Difference between revisions of "NVIDIA Quadro NVS 140M"

From ThinkWiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(rephrase the first part, CUDA)
Line 1: Line 1:
A new driver has been released on 8 jun 2007.<br>
+
The Quadro NVS 140M is a mobile video card with a G86 core and either 128 MB or 256 MB graphics memory.
You need this version 100.14.09 or greater.
+
 
----
+
Support for Quadro NVS 140M has been introduced in the NVIDIA Linux unified driver version 100.14.09 (released on 8 June 2007). For the latest drivers go to the [http://www.nvidia.com/object/unix.html NVIDIA Unix Drivers page]. Note that NVIDIA proprietary drivers do not work with a Xen virtualized kernel.
Here's the link
+
 
[http://www.nvidia.com/object/linux_display_ia32_100.14.09.html]
+
Since it has a G86 core, [http://developer.nvidia.com/object/cuda.html NVIDIA CUDA] works on this video card, even though it is not listed in the CUDA manuals. Running very large problems (like the SDK samples) however might fail because of running out of the small graphics memory.
  
 
== LCD Backlight Brightness Control on T61 ==
 
== LCD Backlight Brightness Control on T61 ==

Revision as of 19:46, 19 July 2007

The Quadro NVS 140M is a mobile video card with a G86 core and either 128 MB or 256 MB graphics memory.

Support for Quadro NVS 140M has been introduced in the NVIDIA Linux unified driver version 100.14.09 (released on 8 June 2007). For the latest drivers go to the NVIDIA Unix Drivers page. Note that NVIDIA proprietary drivers do not work with a Xen virtualized kernel.

Since it has a G86 core, NVIDIA CUDA works on this video card, even though it is not listed in the CUDA manuals. Running very large problems (like the SDK samples) however might fail because of running out of the small graphics memory.

LCD Backlight Brightness Control on T61

To the best of my knowledge, no one has been able to get lcd backlight brightness control to work with this video card on the T61 when using the proprietary driver. However, brightness control works fine when using the vesa driver, so it seems that the problem lies with the Nvidia driver itself.

Strangely, if the nvidia module is loaded with the argument NVreg_EnableBrightnessControl=1, one can switch to a virtual console, change the lcd brightness level there, and have that level preserved after switching back to the X session. This was tested with the acpi video driver included in the vanilla Linux 2.6.21-6 kernel.