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# Use systemd for managing NVIDIA driver suspend in drivers ====>>> PRIOR to version 470 <<<===== | |
# https://download.nvidia.com/XFree86/Linux-x86_64/450.66/README/powermanagement.html | |
# https://forums.developer.nvidia.com/t/unable-to-set-nvidia-kernel-module-parameters/161306 | |
# Please note: In Fedora Linux you may need to just install the xorg-x11-drv-nvidia-power pakage | |
# as sugested by @goombah88 in the comments below. | |
TMP_PATH=/var/tmp | |
TMPL_PATH=/usr/share/doc/nvidia-driver-460/ | |
echo "options nvidia NVreg_PreserveVideoMemoryAllocations=1 NVreg_TemporaryFilePath=${TMP_PATH}" | sudo tee /etc/modprobe.d/nvidia-power-management.conf | |
sudo install --mode 644 "${TMPL_PATH}/nvidia-suspend.service" /etc/systemd/system | |
sudo install --mode 644 "${TMPL_PATH}/nvidia-hibernate.service" /etc/systemd/system | |
sudo install --mode 644 "${TMPL_PATH}/nvidia-resume.service" /etc/systemd/system | |
sudo install "${TMPL_PATH}/nvidia" /lib/systemd/system-sleep | |
sudo install "${TMPL_PATH}/nvidia-sleep.sh" /usr/bin | |
sudo systemctl enable nvidia-suspend.service | |
sudo systemctl enable nvidia-hibernate.service | |
sudo systemctl enable nvidia-resume.service | |
@dmikushin
Thanks, that worked for me. I have a 1080ti using driver version 570.86.15. This is on Fedora 41.
sudo systemctl unmask nvidia-suspend
sudo systemctl enable nvidia-suspend
sudo systemctl unmask nvidia-resume
sudo systemctl enable nvidia-resume
sudo systemctl unmask nvidia-hibernate
sudo systemctl enable nvidia-hibernate
Thanks! It worked on a Lenovo P1G7 with kubuntu 24.04 and Driver Version: 570.124.06 CUDA Version: 12.8
sudo systemctl unmask nvidia-suspend
sudo systemctl enable nvidia-suspend
sudo systemctl unmask nvidia-resume
sudo systemctl enable nvidia-resume
sudo systemctl unmask nvidia-hibernate
sudo systemctl enable nvidia-hibernate
Did not work for me. Using Ubuntu 24.10 and nvidia-driver-560.
As for the responses of tommyliu and pgbarletta, I am unsure whether they are helpful, because they are using driver 570, and the problem has been fixed starting from driver 565 according to ethan2009.
Also the disabling of the services and the editing of nvidia-sleep.sh suggested by bilallamal07 did not work for me.
Ubuntu 24.10 did allow me to choose the nvidia-driver-570-server, which solved the problem, probably because it contains the fix starting from driver 565.
For me on driver 535.216.03 and GeForce RTX 2070 Mobile / Max-Q the following services where located under /usr/lib/systemd/system/
:
- nvidia-hibernate.service
- nvidia-persistenced.service
- nvidia-resume.service
- nvidia-suspend.service
This meant taht I only had to enable them with
sudo systemctl enable nvidia-hibernate.service
sudo systemctl enable nvidia-persistenced.service
sudo systemctl enable nvidia-resume.service
sudo systemctl enable nvidia-suspend.service
This is my current setting and it's working for me (Linux Mint 22, Nvidia GeForce GTX 745 using Nvidia 550.107.02 driver)
sudo nano /etc/modprobe.d/nvidia-graphics-drivers-kms.conf
and add these lines into it:
options nvidia-drm fbdev=1 options nvidia NVreg_PreserveVideoMemoryAllocations=1 options nvidia NVreg_TemporaryFilePath=/var/tmp
This fixed my issues!
Laptop: Lenovo p16v Gen 1
System:
Kubuntu 24.04.2 LTS, noble
AMD Ryzen 7 7840HS w/ Radeon 780M Graphics
Nvidia rtx A500: Driver 570.133.07
Kernel: 6.11.0-24-generic
(Issue remaining: "unable to change power state from D3hot to D0")
I also tried the answer from dmikushin, but it didn't change anything!
sudo systemctl unmask nvidia-suspend sudo systemctl enable nvidia-suspend sudo systemctl unmask nvidia-resume sudo systemctl enable nvidia-resume sudo systemctl unmask nvidia-hibernate sudo systemctl enable nvidia-hibernate
This is what helped me:
Crossposting on Ask Ubuntu.