
It works!
Still have to sort out a bridge for the ethernet connection and to pass through a USB host controller, but the hard part is done!
My plan was to use an MSI 780Ti 6G Gaming for UnRAID and a TitanX-P for the game. Even with a small loss for overhead, the end result should be playable at 1080 and maybe (fingers crossed, knock on wood) good enough for Vive VR.Might have to give this a try, I've used VMs before but not with the GPU passthrough.
Wonder would VR work ? I suspect any added latency would mess it up, be cool to try though.
Dunno - but if it appears, I'll buy one for the aesthetics alone! I think it looks great.I doubt the specs are very good on this, but what do you Linux people think of the chances of playing ED on the vapourware Ataribox ?
http://www.trustedreviews.com/news/...release-date-specs-games-news-rumours-2993249
On paper, the Titan X should still perform well for current-gen VR. There do seem to be issues with drivers at low latency though: https://www.reddit.com/r/VFIO/comments/6vgtpx/high_dpc_latency_and_audio_stuttering_on_windows/My plan was to use an MSI 780Ti 6G Gaming for UnRAID and a TitanX-P for the game. Even with a small loss for overhead, the end result should be playable at 1080 and maybe (fingers crossed, knock on wood) good enough for Vive VR.
It should be fine. You can always test first with a liveUSB if you're unsure, or perhaps use something like Xubuntu or Lubuntu if you need something lightweight.Question:
Before I delve into the VM option - I have a GTX 660 Ti 2gb in my machine and the onboard graphics built into my motherboard ( can't remember the motherboard specs, it was 4 years ago but it was a mid price range ASUS intel board capable of SLI ) Will the onboard graphics be sufficient?
Once set up will the GTX be permanently locked into the VM?
Do I have the option to shut down the VM and have the card available for regular use?
Which DVI port should I plug my single monitor into?
It should be fine. You can always test first with a liveUSB if you're unsure, or perhaps use something like Xubuntu or Lubuntu if you need something lightweight.
You should be aware that there is a performance overhead.
I wouldn't wait - the tutorials out there are already good enough. I don't use Linux in any professional capacity, but managed to get it working.
- Yes. In order for passthrough to work, the VFIO or PCI-stub drivers must grab the device at boot.
- Not currently. This might come later though.
- Both. You'll need one input connected to the onboard GPU and one connected to the 660 Ti.
Fair enough - it's your machine after all.Thank you Monkey. In retrospect I have decided I'm not quite ready to lock my machine into only being able to play ED. There are a number of other games I play. I may just have to dual boot if I want to play ED soon![]()
Fair enough - it's your machine after all.
I'd suggest, though, that if you're happy on a GTX 660Ti, you can probably buy a second GPU with similar performance, say an AMD HD7870 2GB, relatively cheaply - you're on a six year old card. It's possible to run two Nvidia cards and only pass through one, but it's rather more complex to set up due to the vendor drivers conflicting with the VFIO drivers. An AMD card and an Nvidia card wouldn't have that problem and you'd still be able to run your games on the host machine.
I'm curious as to which Linux games you play that you aren't willing to sacrifice and only have a Linux client!
OSX does not have Horizons thoughCrazy idea - There is an ED official release for OSX which uses open GL does it not?
Would it not be easier to get the Mac Version running on Linux? I don't suppose there's a "MINE" out there is there?
A problem which has nothing to do with Frontier.OSX does not have Horizons though![]()
Yes and no, but moot overall. The point was porting from Mac OS X version is not necessarily as simple as some might like to think it should be.A problem which has nothing to do with Frontier.