mirror of
https://github.com/hyprwm/hyprland-wiki.git
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7c1f67f7ed
Since disabling hardware cursors is still an important part of having a good time on Hyprland with NVIDIA hardware, it should be better clarified instead of linking to the Variables page with only a warning about WLR_NO_HARDWARE_CURSORS being depreciated.
300 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
300 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
---
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weight: 8
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title: NVidia
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---
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# Foreword
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There is no _official_ Hyprland support for Nvidia hardware. However, many people
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have had success with the instructions on this page.
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You can choose between the proprietary
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[Nvidia drivers](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/NVIDIA) or the open source
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[Nouveau driver](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Nouveau). For the
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proprietary drivers, there are 3 of them: the current closed source driver
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named 'nvidia' (or 'nvidia-dkms' to use with custom linux kernels) which is
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under active development; the legacy closed source drivers 'nvidia-3xxxx' for older cards
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which Nvidia no longer actively supports; and the 'nvidia-open' driver which is
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currently an alpha stage attempt to open source a part of their closed source
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driver for newer cards.
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If the proprietary drivers support your graphics card, it's generally recommended
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to use them instead, as it includes significantly improved gaming performance
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and power management for recent GPUs.
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However, keep in mind that if the proprietary Nvidia drivers do not work
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properly on your computer, the Nouveau driver might work fine. This will
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most likely be the case for
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[older cards](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/NVIDIA#Unsupported_drivers).
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## How to get Hyprland to possibly run on Nvidia (Proprietary)
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Install the correct headers package for your current kernel. For the example of
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the `linux-zen` kernel on Arch Linux, this package would be `linux-zen-headers`.
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Install the required nvidia packages. For most cases, this would be `nvidia-dkms`
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(or `nvidia-open-dkms` for the open source ones),
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and `nvidia-utils`. If you'd like to game via Wine or even natively, it would be
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in your best interest to also install `lib32-nvidia-utils`.
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{{< callout >}}
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Even if your GPU is listed as supported by the `nvidia-open-dkms` driver, at this
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point in time, it is still not up to feature parity with the current closed source drivers.
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One issue with the open drivers is that it could cause problems with suspend in
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general, let that be closing the lid on your laptop or by manually triggering one.
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Overall, you'd be better off with `nvidia-dkms` right now, but Hyprland should work
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similarly between the two.
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{{< /callout >}}
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Take care to also install `egl-wayland` (`libnvidia-egl-wayland1` and
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`libnvidia-egl-gbm1` on Ubuntu) if you are using the proprietary drivers.
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It provides the necessary compatibility layer, instead of falling back to
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zink/Vulkan.
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Next up, you need to enable modeset for nvidia, this can be done via editing
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the kernel paramaters for your bootloader.
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If you use [systemd-boot](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/systemd-boot)
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you can do this adding `nvidia_drm.modeset=1` to the end of
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`/boot/loader/entries/arch.conf`. If you use
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[grub](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/GRUB) you can do this by adding
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`nvidia_drm.modeset=1` to the end of `GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT=` in
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`/etc/default/grub`, then running `sudo grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg`.
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For others check out
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[kernel parameters](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Kernel_parameters) and how
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to add `nvidia_drm.modeset=1` to your specific bootloader.
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{{< callout >}}
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There has been a lot of debate on which of `nvidia_drm` or `nvidia-drm`
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is correct for this kernel parameter. It has been confirmed that either
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of these will work.
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{{< /callout >}}
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in `/etc/mkinitcpio.conf` add `nvidia nvidia_modeset nvidia_uvm nvidia_drm` to
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your `MODULES`
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For example, a clean `MODULES` line would now look like this:
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```sh
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MODULES=(nvidia nvidia_modeset nvidia_uvm nvidia_drm)
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```
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Now, run `sudo mkinitcpio -P`. This will regenerate the initcpios for all kernels
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currently installed on the system. If you see any errors here about missing
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nvidia modules, it is highly probable that you forgot to install the correct
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headers package. Make sure you install the headers package for your kernel and
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run this command again.
