How to install nvidia drivers in fedora 3511/10/2023 ![]() ![]() package xorg-x11-drv-nvidia-3:86_64 is filtered out by modular filtering package akmod-nvidia-3:86_64 requires nvidia-kmod-common >= 3:495.46, but none of the providers can be installed package akmod-nvidia-3:86_64 requires nvidia-kmod-common >= 3:470.74, but none of the providers can be installed Last metadata expiration check: 0:05:06 ago on Mon 13:16:57 PST. akmod-nvidia conflictĪfter upgrading from Fedora 32 to 35 (via 34) I hit the following conflict when installing the nvidia driver. In contrast, some cleaner limitataions of the wayland protocol and a from-scratch modern compositor implementation might avoid some of the above issues. However, there appears to be double buffering and multiple framebuffer extensions, so this could all be wrong or they’re just not used. no swapchain or flipping on vsync, which is why tearing is inevitable. There is just one framebuffer for all monitors. ![]() I think with X11 apps actually share access to a framebuffer. I’ve never looked at the code and this is entirely hearsay. For me with KDE plasma, that’s kwin -replace and maybe killall plasmashell kstart plasmashell. Incidentally, workarounds include disabling HW composition or just restarting things. This is likely plasma/kwin’s fault for all I know. Occasional system hangs while the compositor crashes. ![]() Low framerate - I could swear I’m not getting 60fps. ![]() when you drag a window over another it leaves a trail of itself smeard across whatever’s behind it from youtube videos and basically any animation There’s a few things I’m getting tired of with X11… Compositors typically take all the windows, the cursor and window decorations (borders, shadow etc.) and combine them into one big image that gets sent to your monitor. A quick bit of background: X11 is a compositor and Wayland is a protocol for a compositor. ![]()
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