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NVIDIA drivers installation

Note:
This documentation has moved to a new home! Please update your bookmarks to the new URL for the up-to-date version of this page.

This page shows how to install the NVIDIA drivers from the command line, using either the ubuntu-drivers tool (recommended), or APT.

NVIDIA drivers releases

We package two types of NVIDIA drivers:

  1. Unified Driver Architecture (UDA) drivers - which are recommended for the generic desktop use, and which you can also find on the NVIDIA website.

  2. Enterprise Ready Drivers (ERD) - which are recommended on servers and for computing tasks. Their packages can be recognised by the -server suffix. You can read more about these drivers in the NVIDIA documentation.

Additionally, we package the NVIDIA Fabric Manager and the NVIDIA Switch Configuration and Query (NSCQ) Library, which you will only need if you have NVswitch hardware. The Fabric Manager and NSCQ library are only available with the ERDs or -server driver versions.

Check driver versions

To check the version of your currently running driver:

cat /proc/driver/nvidia/version

The recommended way (ubuntu-drivers tool)

The ubuntu-drivers tool relies on the same logic as the “Additional Drivers” graphical tool, and allows more flexibility on desktops and on servers.

The ubuntu-drivers tool is recommended if your computer uses Secure Boot, since it always tries to install signed drivers which are known to work with Secure Boot.

Check the available drivers for your hardware

For desktop:

sudo ubuntu-drivers list

or, for servers:

sudo ubuntu-drivers list --gpgpu

You should see a list such as the following:

nvidia-driver-470
nvidia-driver-470-server
nvidia-driver-535
nvidia-driver-535-open
nvidia-driver-535-server
nvidia-driver-535-server-open
nvidia-driver-550
nvidia-driver-550-open
nvidia-driver-550-server
nvidia-driver-550-server-open

Installing the drivers for generic use (e.g. desktop and gaming)

You can either rely on automatic detection, which will install the driver that is considered the best match for your hardware:

sudo ubuntu-drivers install

Or you can tell the ubuntu-drivers tool which driver you would like installed. If this is the case, you will have to use the driver version (such as 535) that you saw when you used the ubuntu-drivers list command.

Let’s assume we want to install the 535 driver:

sudo ubuntu-drivers install nvidia:535

Installing the drivers on servers and/or for computing purposes

You can either rely on automatic detection, which will install the driver that is considered the best match for your hardware:

sudo ubuntu-drivers install --gpgpu

Or you can tell the ubuntu-drivers tool which driver you would like installed. If this is the case, you will have to use the driver version (such as 535) and the -server suffix that you saw when you used the ubuntu-drivers list --gpgpu command.

Let’s assume we want to install the 535-server driver (listed as nvidia-driver-535-server):

sudo ubuntu-drivers install --gpgpu nvidia:535-server

You will also want to install the following additional components:

sudo apt install nvidia-utils-535-server

Optional step

If your system comes with NVswitch hardware, then you will want to install Fabric Manager and the NVSwitch Configuration and Query library. You can do so by running the following:

sudo apt install nvidia-fabricmanager-535 libnvidia-nscq-535

Note:
While nvidia-fabricmanager and libnvidia-nscq do not have the same -server label in their name, they are really meant to match the -server drivers in the Ubuntu archive. For example, nvidia-fabricmanager-535 will match the nvidia-driver-535-server package version (not the nvidia-driver-535 package).

Manual driver installation (using APT)

Installing the NVIDIA driver manually means installing the correct kernel modules first, then installing the metapackage for the driver series.

Installing the kernel modules

If your system uses Secure Boot (as most x86 modern systems do), your kernel will require the kernel modules to be signed. There are two (mutually exclusive) ways to achieve this.

Installing the pre-compiled NVIDIA modules for your kernel

Install the metapackage for your kernel flavour (e.g. generic, lowlatency, etc) which is specific to the driver branch (e.g. 535) that you want to install, and whether you want the compute vs. general display driver (e.g. -server or not):

sudo apt install linux-modules-nvidia-${DRIVER_BRANCH}${SERVER}-${LINUX_FLAVOUR}

(e.g. linux-modules-nvidia-535-generic)

Check that the modules for your specific kernel/ABI were installed by the metapackage:

sudo apt-cache policy linux-modules-nvidia-${DRIVER_BRANCH}${SERVER}-$(uname -r)

(e.g. sudo apt-cache policy linux-modules-nvidia-535-$(uname -r))

If the modules were not installed for your current running kernel, upgrade to the latest kernel or install them by specifying the running kernel version:

sudo apt install linux-modules-nvidia-${DRIVER_BRANCH}${SERVER}-$(uname -r)

(e.g. sudo apt install linux-modules-nvidia-535-$(uname -r))

Building your own kernel modules using the NVIDIA DKMS package

Install the relevant NVIDIA DKMS package and linux-headers to build the kernel modules, and enroll your own key to sign the modules.

Install the linux-headers metapackage for your kernel flavour (e.g. generic, lowlatency, etc):

sudo apt install linux-headers-${LINUX_FLAVOUR}

Check that the headers for your specific kernel were installed by the metapackage:

sudo apt-cache policy linux-headers-$(uname -r)

If the headers for your current running kernel were not installed, install them by specifying the running kernel version:

sudo apt install linux-headers-$(uname -r)

Finally, install the NVIDIA DKMS package for your desired driver series (this may automatically guide you through creating and enrolling a new key for Secure Boot):

sudo apt install nvidia-dkms-${DRIVER_BRANCH}${SERVER}

Installing the user-space drivers and the driver libraries

After installing the correct kernel modules (see the relevant section of this document), install the correct driver metapackage:

sudo apt install nvidia-driver-${DRIVER_BRANCH}${SERVER}

(Optional) Installing Fabric Manager and the NSCQ library

If your system comes with NVswitch hardware, then you will want to install Fabric Manager and the NVSwitch Configuration and Query library. You can do so by running the following:

sudo apt install nvidia-fabricmanager-${DRIVER_BRANCH} libnvidia-nscq-${DRIVER_BRANCH}

Note:
While nvidia-fabricmanager and libnvidia-nscq do not have the same -server label in their name, they are really meant to match the -server drivers in the Ubuntu archive. For example, nvidia-fabricmanager-535 will match the nvidia-driver-535-server package version (not the nvidia-driver-535 package).

Switching between pre-compiled and DKMS modules

  1. Uninstalling the NVIDIA drivers (below)

  2. Manual driver installation using APT

Uninstalling the NVIDIA drivers

Remove any NVIDIA packages from your system:

sudo apt --purge remove '*nvidia*${DRIVER_BRANCH}*'

Remove any additional packages that may have been installed as a dependency (e.g. the i386 libraries on amd64 systems) and which were not caught by the previous command:

sudo apt autoremove

Transitional packages to new driver branches

When NVIDIA stops support on a driver branch, then Canonical will transition you to the next supported driver branch automatically if you try to install that driver branch.

See NVIDIA’s current support matrix in their documentation.

This page was last modified 2 months ago. Help improve this document in the forum.