* Knurpht - Gertjan Lettink <knurpht@opensuse.org> [02-23-16 11:05]:
Op dinsdag 23 februari 2016 16:24:01 CET schreef René Krell:
2016-02-23 13:23 GMT+01:00 Bjoern Voigt:
... I found, that re-installing the NVidia driver is also necessary after each Xorg/Mesa upgrade. Probably some Xorg/Mesa packages mess-up the NVidia libraries.
Not just probably, this is sure: rpm --verify Mesa-libGL1 Mesa-libEGL1 ....L.... /usr/lib64/libGL.so.1 missing /usr/lib64/libGL.so.1.2 missing /usr/lib64/libGL.so.1.2.0 SM5....T. /usr/lib64/libEGL.so.1 missing /usr/lib64/libEGL.so.1.0.0 (probably more, also the 32-bit variants, if chosen to be installed)
The NVidia installer replaces these libraries. If you choose --uninstall as command line option restores them if you want. From the output using -A as command line option: "During driver installation, conflicting files are backed up, so that they can be restored when the driver is uninstalled."
Have a look at the installer options. In the (very) past I have been installing the driver with an option that pushed the nvidia libs to their own directory, added that directory to ld.so.conf, ran ldconfig, done. This worked fine, and kept working on a Mesa update. YMMV
I have taken the habit of reinstalling the drivers when-ever I drop from graphical target. sh <pkg.run> -aks -- (paka)Patrick Shanahan Plainfield, Indiana, USA @ptilopteri http://en.opensuse.org openSUSE Community Member facebook/ptilopteri http://wahoo.no-ip.org Photo Album: http://wahoo.no-ip.org/gallery2 Registered Linux User #207535 @ http://linuxcounter.net -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-factory+owner@opensuse.org