ibonina a écrit :
Le kernel c'est le noyau. Utilisant OpenSuSE j'ai pas eu besoin d'utiliser ce script par contre quand j'etais sous SuSE 9 je l'ai utilisé pkusieurs fois.
Il faut si je me souviens bien d'abord installer les sources de ton noyau (kernel-devel ou kernel-sources)
Ensuite en quittant X, tu utilises ce truc
Sinon :
http://www.nvidia.fr/object/linux_ [...] 11_fr.html
http://fr.download.nvidia.com/XFre [...] on-02.html
http://fr.download.nvidia.com/XFre [...] on-03.html
Voila :
"The NVIDIA kernel module has a kernel interface layer that must be compiled specifically for each kernel. NVIDIA distributes the source code to this kernel interface layer, as well as precompiled versions for many of the kernels provided by popular Linux distributions.
When the installer is run, it will determine if it has a precompiled kernel interface for the kernel you are running. If it does not have one, it will check if there is one on the NVIDIA FTP site (assuming you have an Internet connection), and download it. If one cannot be downloaded, either because the FTP site cannot be reached or because one is not provided, the installer will check your system for the required kernel sources and compile the interface for you. You must have the source code for your kernel installed for compilation to work. On most systems, this means that you will need to locate and install the correct kernel-source, kernel-headers, or kernel-devel package; on some distributions, no additional packages are required (e.g. Fedora Core 3, Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4).
After the correct kernel interface has been identified (either included in the .run file, downloaded, or compiled from source code), the kernel interface will be linked with the closed-source portion of the NVIDIA kernel module. This requires that you have a linker installed on your system. The linker, usually /usr/bin/ld, is part of the binutils package. You must have a linker installed prior to installing the NVIDIA driver."
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