displaylink-rpm
envycontrol
displaylink-rpm | envycontrol | |
---|---|---|
27 | 67 | |
523 | 993 | |
1.5% | - | |
7.7 | 6.0 | |
23 days ago | about 2 months ago | |
Makefile | Python | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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displaylink-rpm
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Fedora 38 and DisplayLink
For the driver, I download this rpm and installed it. While it froze at the end, after a reboot, it worked.
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Ubuntu ---> Fedora. This time I really doing it.
Now, it's much easier to enable the Fusion repository and Envycontrol makes it as easy as Ubuntu to switch GPUs! I also use DisplayLink for additional monitors and there is now a 3rd party rpm for that.
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Dear Ubuntu
Doing a quick search for "displaylink Fedora" on brave. These are the first 2 results and look pretty simple:
https://github.com/displaylink-rpm/displaylink-rpm
https://kcore.org/2023/01/01/installing-evdi-fedora37/ (should work on the latest Fedora 38)
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USB A to HDMI adapter for laptop
Hope you next time do some research before making any statement. https://github.com/displaylink-rpm/displaylink-rpm
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Displaylink drivers on fedora 37 linux 6.2
Appears to be broken on 6.2.x kernels (github issue).
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Help needed: Can't install DisplayLink Drivers for my dock. Fedora 37 Kernal 6.2 Evdi 1.12.0, RPM Release isn't working
AFAIK this driver is not completely open source. But I assume this issue was created by you? Then I'm afraid you can't do any more besides going back to a 6.1.x kernel.
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Losing wifi, animations after installing display link drivers on 37
I'm losing wifi and all animations after installing the evdi display link drivers from the following link: https://github.com/displaylink-rpm/displaylink-rpm/releases
- New to linux and fedora. I have a zenbook with an optimus nvidia graphics card. Having trouble playing videos on the internet and using my second external monitor (has a usb to hdmi adapter for lack of hdmi inputs). I've tried various guides. Can anybody point me to a more detailed foolproof guide?
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Does fedora support external monitors and usb C hubs fine?
DisplayLink - you will need to get the DisplayLink RPM out-of-kernel driver; if you want to continue using SecureBoot then you'll need to enroll a MOK and get that all set up as part of the build. More details over there.
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Help: DisplayLink displays are detected but not working
If you used another method, especially if you did this setup manually, consider building and installing the source rpm here instead: https://github.com/displaylink-rpm/displaylink-rpm
envycontrol
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Linux on lenovo legion 5 pro
You're probably looking for envycontrol ... it will allow you to switch back and forth between integrated/hybrid/dedicated-only graphics as needed. I used this on my 2023 Legion Slim 5 and it made a huge difference in power consumption. Now I only enable dedicated if I need it for something specific, which is rare for me. Computer generally sips between 16w-20w doing basic browsing tasks, with no other optimizations performed (this is on Fedora Silverblue)
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Got terrible battery life on Linux Laptops? I got ya! (Targeted at Nvidia Users but should work for most people)
Install EnvyControl, which is a useful package that can offload applications to the integrated GPU and turn off the dedicated Nvidia GPU. This will add a few hours at least to your battery life. Distro-specific instructions: https://github.com/bayasdev/envycontrol
- Week 5 of issues, today I installed 3 updates gnome-maps, gnome-user-docs and something else, now Fedora doesn’t boot, come on!!!
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make xorg and i3wm run on dedicated Nvidia card instead of integrated Intel card
Check out this video. https://youtu.be/Pn2iUgW3l6w . It's how I setup my graphics card. You could also use envy control https://github.com/bayasdev/envycontrol.
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Ubuntu ---> Fedora. This time I really doing it.
Now, it's much easier to enable the Fusion repository and Envycontrol makes it as easy as Ubuntu to switch GPUs! I also use DisplayLink for additional monitors and there is now a 3rd party rpm for that.
- What distro is the best for this laptop?
- OpenSUSE Tumbleweed + KDE + Wayland + Nvidia
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switch to integrated gpu
use envycontrol
- Using only NVIDIA
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Fuc*ed up my nvidia settings (things zoomed on sddm/i3 + glitches)
I thus played a bit with https://github.com/bayasdev/envycontrol which is listed on the archwiiki, the problem is that now, even when selecting the "nvidia" mode and even when going back to "discret graphics" in the bios I'm encountering bugs I didn't have before, mainly SDDM being really zoomed, i3 borders being HUGE (while the rest is normal, I didn't change my config so it's likely not a DPI problem there), glitches when I first login with polybar duplicating itself and the wallpaper being broken, requiring to refresh i3 to have those 2 things fixes, picom animations are also super glitchy.
What are some alternatives?
evdi - Extensible Virtual Display Interface
optimus-manager - A Linux program to handle GPU switching on Optimus laptops.
mxe - MXE (M cross environment)
supergfxctl
magicfile - Simple Makefile template for documenting frequent commands.
asus-wmi-screenpad - Variation of the asus-wmi kernel module with screenpad brightness support
pico8-deploy - An easy way to export and deploy PICO-8 projects to itch.io
nfancurve - A small and lightweight POSIX script for using a custom fan curve in Linux for those with an Nvidia GPU.
displaylink-debian - DisplayLink driver installer for Debian and Ubuntu based Linux distributions.
nvfancontrol - NVidia dynamic fan control for Linux and Windows
docker-ce-packaging - Packaging scripts for Docker CE
lm-sensors - lm-sensors repository