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More information is available here:
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[https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/NVIDIA#DRM_kernel_mode_setting](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/NVIDIA#DRM_kernel_mode_setting)
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Export these variables in your hyprland config:
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```sh
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env = LIBVA_DRIVER_NAME,nvidia
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env = XDG_SESSION_TYPE,wayland
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env = GBM_BACKEND,nvidia-drm
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env = __GLX_VENDOR_LIBRARY_NAME,nvidia
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cursor {
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no_hardware_cursors = true
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}
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```
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{{< callout type=warning >}}
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Previously used `WLR_NO_HARDWARE_CURSORS` environment variable has been deprecated.
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Do not set it in your configs. Use `cursor:no_hardware_cursors` instead.
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{{< /callout >}}
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Lastly, you also need to install a few packages to get some apps
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to function natively with Wayland. Have a look at [the Master Tutorial](https://wiki.hyprland.org/Getting-Started/Master-Tutorial/#force-apps-to-use-wayland).
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Reboot your computer.
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Launch Hyprland.
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It _should_ work now.
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## VA-API hardware video acceleration
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We can achieve VA-API acceleration on Nvidia and Wayland with the help of the
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[nvidia-vaapi-driver](https://github.com/elFarto/nvidia-vaapi-driver). This may
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solve certain issues in Electron apps, and it will also allow for GPU decoding
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for videos on the web, with benefits including higher performance video playback
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and also higher power efficiency during video playback.
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Its install instructions are available in the README, however, a quick guide will
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be given here:
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- Install the package. On Arch, this is `libva-nvidia-driver` in the official
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repos.
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- export this variable in your hyprland config:
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```sh
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env = NVD_BACKEND,direct
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```
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see [here](https://github.com/elFarto/nvidia-vaapi-driver?tab=readme-ov-file#upstream-regressions)
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for more information on this environment variable.
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- Enable the services `nvidia-suspend.service`, `nvidia-hibernate.service` and
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`nvidia-resume.service`
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- Add `nvidia.NVreg_PreserveVideoMemoryAllocations=1` to your kernel parameters if
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you don't have it already. This will solve issues with corrupted desktop / videos
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after waking.
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- You can check the README to get it working for Firefox.
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## Other issues to look out for
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### Regarding environment variables
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- If you encounter crashes in Firefox, remove the line
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`env = GBM_BACKEND,nvidia-drm`.
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- If you face problems with Discord windows not displaying or screen sharing not
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working in Zoom, first try running them in Native Wayland (more details below).
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Otherwise, remove or comment the line
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`env = __GLX_VENDOR_LIBRARY_NAME,nvidia`.
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### How to possibly get multi-monitor working with hybrid graphics
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On a hybrid graphics device (a laptop with
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both an Intel and an Nvidia GPU), you will need to remove the `optimus-manager`
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package if installed (disabling the service does not work). You also need to
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change your BIOS settings from hybrid graphics to discrete graphics.
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### Fixing flickering in Electron / CEF apps
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This flickering is likely caused by these apps running in XWayland.
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To fix the flickering, try running the apps with native Wayland instead.
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For most Electron apps, you should be fine just adding this
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environment variable to your config:
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```sh
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env = ELECTRON_OZONE_PLATFORM_HINT,auto
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```
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This has been confirmed to work on Vesktop, VSCodium and Obsidian and will probably
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work on other Electron apps as well.
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For other apps, including CEF apps, you will need to launch them with these flags:
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```sh
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--enable-features=UseOzonePlatform --ozone-platform=wayland
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```
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To do this easily for Spotify, Arch Linux has a `spotify-launcher` packages
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in their official repos. You should use that instead of the `spotify`
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package in the AUR. Then, enable the Wayland backend in
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`/etc/spotify-launcher.conf` by uncommenting this line:
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```sh
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extra_arguments = ["--enable-features=UseOzonePlatform", "--ozone-platform=wayland"]
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```
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Some CEF / Electron apps may also have a respective flags file in ~/.config.
