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CUDA

Installation

This Howto provides a way to install the official CUDA packages from NVIDIA along our packaged NVIDIA driver at RPM Fusion.

While this repository contains both the NVIDIA driver and CUDA toolkit, We recommend to use our packaged driver instead, in order to receive fixes needed by Fedora kernel update.

NVIDIA official repositories

These repositories contain versions of CUDA that are parallel installable along with another version.

CUDA Toolkit

Please use the Official link: https://developer.nvidia.com/cuda-downloads

Machine Learning repository

Please use the official link: https://developer.nvidia.com/nccl/nccl-download

Merged with the regular CUDA repository

TensorRT repository

You can download the TensorRT component using the appropriate version from https://developer.nvidia.com/nvidia-tensorrt-download

This requires to login with the NVIDIA CUDA program subscription.

Legacy NVIDIA 340xx/CUDA 6.5

This repository contains a legacy version of CUDA 6.5 that will works with the NVIDIA 340xx series

Please use the Official link: https://developer.nvidia.com/cuda-toolkit-65

Please verify to have a compatible compiler.

Community repositories

RPM Fusion CUDA

This repository aims to receive content dedicated for CUDA and is built with the official cuda releases. Only available for Fedora (latest supported CUDA release) so far and is still a work in progress...

AI/ML Fedora nvidia-container-toolkit

With the AI-ML working group at fedora, there is this content allowing a fully built from source nvidia-container-toolkit that integrates well with fedora: See also https://copr.fedorainfracloud.org/coprs/g/ai-ml/nvidia-container-toolkit/

Known issues

Newer/Beta driver

Sometime with recent CUDA releases, a newer/beta driver version is required. We usually package the such driver in RPM Fusion for rawhide. To ease the installation in stable Fedora branches, you can follow this guideline: See also https://rpmfusion.org/Howto/NVIDIA#Latest.2FBeta_driver

It can be a good idea to keep using the rawhide drivers by default.

GCC version

When using a later version of Fedora than what is supported by the NVIDIA CUDA Official repository, you might be unable to compile. You can either:

Install an older gcc for dedicated for CUDA from COPR (Recommended on Fedora).

dnf copr enable kwizart/cuda-gcc-10.1 -y
dnf install cuda-gcc cuda-gcc-c++ -y

You will need to tell CUDA to use it instead of using the default g++ this can be done for the cuda-samples with:

export HOST_COMPILER=cuda-g++

sudo dnf install https://rpmfind.net/linux/centos/7/extras/x86_64/Packages/centos-release-scl-rh-2-3.el7.centos.noarch.rpm
sudo dnf install devtoolset-8-toolchain

You cannot install the whole devtoolset-8 collection, but the toolchain is enough , then each time you need to build using cuda, you start by

scl run devtoolset-8 bash
gcc --version
gcc (GCC) 8.3.1 20190311 (Red Hat 8.3.1-3)
Copyright (C) 2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions.  There is NO
warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
exit
gcc --version
gcc (GCC) 9.2.1 20190827 (Red Hat 9.2.1-1)
Copyright (C) 2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions.  There is NO
warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Which driver Package

Both "CUDA" and "RPM Fusion" repositories provide the nvidia driver packages. Unfortunately, the packaging method is way too different and can conflicts. We recommends to use the publicly and community based packaging method (RPM Fusion) and avoid the NVIDIA packaged nvidia-driver. From time to time, NVIDIA uses non-publictly released driver, so you will have to wait for a public driver for the RPM Fusion counterpart...

With current RHEL8 repositories, the nvidia-driver is packaged as a module. So it's easy to disable with:

sudo dnf module disable nvidia-driver

NVIDIA driver higher in CUDA repo

Often when NVIDIA release a newer CUDA version or even in the case of pre-release software the NVIDIA driver is at a higher version than the driver provided by RPM Fusion. There is no way for us to provide a version that will match the newer CUDA requirement "ahead" of any NVIDIA public driver release. With that said, the dependencies can sometime be faked at the RPM level with:

dnf module enable nvidia-driver -y && dnf download cuda-drivers && dnf module disable nvidia-driver -y
rpm -Uvh cuda-drivers*.rpm --nodeps
dnf update

Please remind to remove the cuda-drivers package when the RPM Fusion provided driver is high enough. Complain to NVIDIA for this bad behaviour, not to us.

Once a newer version of the driver is available publicly, it will likely be available on the RPM Fusion rawhide repository in the first step, please follow this guide on how to upgrade to the newer driver (This is currently the case with CUDA 11 and 450xx driver serie) : https://rpmfusion.org/Howto/NVIDIA#Latest.2FBeta_driver

NVIDIA provided libOpenCL

NVIDIA only advertise OpenCL 1.2 with the binary driver at this time. As a consequence, they provide an old version of libOpenCL.so.1 which works fine with their binary driver. As most software in Fedora and RPM Fusion are built using a newer libOpenCL, the system linker detects that and issues the following message:

 /usr/local/cuda-9.2/targets/x86_64-linux/lib/libOpenCL.so.1: no version information available (required by ffmpeg)

You can either ignore the message or manually delete the libOpenCL.so.1 provided by NVIDIA (run sudo ldconfig once deleted). Please verify to not have other OpenCL providers that might interfere with NVIDIA OpenCL usage. (looking at /etc/OpenCL/vendors ).

Running blender

Even when only running blender, you need a CUDA compatible compiler as described above. This is because blender will compile the "CUDA Kernels" optimized for your own GPU. You can run blender with:

 scl run devtoolset-7 blender

Once the "CUDA kernels" are compiled, you can run blender normally

References


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