- #Davinci resolve 18 crashing during render install
- #Davinci resolve 18 crashing during render drivers
#Davinci resolve 18 crashing during render drivers
The very last post indicates, "Hello, I had the same issue and got it working by using the progl prefix after using davinci-resolve-checker, it should check if the necessary drivers are installed". And if people can get Resolve to run with those error messages anyhow, it might not be worth spending time on trying to clear the messages. I did a quick check in Synaptic Package Manager and there appears to be some packages related to it, but I'm not sure which ones, if any, might apply for this situation.
#Davinci resolve 18 crashing during render install
It's a slightly different issue, but towards the end of the posts, the person mentions they were able to install log4cxx from the Arch repositories. The only other place where I found info that I thought might be helpful was this Archlinux topic Davinci Resolve 16 stable gets stuck on "Looking for control surface". In this post in that long topic, a person mentions they get the two lines you posted, but Resolve is launching. I found mention of that elsewhere as well, but I didn't really find what that feature is supposed to do to know know what "not a problem" means. In that 40 page topic, I found this post in which Daniel Tufvesson is quoted as saying the log4cxx messages are probably not a problem. No Nvidia drivers appear in Driver Manager still and my inxi -Gx output is: The applet now shows an AMD logo and says I have NVIDIA On-Demand selected. No Nvidia options appear in Driver Manager either.Īt this point I resumed my usual process of signing the kernel modules, selecting "On-Demand" mode and restarting. This appears to break my Nvidia Driver settings though- EDIT: It breaks my drivers because it automatically installs a full suite of nvidia-driver-510 packages.īoth before and after a reboot at this point the Nvidia Optimus applet appears and shows that I have Nvidia "Performance Mode" selected and inxi -Gx switches from stating my Nvidia GPU's driver is "Nouveau" to "N/A". I followed the instructions and during the massive install dump it appeared to say it was automating the process of blacklisting Nouveau, which, interestingly, calls back to the original 2014 guide that intended me to do that manually.
And nothing seems to indicate that I ever did. Install CUDA, following the NVIDIA guide.I'm not even sure that I actually have CUDA installed.