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For example, for VSCodium, you can add the flags to `~/.config/codium-flags.conf`
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and for Obsidian, you can add the flags to `~/.config/obsidian/user-flags.conf`.
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{{< callout >}}
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On earlier Nvidia driver versions, including 535, you may have to also include
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the `--disable-gpu` and `--disable-gpu-sandbox` flags, but, as the names suggest,
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you will lose hardware acceleration for whichever app is run with these flags.
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{{< /callout >}}
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With NixOS, you can also try setting the `NIXOS_OZONE_WL` environment variable
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to `1`, which should automatically configure Electron / CEF apps to run with native
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Wayland for you.
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While it is best to have as many things as possible running natively in
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Wayland, the root cause of the flickering will likely be solved
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in the 555 series of Nvidia driver updates.
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### Fixing flickering in XWayland games specifically
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The symptoms of this widespread issue include XWayland games flickering in
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a way which makes them unplayable. Repeated frames, random presenting of
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black frames, and overall weirdness. This is a result of a multitude of
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issues which will be solved soon via Nvidia driver updates, but for now
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you have a few possible fixes:
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- Install xorg-xwayland-git (AUR). This git package includes this [PR](https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/xorg/xserver/-/merge_requests/967)
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which implements the "Explicit Sync" protocol.
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This will fix it in some, if not all cases. However if it doesn't,
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try the next solution. Once the 555 series of drivers are released, this
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should completely fix the issue.
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- Install older nvidia drivers which do not exhibit this problem. The
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last ones which would work will be the 535xx series of drivers. These
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can be installed easily on Arch via [these AUR packages](https://aur.archlinux.org/packages?O=0&K=535xx)
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More info about explicit sync is available
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[on this blog](https://planet.kde.org/xavers-blog-2024-04-05-explicit-sync/).
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### Fixing other random flickering (nuclear method)
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Note that this forces performance mode to be active, resulting in
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increased power-consumption (from 22W idle on a RTX 3070TI, to 74W).
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This may not be needed for some users. Only apply these 'fixes' if you
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do notice flickering artifacts from being idle for ~5 seconds.
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Make a new file at `/etc/modprobe.d/nvidia.conf` and paste this in:
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```sh
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options nvidia NVreg_RegistryDwords="PowerMizerEnable=0x1; PerfLevelSrc=0x2222; PowerMizerLevel=0x3; PowerMizerDefault=0x3; PowerMizerDefaultAC=0x3"
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```
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Reboot your computer and it should be working.
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If it does not, try:
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- lowering your monitor's refresh rate, as this can stop the flickering
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altogether
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- using the [Nouveau driver](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Nouveau) as
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mentioned above
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### Fixing suspend/wakeup issues
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Enable the services `nvidia-suspend.service`, `nvidia-hibernate.service` and
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`nvidia-resume.service`, they will be started by systemd when needed.
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Add `nvidia.NVreg_PreserveVideoMemoryAllocations=1` to your kernel parameters if
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you haven't already.
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{{< callout >}}
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As previously mentioned, suspend functions are currently broken on `nvidia-open-dkms`
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[due to a bug](https://github.com/NVIDIA/open-gpu-kernel-modules/issues/472), so
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make sure you're on `nvidia-dkms`.
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{{< /callout >}}
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For Nix users, the equivalent of the above is
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```nix
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# configuration.nix
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boot.kernelParams = [ "nvidia.NVreg_PreserveVideoMemoryAllocations=1" ];
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hardware.nvidia.powerManagement.enable = true;
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# Making sure to use the proprietary drivers until the issue above is fixed upstream
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hardware.nvidia.open = false;
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```
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## Still having issues?
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If you're still having issues after following this guide, you can join the
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[Hyprland Discord](https://discord.gg/hypr) and ask for help in the
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`#hyprland-nvidia` channel. Hopefully someone will be able to help you out.
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