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Now install Bumblebee:
==== Install Bumblebee: ====
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yum -y install bbswitch bumblebee
yum -y install bbswitch bumblebee

Revision as of 15:53, 5 November 2013

Description

Nvidia Optimus is an optimization technology created by Nvidia which, depending on the resource load generated by client software applications, will transparently and seamlessly switch between two graphics adapters within a computer system in order to provide either maximum performance or minimum power draw from the system's graphics rendering hardware. From Bumblebee's FAQ: Bumblebee is a effort to make Nvidia Optimus enabled laptops work in GNU/Linux systems. Such feature involves two graphics cards with two different power consumption profiles plugged in a layered way sharing a single framebuffer.

Install Dependencies

su -c "yum install -y libbsd-devel libbsd glibc-devel libX11-devel help2man autoconf git tar glib2 glib2-devel kernel-devel kernel-headers automake gcc gtk2-devel"

You also need to install VirtualGL. Download the latest version for your arch at the VirtualGL download page or use yum command

 yum install VirtualGL 

If you want to run 32 bit apps on your 64 bit system, then also install:

 yum install VirtualGL.i686 

Install Bumblebee

Install the Bumblebee yum repository

Fedora 17

yum -y --nogpgcheck install http://install.linux.ncsu.edu/pub/yum/itecs/public/bumblebee/fedora17/noarch/bumblebee-release-1.1-1.noarch.rpm

Fedora 18

yum -y --nogpgcheck install http://install.linux.ncsu.edu/pub/yum/itecs/public/bumblebee/fedora18/noarch/bumblebee-release-1.1-1.noarch.rpm

Fedora 19

yum -y --nogpgcheck install http://install.linux.ncsu.edu/pub/yum/itecs/public/bumblebee/fedora19/noarch/bumblebee-release-1.1-1.noarch.rpm

Install Bumblebee:

yum -y install bbswitch bumblebee

Bumblebee with the NVIDIA proprietary drivers

The previous commands install bumbleblee with the nouveau drivers. If you want to install bumblebee with the NVIDIA proprietary drivers you must also follow these instructions:

Install the bumblebee-nonfree repository:

Fedora 17

yum -y --nogpgcheck install http://install.linux.ncsu.edu/pub/yum/itecs/public/bumblebee-nonfree/fedora17/noarch/bumblebee-nonfree-release-1.1-1.noarch.rpm

Fedora 18

yum -y --nogpgcheck install http://install.linux.ncsu.edu/pub/yum/itecs/public/bumblebee-nonfree/fedora18/noarch/bumblebee-nonfree-release-1.1-1.noarch.rpm

Fedora 19

yum -y --nogpgcheck install http://install.linux.ncsu.edu/pub/yum/itecs/public/bumblebee-nonfree/fedora19/noarch/bumblebee-nonfree-release-1.1-1.noarch.rpm

Make sure you have glibc-devel installed because it is needed for bumblebee-nvidia to compile the driver

sudo yum install glibc-devel

Now install bumblebee-nvidia

yum -y install bumblebee-nvidia

"bumblebee-nvidia" is both a rpm package and a shell script. The "bumblebee-nvidia" package contains the shell "wrapper" script, init scripts to run it at bootup, and a SELinux security policy, and lastly a copy of the NVidia Linux binary driver "blob" downloaded from NVidia's UNIX drivers page. This is why the packages are so large compared to the bumblebee package.

Reboot.

Testing Bumblebee

If you want to make sure you have bumblebee up and running, write:

optirun glxgears -info

You should see some gears rotating, and in the terminal you should see "GL_VENDOR = NVIDIA Corporation" or something similar.

Primus

For speed imrovements you can use primus. Primus is a shared library that provides OpenGL and GLX APIs and implements low-overhead local-only client-side OpenGL offloading via GLX forking, similar to VirtualGL. It intercepts GLX calls and redirects GL rendering to a secondary X display, presumably driven by a faster GPU. On swapping buffers, rendered contents are read back using a PBO and copied onto the drawable it was supposed to be rendered on in the first place. Currently primus requires the NVIDIA proprietary drivers.

Install primus:

yum install primus 

If you want to run 32 bit apps on your 64 bit system, then also install:

yum install primus.i686

Testing primus

Open up a terminal and run:

PRIMUS_VERBOSE=2 optirun -b primus glxgears -info

If primus is working properly, you should see "primus: profiling:" messages every so often in the terminal you ran it from.

How to use Bumblebee

General Usage:

optirun [options] <application> [application-parameters]

If you installed primus, then you can use the following command to take advantage of it:

optirun -b primus <application> [application-parameters]

Start Windows applications:

optirun wine <windows application>.exe

with primus:

optirun -b primus wine <windows application>.exe

By default, primus renders up to 60 fps. To render more frames per second:

vblank_mode=0 optirun -b primus <application> [application-parameters]

In practice this will probably only waste power, as most screens do not display more than 60 frames per second.

You can always run "man optirun" for more information.

Useful links