System:
OS: Garuda Soaring Broadwing
Kernel: x86_64 Linux 6.13.8-zen1-1-zen
Shell: zsh 5.9
Resolution: 1920x1080
DE: KDE
WM: KWin
CPU: 12th Gen Intel Core i7-12700KF @ 20x 5.1GHz [29.0°C]
GPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3070 Ti
RAM: 6242MiB / 31943MiB
Monitor: Samsung 55’ LED tu8000 Crystal UHD TV (model: UN55TU8000FXZA)
(monitor capped to 60fps obviously, no issues outside wayland with tv monitor)
Running Wayland w/ HDR. seems to be caused by Night Light in KDE.
output of inxi -Gxx:
Graphics:
Device-1: NVIDIA GA104 [GeForce RTX 3070 Ti] vendor: ASUSTeK driver: nvidia
v: 570.133.07 arch: Ampere pcie: speed: 2.5 GT/s lanes: 16 ports:
active: none off: HDMI-A-1 empty: DP-1, DP-2, DP-3, HDMI-A-2
bus-ID: 01:00.0 chip-ID: 10de:2482
Display: wayland server: X.org v: 1.21.1.16 with: Xwayland v: 24.1.6
compositor: kwin_wayland driver: X: loaded: nvidia unloaded: modesetting
alternate: fbdev,nouveau,nv,vesa gpu: nvidia,nvidia-nvswitch display-ID: 0
Monitor-1: HDMI-A-1 model: Samsung res: 1920x1080 hz: 60 dpi: 81
diag: 1388mm (54.6")
API: EGL v: 1.5 platforms: device: 0 drv: nvidia device: 1 drv: nouveau
device: 2 drv: swrast gbm: drv: nvidia surfaceless: drv: nvidia wayland:
drv: nvidia x11: drv: nvidia
API: OpenGL v: 4.6.0 compat-v: 4.5 vendor: nvidia mesa v: 570.133.07
glx-v: 1.4 direct-render: yes renderer: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3070 Ti/PCIe/SSE2
display-ID: :1.0
API: Vulkan v: 1.4.309 surfaces: xcb,xlib,wayland device: 0
type: discrete-gpu driver: N/A device-ID: 10de:2482
Info: Tools: api: clinfo, eglinfo, glxinfo, vulkaninfo
de: kscreen-console,kscreen-doctor gpu: corectrl, nvidia-settings,
nvidia-smi wl: wayland-info x11: xdpyinfo, xprop, xrandr
output of journalctl, similar to other reports:
kwin_wayland[7576]: kwin_wayland_drm: Pageflip timed out! This is a bug in the nvidia-drm kernel driver
What I was doing:
Had multiple windows halved, including windowed fullscreen video between left and text editor on other half.
Had KDE nightlight on, had screen freeze, audio still playing intact, no interactivity w/ mouse, ctl-alt-delete, or mouse.
Running Garuda (Arch linux)
dmesg didn’t have anything more instructive unfortunately.