Files
garandos/modules/drivers/nvidia-drivers.nix

62 lines
1.8 KiB
Nix

{
lib,
config,
pkgs,
...
}:
with lib;
let
cfg = config.drivers.nvidia;
in
{
options.drivers.nvidia = {
enable = mkEnableOption "Enable Nvidia Drivers";
};
config = mkIf cfg.enable {
services.xserver.videoDrivers = [ "nvidia" ];
environment.systemPackages = with pkgs; [ nvidia-docker ];
hardware = {
nvidia-container-toolkit.enable = true;
nvidia = {
# Modesetting is required.
modesetting.enable = true;
# Nvidia power management. Experimental, and can cause sleep/suspend to fail.
powerManagement.enable = true;
# Fine-grained power management. Turns off GPU when not in use.
# Experimental and only works on modern Nvidia GPUs (Turing or newer).
powerManagement.finegrained = false;
# Use the NVidia open source kernel module (not to be confused with the
# independent third-party "nouveau" open source driver).
# Support is limited to the Turing and later architectures. Full list of
# supported GPUs is at:
# https://github.com/NVIDIA/open-gpu-kernel-modules#compatible-gpus
# Only available from driver 515.43.04+
# Currently alpha-quality/buggy, so false is currently the recommended setting.
open = false;
# Enable the Nvidia settings menu,
# accessible via `nvidia-settings`.
nvidiaSettings = true;
# Optionally, you may need to select the appropriate driver version for your specific GPU.
package = config.boot.kernelPackages.nvidiaPackages.stable;
};
};
};
}
# Making nvidia docker toolkit work:
#
# sudo nvidia-ctk cdi generate --output=/etc/cdi/nvidia.yaml
#
# sudo nvidia-ctk cdi list
#
# sudo tee /etc/docker/daemon.json > /dev/null <<EOF
# {
# "features": {
# "cdi": true
# }
# }
# EOF
#
# docker run --device nvidia.com/gpu=all