Personally I don’t think it is of much help repeating the same request over and over again.
This is the first time since I watch this forum, that I’ve seen that Nvidia is talking about prioritizing a topic.
I think we can believe this. Let the developers work and have a little patience. It’s not their fault nvidia does not hire more developers in the linux section.
No one is saying it’s the fault of developers. It is Nvidia’s (the company’s) fault that they haven’t hired enough devs though. Either way, this isn’t about assigning blame, this is about raising awareness for what is a very serious issue for some of the company’s biggest customers (by individual spend anyway).
I would love to believe that this is a priority, but it’s difficult when the ticket doesn’t even have a deadline. Ultimately the devs will be working on tickets ordered by priority. The aim of this thread is to convince project management that this ticket should be high priority and ideally planned for the next (driver) release.
And the devs already said it is high priority…
I think Mart has a stake in Nvidia.
Tbh i never saw Nvidia or any other HW vendors giving deadlines about a driver/SW issue/upcoming feature on a public forum nor via other channels. They just notify people when fix/feature is available and ready to land by saying “next driver will include X,Y,Z”
Yeah, sure! You uncovered the conspiracy!
Now that everything is uncovered we can talk. Tell me why did you do it? It was just a joke :-| I will have to buy a water cooler as I cannot see how hot the card is.
Please add this much needed feature
What’s worse than spending $3500+ on a GPU because it can’t be had anywhere near MSRP? Finding out the memory thermal throttles under load and spending more money to replace the thermal pads. Being able to see how hot the memory is running under Linux would definitely be appreciated.
Hey Nvidia! Are you still listening? I just spent $12k on 3090 GPUs and I’m tired of the excuses. It was said this issue was being prioritized a month ago and still haven’t seen any progress. When can we expect it?
Nvidia has some of the best developers in the industry and I can’t imagine it would take an experienced dev long to get this working. Making this feature readily available is really a win/win for Nvidia. It would significantly reduce the questions and criticism around throttling or performance anomalies if we could see why it was happening.
It is prioritized and is assigned to an engineer. The functionality should come in a future release.
That’s great news!
Is it possible to have a rough time estimate?
Will it be days, months or perhaps more?
Looking forward to your insight.
So from the archive of releases here Linux AMD64 Display Driver Archive | NVIDIA it seems that updates have become pretty frequent over the past 2 months (roughly 7-10 days between each update). It might be a bit naïve to assume it’s coming in the next release, but it’s probably a good sign that the Linux driver updates have been more frequently recently.
Thanks for keeping us updated mate, much appreciated!
Happy to hear. Thanks for the update.
That’s indeed a good sign.
I was actually hoping for an answer from the moderator.
Would be nice if there was an official estimation :)
We need this ASAP! It’s pathetic Linux world is left out on such an important detail, especially considering the operating temps of the GDDR6X memory modules and especially the crap thermal pads found on FE GPUs and even most of the partner models.
Is there an ETA on this funcionality please?
I hope that future not took long to be alive