So I ran that command (it took a while, but completed successfully) then tried nvidia-smi both before and after a reboot. Sadly its still in the same position.
From what I understood in the docs, it creates/updates a ramdisk for each kernel I have installed? By the look of it, I might have a load of kernel versions still installed, is it worth removing some of them?
Thank you for the really quick reply!
I copy and pasted each of those commands exactly, and did a reboot before and after the install, but I'm still experiencing the same issues.
nvidia-smi returns the following:
NVIDIA-SMI has failed because it couldn't communicate with the NVIDIA driver. Make sure that the latest NVIDIA driver is installed and running.
Wow you guys work fast!
I ran that line and got the following:
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree... Done
Reading state information... Done
system76-driver-nvidia is already the newest version (20.04.79~1683832504~22.04~3e9def1).
0 to upgrade, 0 to newly install, 0 to remove and 0 not to upgrade.
So I ran that command (it took a while, but completed successfully) then tried
nvidia-smi
both before and after a reboot. Sadly its still in the same position.From what I understood in the docs, it creates/updates a ramdisk for each kernel I have installed? By the look of it, I might have a load of kernel versions still installed, is it worth removing some of them?