.53-1 -> 304.32-1
extra/nvidia 295.53-1 -> 304.32-1Hence, marking issue solved.
jmu
https://bbs.archlinux.org/profile.php?id=58306
2012-08-10T14:37:10Z