OK, it's working fine - SETI currently simply has any CUDA-tasks...
On Sat, Mar 9, 2013 at 1:40 PM, Satz Klauer <satzklauer(a)googlemail.com> wrote:
You're right, I found the lib in /usr/lib64/nvidia/ and it is
also
part of-ld-path.
Unfortunately Boinc still does not use it, restarting the client or
the whole computer does not help...
Is there an other variant of Boinc available from RPMFusion or can I
use the original Fedora packages?
On Fri, Mar 8, 2013 at 11:47 PM, <mmamiga6(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: rpmfusion-users-bounces(a)lists.rpmfusion.org
> [mailto:rpmfusion-users-bounces@lists.rpmfusion.org] On Behalf Of Satz
> Klauer
> Sent: Friday, March 08, 2013 4:21 AM
> To: rpmfusion-users(a)lists.rpmfusion.org
> Subject: NVidia-Drivers / libcuda.so?
>
> Hi,
>
> I want to use the NVidia drivers together with libcuda.so to use my graphics
> card for calculations (for SETI@Home to be more exact).
>
> After I installed the related graphics-driver-packages from RPMFusion I
> found some programs like nvidia-cuda-proxy or nvidia-cuda-server-control but
> no libcuda.so. Amazingly these NVidia-CUDA-daemons are not started.
>
> Google told me libcuda was part of the NVidia xorg-drv-package at least for
> earlier versions than Fedora 18. So what happened to it? Is there a reason
> why it is no longer part of that package?
>
> Thanks!
>
> It could be that the libcuda.so is in lib64
> Search libcuda.so
>
> Try sudo service boinc start to start the daemon
> Sudo service boinc stop to stop the daemon
> Sudo service boinc restart to restart it
>
> Michael